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DLC-Qualified Grow Lights

DLC qualification is the industry signal that a horticultural LED fixture meets DesignLights Consortium efficacy and quality thresholds, and it is the gate most North American utility rebate programs use to decide which fixtures earn an incentive. Every fixture in this collection comes from a manufacturer line that commonly appears on the DLC Qualified Products List for horticultural lighting, but listing status changes per SKU and per spec revision. Trimleaf operates a rebate verification service that confirms each fixture against the live QPL, identifies your utility's active horticultural program, and files the application on your behalf so the incentive actually lands.

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Buyer's Guide

DLC-Qualified Grow Lights: Complete Guide

DLC-Qualified LED Grow Lights for Utility Rebate Eligibility

DLC qualification is what separates a marketing claim from a rebate-eligible fixture. The DesignLights Consortium maintains the horticultural Qualified Products List that nearly every utility in North America references when deciding which LED grow lights earn an incentive cheque. If a fixture is not on the QPL under the spec your utility recognises, the rebate paperwork stops at the desk reviewer no matter how strong the PPE numbers look on the cut sheet. This collection gathers 127 commercial-grade LED fixtures from manufacturers whose product lines routinely appear on the DLC horticultural QPL, organised so commercial growers can shortlist by wattage class, form factor, and brand before the rebate consultation begins.

Trimleaf Rebate Service

We handle the rebate paperwork on your LED upgrade

Commercial LED rebates often run several hundred dollars per fixture, but only units listed on the DLC Qualified Products List qualify, and only when your utility runs an active horticultural program in your service territory. Sorting through that fixture by fixture eats hours of staff time and stalls the upgrade.

Trimleaf verifies each fixture against the live QPL, confirms your utility's active incentive amount, and files the application on your behalf. You get the rebate without the back-and-forth, and your install team stays focused on the room.

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What DLC Horticultural Listing Means

The DesignLights Consortium is a non-profit that publishes performance specifications for energy-efficient lighting, and it maintains the Qualified Products List (QPL) as a vendor-neutral public registry of fixtures that have been independently tested and confirmed to meet those thresholds. For horticultural LEDs, the current floor is set by DLC Horticultural V3.0, which raised the minimum photosynthetic photon efficacy (PPE) to 2.3 μmol/J for a standard listing and 2.6 μmol/J for the Premium tier, and added a Q90 sample-rate requirement that proves a fixture maintains at least 90 percent of its rated photon flux through a defined operating life.

Utilities reference the QPL because it is the only national, technology-neutral list that ties an incentive payment to verified field performance. When a commercial rebate program publishes a "DLC-listed required" rule, it is pointing directly at this database, and desk reviewers pull the QPL ID off the application, confirm the fixture is in-service for the current spec, and release the rebate from there. A fixture that was QPL-listed under V2.1 but never updated to V3.0 will fail this check even if the physical hardware is identical.

How to Confirm a Fixture Is DLC-Qualified for Your Rebate

Verification is fixture-by-fixture, not brand-by-brand. A manufacturer can have ten SKUs on the QPL and two that never made it through testing, so the rebate desk needs the specific model and the specific QPL ID before the application moves forward. The cleanest path is to search the QPL directly by model number, confirm the listing is marked "in-service" rather than "proposed" or "withdrawn," and capture the QPL ID for the rebate form. If a fixture has been re-certified under a newer spec, the listing will show the active version, and older spec listings still appear in the database but most utility programs require the current spec.

The second layer is the utility itself. Each program defines its own incentive amount, eligible facility types, and pre-approval rules, and some require an additional in-state distributor or contractor signature on top of the QPL verification. For the full walkthrough of how spec listings translate into rebate dollars, the LED grow light rebates and DLC certification guide explains how to read a horticultural QPL listing, which spec revisions current programs still accept, and what documentation rebate desks ask for at submission.

Trimleaf's DLC-Candidate Catalog

The 127 fixtures on this page come from manufacturers whose horticultural product lines commonly appear on the DLC QPL, including Fluence, Gavita, Growers Choice, ThinkGrow, AC Infinity, FloraFlex, and other commercial-grade brands stocked at Trimleaf. The listing status on the QPL is dynamic, since a SKU can be added when a new spec ships and removed when a manufacturer retires a model, so the "DLC-candidate" tag is exactly that: a candidate worth verifying for your rebate, not a guarantee that every SKU is listed against your utility's current spec on the day you apply.

