{"title":"How to Install a Ceiling Fan","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/home-improvement/how-to-install-a-ceiling-fan","category":{"slug":"home-improvement","name":"Home Improvement"},"creator":{"name":"Terry “The Internet Electrician” Peterman","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCL81H9jdKzuzCfqxV4fBVAA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiIiI4037NE"},"tldr":"Ceiling fan installation in 8 DIY steps. Licensed electrician's method covers the box check, wire ID, receiver wiring, DIP-switch pairing, blades, and test.","totalDurationSeconds":465,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Voltage Tester","Phillips Screwdriver","Flathead Screwdriver","Wire Stripper","Step Ladder"],"materials":["Ceiling Fan Kit (with remote receiver)","Wire Nuts","Fan-Rated Ceiling Box (if replacing)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Turn Off Power and Verify the Ceiling Box","text":"Flip the breaker that controls the ceiling circuit, then test with a voltage tester at the fixture to confirm the power is actually off. Don't trust the switch alone.Next, check the box the fan will hang from. Standard round electrical boxes are not rated for ceiling fans. You need a fan-rated box that can hold at least 50 pounds of dynamic weight.If the existing box is just a light-fixture box, stop and install a proper fan-rated brace box before continuing.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":2,"title":"Hang the Mounting Bracket and Down Rod","text":"Screw the fan's mounting bracket to the ceiling box using the hardware the manufacturer supplies. Don't substitute screws. The kit ones are rated for the fan's weight.Thread the down rod through the bracket according to the instructions.Most kits have a shim or hook slot that lets the fan hang from the bracket while you work both hands free. Use it. Trying to hold the fan and make wire connections at the same time is how connections go sloppy.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":3,"title":"Identify Your Ceiling Wiring","text":"Look at the wires coming out of the ceiling box. A standard fan pre-wire has four: a bare copper or green ground, a white neutral, and two hot wires (black and red) controlled by two wall switches.With a remote-controlled fan you only need one hot source since the remote handles fan vs light separately.Find a helper or use a voltage tester to identify which switch controls which hot wire. Pick the switch the homeowner wants as the master. That's the one you'll connect.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":4,"title":"Wire the Remote Receiver Power Side","text":"Cap off the unused hot wire with a wire nut and tuck it into the box out of the way.Connect the neutral (white from ceiling) to the white on the receiver's power-in side. Connect the master hot (black or red from ceiling) to the black on the receiver's power-in side. Ground wires twist together and connect to the receiver's ground.These three connections feed the receiver. The fan and light get power from the receiver's output side in the next step.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":5,"title":"Wire the Fan and Light Output Side","text":"The opposite side of the receiver has three output wires. Connect white (receiver) to white (fan). Connect black (receiver) to black (fan motor). Connect blue (receiver) to blue (light kit).Ground wires all share a single wire nut with the fan's ground.Leave the small wire antenna sticking out. Don't coil it around anything. A coiled antenna kills the remote's range. It's a few inches of bare wire that needs to sit loose inside the canopy.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":6,"title":"Set a Unique DIP Switch Code","text":"Open the small compartment on the receiver and find the DIP switches (usually four tiny white toggles). Set a pattern that isn't the factory default (all off).Flip the matching switches on the back of the remote transmitter so they match exactly. Any pattern works as long as the receiver and remote match.Skipping this step means your neighbor's identical fan could control your fan. Do it before you button up the canopy. You can't reach the DIP switches later without pulling it back down.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":7,"title":"Tuck the Canopy Wiring and Secure It","text":"Stuff the receiver and wires up into the canopy. Take your time. Pinched wires are a shock hazard and a fire risk.Make sure the antenna isn't pinned against metal.Lift the canopy over the mounting bracket and screw it into place with the canopy screws. The canopy should sit flush against the ceiling with no visible wires poking out.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":8,"title":"Install Blades, Light Kit, and Test","text":"Screw the blade brackets to the motor housing, then attach each fan blade. Hand-tight isn't enough. Use the supplied screws and tighten firmly.Install the light kit onto the bottom of the motor. Add the bulbs and shade.Flip the breaker back on and switch the master wall switch to on. Test the light first, then each fan speed (low, medium, high) with the remote.Check the reverse direction switch on the motor housing if you want to swap between pulling air up (summer) and pushing it down (winter).Watch this moment in the video."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T13:30:34.588Z","published":"2026-04-21T00:39:56.147Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}