Christmas light installation in Brooklyn
★ Brooklyn, New York · Kings County

Christmas light installation for Brooklyn brownstones, row houses, and neighborhood storefronts

Full-service holiday lighting for Brooklyn homes, businesses and properties — designed, installed, maintained and taken down by our local crews.

Since 20065.0★ GoogleLicensed & Insured

Brooklyn residents hire us because holiday lighting here has to work with the housing we actually have — attached brownstones with limited roof access, three-story row houses on tight lots, and street-facing stoops that do a lot of the decorating work. We install for homeowners across Park Slope, Bay Ridge, Ditmas Park, and the townhouse blocks of Bedford-Stuyvesant, matching lights to cornices, bay windows, and wrought-iron railings rather than assuming a suburban front yard. With over 2.7 million people packed into Kings County, curb appeal on a Brooklyn block is a shared thing — one well-lit facade lifts the whole row. We handle the parking, the permits where needed, and the ladder logistics that make DIY lighting a headache in dense neighborhoods, so you get a clean install without wrestling extension cords over a fire escape.

Lighting Brooklyn, neighborhood by neighborhood

We cover Brooklyn from the Victorian free-standing homes of Ditmas Park and Prospect Park South to the classic brownstone corridors of Park Slope, Fort Greene, and Cobble Hill, out to the larger detached houses of Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, and Marine Park. Dyker Heights deserves its own mention — the neighborhood's famous holiday displays set a high bar, and we work with residents there who want a professional, cohesive look rather than a patchwork. We also serve Brooklyn Heights, Carroll Gardens, Windsor Terrace, Sheepshead Bay, and Greenpoint. If your block runs on attached row houses or you've got a rare Brooklyn lot with a real front yard, we scope the job around your actual property. Not sure we reach your street? Ask — Kings County coverage is wide.

Built for Brooklyn homes

Brooklyn's housing runs from limestone and brownstone row houses to the Queen Anne and Colonial Revival Victorians of Ditmas Park and Prospect Park South, plus brick semi-detached homes in Bay Ridge and Dyker Heights. That variety changes the lighting strategy entirely — brownstones look best with warm-white runs tracing the cornice line, window frames, and stoop railings, while free-standing Victorians can carry wrapped porch columns and outlined gables. Street trees are mostly London plane, honey locust, and the occasional Callery pear along the sidewalks; these are city-owned, so we focus wrapping on private front-yard trees and shrubs where they exist. The biggest challenges are height without roof access, protecting historic facade materials, and dense wiring on limited outdoor outlets — all things we design around before we ever set a ladder.

Why local experience matters

Brooklyn lighting is not suburban lighting. Most homes are attached, meaning roof access comes from the front facade or a shared parapet, and there's rarely a driveway to stage a ladder. We plan around that — securing lights to cornices, lintels, and railings with mounts that won't damage historic masonry, which matters on landmarked blocks in Brooklyn Heights and Park Slope. Coastal neighborhoods like Bay Ridge, Sheepshead Bay, and Coney Island get salt-laden wind off the harbor and Atlantic, so we use corrosion-resistant clips and commercial-grade cord. Street parking and pedestrian traffic mean we schedule installs efficiently and clean up completely. And for Dyker Heights-caliber displays, we handle the amperage math so you're not blowing breakers on a century-old electrical panel.

Pricing in Brooklyn

Brooklyn pricing reflects the housing mix. Attached row houses and brownstone facades typically run $599 to $1,800 depending on stories and detail work along cornices, windows, and railings. Free-standing Victorians in Ditmas Park or larger Bay Ridge homes with yard trees usually land between $1,500 and $3,500. Dyker Heights-style statement displays are quoted custom. Every estimate includes installation, timed takedown, and storage — no surprise charges for a walk-up.

Service area

We also serve near Brooklyn

Christmas lighting in Brooklyn — FAQ

Christmas light installation in Brooklyn, New York starts at $399 for standard residential packages. Custom designs and large homes may vary. Contact us for a free estimate.

We recommend booking your Brooklyn installation in September or October. Spots fill quickly, especially in popular neighborhoods.

Yes! We cover all neighborhoods and surrounding areas of Brooklyn, NY. Our team is familiar with local regulations and HOA requirements.

Yes — this is the most common Brooklyn scenario we handle. We work from the front facade using extension ladders staged on the sidewalk or stoop, and we attach lights to the cornice, window lintels, and iron railings with non-invasive clips rather than screws or nails, which protects historic masonry and landmarked facades. We coordinate timing to avoid blocking pedestrian traffic and pull any sidewalk permits if your block requires them. No backyard, driveway, or roof deck is needed. We just need to see your facade — send a photo or we'll do a quick walk-up assessment before quoting.

We do, and we take them seriously. Dyker Heights sets the standard for Brooklyn holiday lighting, and residents there expect scale and precision — full facade outlines, wrapped trees, lit walkways, and often animated or themed elements. We handle the design, the commercial-grade materials, and critically the electrical load planning so an older home's panel isn't overwhelmed. For displays at that level we build a custom quote rather than a flat package, and we recommend booking early since demand in the neighborhood spikes fast every fall. We also serve neighbors who want a scaled-down but still polished version of the Dyker look.

Brooklyn's harbor and Atlantic-facing neighborhoods — Bay Ridge, Sheepshead Bay, Coney Island, and Manhattan Beach — deal with stronger, salt-carrying winter winds than the borough's interior. We use corrosion-resistant clips, sealed connections, and commercial-grade cord rated for outdoor coastal exposure so lights don't loosen, short, or dull over the season. Facade-mounted runs get extra attachment points to survive gusts, and we check installs after the first strong storm if you're in an exposed waterfront spot. This is exactly why professional installation outperforms big-box DIY kits near the water — those clips fail fast in salt air and wind.

Yes — this is the most common Brooklyn scenario we handle. We work from the front facade using extension ladders staged on the sidewalk or stoop, and we attach lights to the cornice, window lintels, and iron railings with non-invasive clips rather than screws or nails, which protects historic masonry and landmarked facades. We coordinate timing to avoid blocking pedestrian traffic and pull any sidewalk permits if your block requires them. No backyard, driveway, or roof deck is needed. We just need to see your facade — send a photo or we'll do a quick walk-up assessment before quoting.

We do, and we take them seriously. Dyker Heights sets the standard for Brooklyn holiday lighting, and residents there expect scale and precision — full facade outlines, wrapped trees, lit walkways, and often animated or themed elements. We handle the design, the commercial-grade materials, and critically the electrical load planning so an older home's panel isn't overwhelmed. For displays at that level we build a custom quote rather than a flat package, and we recommend booking early since demand in the neighborhood spikes fast every fall. We also serve neighbors who want a scaled-down but still polished version of the Dyker look.

Brooklyn's harbor and Atlantic-facing neighborhoods — Bay Ridge, Sheepshead Bay, Coney Island, and Manhattan Beach — deal with stronger, salt-carrying winter winds than the borough's interior. We use corrosion-resistant clips, sealed connections, and commercial-grade cord rated for outdoor coastal exposure so lights don't loosen, short, or dull over the season. Facade-mounted runs get extra attachment points to survive gusts, and we check installs after the first strong storm if you're in an exposed waterfront spot. This is exactly why professional installation outperforms big-box DIY kits near the water — those clips fail fast in salt air and wind.

Festive Brooklyn home at night

Light up your Brooklyn home

Free, fixed-price quote within one business day.