Honest framing matters here because the rebate desk decides on the live QPL, not on a vendor catalogue. As part of the commercial rebate consultation, Trimleaf pulls the current QPL listing for every fixture in your room design, confirms the listing version matches your utility's requirement, and flags any swap-outs before the application is filed so the rebate calculation matches what actually lands at delivery.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does DLC-qualified mean for a horticultural LED grow light?
DLC-qualified means the fixture has been independently tested and confirmed to meet the DesignLights Consortium horticultural performance specification, currently V3.0, which requires a minimum 2.3 μmol/J photosynthetic photon efficacy for a standard listing and 2.6 μmol/J for the Premium tier, plus a Q90 photon-flux maintenance threshold. The fixture's manufacturer, model, and QPL ID are then published on the public Qualified Products List, which utility rebate programs reference as their eligibility gate.
How do I check whether my utility runs a rebate program that accepts DLC-listed grow lights?
Start with your utility's commercial energy efficiency portal, since most investor-owned utilities publish a horticultural or agricultural lighting incentive page, and many list "DLC-listed" or "DLC Premium" as a required spec for the fixture itself. If the program is not posted publicly, account-managed customers can request the current incentive sheet from their utility key-account contact. Trimleaf's rebate service confirms your utility's active program, eligible facility types, and per-fixture incentive amount at the start of the consultation, so you know the rebate math before the fixtures ship.
What is the difference between "DLC-listed" and "DLC-qualified"?
In practical use the two terms are interchangeable in the horticultural QPL: a fixture is "listed" on the QPL once it has been "qualified" by passing the spec. The distinction that matters is between the standard Horticultural V3.0 tier (2.3 μmol/J minimum) and the Premium tier (2.6 μmol/J minimum). Some utility programs pay a higher incentive for Premium listings, and a few high-tier programs only accept Premium. Always confirm which tier your utility requires before locking in a fixture for the room.
What is a QPL ID and where do I find it?
The QPL ID is the unique identifier the DLC assigns to each listed fixture, and it is the number rebate desk reviewers use to look up your fixture on the live QPL. You can find it by searching designlights.org/qpl for the manufacturer and model, then copying the ID from the listing page. Rebate applications usually have a dedicated field for it. Trimleaf captures the QPL ID for every fixture during the rebate consultation so the application is complete the first time it is submitted.
Do I need DLC qualification to claim a Section 179 deduction on commercial LED grow lights?
No. Section 179 of the U.S. tax code is a depreciation election rather than a utility rebate, so it does not require a fixture to be on the DLC QPL. What matters is that the equipment is placed in service for a qualifying business use within the tax year and stays under the annual deduction limit. The utility rebates vs Section 179 guide walks through how the two incentives stack and where DLC qualification does and does not gate the dollars.
Can hobbyist or residential growers claim utility rebates on DLC-listed grow lights?
Almost always no. Horticultural lighting rebates are administered through commercial and agricultural energy efficiency programs, which require a commercial utility account, a facility classification (typically licensed cultivation, controlled-environment agriculture, greenhouse, or research), and pre-approval before the fixture is purchased. Residential accounts and uncategorised hobby setups do not qualify even when the fixture itself is DLC-listed. The state-by-state commercial grow room rebate guide lists the eligibility rules program by program.
Does Trimleaf guarantee every fixture tagged "DLC-candidate" is currently on the QPL?
No, and that framing is deliberate. The "DLC-candidate" tag means the fixture comes from a manufacturer product line whose models commonly appear on the QPL, but listing status changes per SKU and per spec revision, and a model can be on the list against V3.0 today and pending re-certification next quarter. Verification happens during the rebate consultation, where each fixture in the proposed room is checked against the live QPL and confirmed against your utility's current spec requirement before the application is filed.
What happens if a fixture is QPL-listed but my utility's program ran out of funds?
Most utility horticultural programs operate on a fiscal-year budget and close to new applications once funds are exhausted, typically reopening on the next program cycle. If your utility's incentive is paused, the fixture is still installable and still energy-efficient, but the rebate cheque waits for the next funding round. Trimleaf tracks active program status during the consultation so you can decide whether to delay the install for an open incentive window or proceed without the rebate and capture it on the next eligible upgrade.

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