Christmas light installation in Port Chester
★ Port Chester, New York · Westchester County

Christmas light installation for Port Chester's tight-knit blocks and busy two-family homes

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

Since 20065.0★ GoogleLicensed & Insured

Port Chester runs on a different rhythm than the quieter estate corners of Westchester County, and our crews know it. This is a working, densely settled village along the Byram River near the Connecticut line, full of multi-family houses, narrow lot lines, and porches that sit close to the sidewalk. Residents here hire us because they want their displays done right the first time — neatly, safely, and without ladders propped against a neighbor's fence. Whether you own a two-family near the downtown core, a single-family on the village's residential side streets, or a unit in one of the newer developments near the waterfront, we tailor each install to the property's scale. From our White Plains depot, Port Chester is a straightforward 30-mile run, so we keep service prompt through the holiday season.

Lighting Port Chester, neighborhood by neighborhood

We light homes across all of Port Chester, from the densely packed blocks near the Main Street and Westchester Avenue commercial corridor to the quieter residential streets toward the village edges and the redeveloped waterfront sections near the harbor. Because Port Chester sits right against the Connecticut border, we coordinate routes with our work in neighboring communities we already serve — including Bronxville to the south, Bedford and Briarcliff Manor to the west, and Buchanan, Cortlandt, and Ardsley as we move through the county. If you're on one of the hillier streets above downtown or in the flatter blocks near the river, we'll scope access and parking in advance so installation day stays smooth even on the tightest village lots.

Built for Port Chester homes

Port Chester's housing stock leans toward early-20th-century two-family homes, vinyl-sided colonials, and a growing number of newer townhouse and apartment developments near the waterfront. That mix means we frame a lot of steep gable rooflines, narrow porch columns, and shared-wall facades where clean, symmetrical roofline lighting reads best from the street. Street trees here are mature — pin oaks, Norway maples, and the occasional London plane lining the residential blocks — and we wrap or uplight them with weighted attention to overhead utility lines, which run close in many parts of the village. The proximity to the Sound brings damp, salty winter air, so we use commercial-grade bulbs and sealed connectors that hold up far better than big-box strands on these exposed, wind-facing elevations near the river and harbor.

Why local experience matters

Port Chester's biggest installation challenge is density. Houses sit close together, many are two- and three-family structures with steep peaks, and street parking is at a premium — so a contractor who knows how to stage equipment without blocking driveways or neighbors matters. We secure every clip and connector against the damp, gusty winter weather that blows off Long Island Sound just a few miles away, salt-laden air that chews through cheap retail light strings. We also handle landlord-tenant coordination cleanly for the village's many rental and multi-family properties, scheduling installs that work around occupied units. Everything is professional-grade, fully insured, and tested before we leave the curb.

Pricing in Port Chester

Port Chester is a practical, value-minded market, and we price accordingly. Roofline packages start around $599, and most single- and two-family homes here land between $1,200 and $2,800 depending on linear footage, peak height, and whether you add tree wraps or porch accents. Multi-family and rental properties get itemized quotes so owners can split or scale the display. Every package includes installation, takedown, and in-season service.

Service area

We also serve near Port Chester

Christmas lighting in Port Chester — FAQ

Christmas light installation in Port Chester, 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 Port Chester installation in September or October. Spots fill quickly, especially in popular neighborhoods.

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

Yes — multi-family work is a big part of what we do in Port Chester, since two- and three-family homes make up so much of the village. We coordinate access with owners and tenants ahead of time, scope which units and entrances will be decorated, and stage our equipment to avoid blocking shared driveways or occupied parking. For landlords, we can light a single facade for curb appeal or do a full roofline-plus-porch display. We provide itemized quotes so the cost is clear and easy to allocate across units or buildings if you own more than one property in the village.

Port Chester's residential streets are dense and street parking is competitive, so we plan logistics before the crew arrives. We confirm where we can stage the truck and ladders, work efficiently to minimize curb time, and avoid blocking neighbors' driveways or the narrow shared lanes common on the village's side streets. For homes near the busy downtown corridor or on the hillier blocks above Main Street, we may schedule earlier in the day when parking is easier. Just let us know about any permit zones or building access rules and we'll work within them.

They're built for it. Port Chester sits just a few miles from Long Island Sound, and the damp, salty, gusty air that blows in over the winter destroys ordinary retail light strings — corroding connectors and dimming bulbs within a season. We use commercial-grade products with sealed, weather-rated connections, and we anchor every run securely so wind off the water doesn't loosen clips on your steep gable peaks or exposed porch fronts. If anything fails during the season, our in-season service covers it, so you're not climbing a ladder in January to fix a dark section near the river.

Yes — multi-family work is a big part of what we do in Port Chester, since two- and three-family homes make up so much of the village. We coordinate access with owners and tenants ahead of time, scope which units and entrances will be decorated, and stage our equipment to avoid blocking shared driveways or occupied parking. For landlords, we can light a single facade for curb appeal or do a full roofline-plus-porch display. We provide itemized quotes so the cost is clear and easy to allocate across units or buildings if you own more than one property in the village.

Port Chester's residential streets are dense and street parking is competitive, so we plan logistics before the crew arrives. We confirm where we can stage the truck and ladders, work efficiently to minimize curb time, and avoid blocking neighbors' driveways or the narrow shared lanes common on the village's side streets. For homes near the busy downtown corridor or on the hillier blocks above Main Street, we may schedule earlier in the day when parking is easier. Just let us know about any permit zones or building access rules and we'll work within them.

They're built for it. Port Chester sits just a few miles from Long Island Sound, and the damp, salty, gusty air that blows in over the winter destroys ordinary retail light strings — corroding connectors and dimming bulbs within a season. We use commercial-grade products with sealed, weather-rated connections, and we anchor every run securely so wind off the water doesn't loosen clips on your steep gable peaks or exposed porch fronts. If anything fails during the season, our in-season service covers it, so you're not climbing a ladder in January to fix a dark section near the river.

Festive Port Chester home at night

Light up your Port Chester home

Free, fixed-price quote within one business day.