{"title":"How to Install a Ceiling Fan with Light Kit","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/home-improvement/how-to-install-a-ceiling-fan-with-light-kit","category":{"slug":"home-improvement","name":"Home Improvement"},"creator":{"name":"Apartment Maintenance","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC37CfppZJjf6hdzaEMQX4Uw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoFRDB9v-RA"},"tldr":"Add a light kit to your ceiling fan in 8 steps. Wire pairing, safety check, and the harness reconnect everyone misses. Done in 30 minutes.","totalDurationSeconds":346,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["screwdriver (Phillips + flathead)","wire stripper","voltage tester","step ladder"],"materials":["wire nuts (yellow + orange)","compatible LED bulbs","ceiling fan light kit","electrical tape"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Turn Off Power at the Breaker and Test","text":"Turn off the power at the breaker, not just at the wall switch. A dual-switch wiring setup can leave one circuit live even when the switch is down. Use a voltage tester to confirm.Find the breaker for the room, flip it off, then come back to the fan and press a non-contact voltage tester against the wires you'll be touching. Only continue when the tester stays silent.If the tester chirps with the breaker off, you're on a circuit you didn't expect. Stop and trace the right breaker before you touch anything else.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":2,"title":"Remove the Existing Shroud or Trim Plate","text":"Most ceiling fans use three screws spaced around the perimeter of the bottom trim. Back each one out with a Phillips screwdriver and keep them in a magnetic tray so they don't roll off the ladder.Once all three are loose, the shroud drops free in your hand. Lower it gently - there's usually a wiring harness still connecting it to the fan body. Set the shroud and harness on a flat surface where the wires can hang free.If your fan has a built-in cover plate instead of a shroud, the same idea applies. Look for screws around the perimeter and back them out one at a time.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":3,"title":"Unplug the Wiring Harness","text":"Most fans use a quick-connect plug instead of bare wires between the shroud and the fan body. Look for a small clip or tab on the side of the connector, press it in, and pull the two halves apart.Set the shroud somewhere flat where the wires can hang loose while you work overhead. Don't let the shroud dangle by its wires - the strain damages the connector pins over time.If your fan has hard-wired bare leads instead of a quick-connect, unscrew the wire nuts and separate the connections. Note which color went to which before you take them apart.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":4,"title":"Find the Capped Light Kit Wires","text":"The light kit wires are usually tucked behind a small plastic cap on the underside of the fan motor. Pop that cap out with a flathead screwdriver and you'll see two wires - a blue one and a white one.Blue is the hot lead reserved for the light kit. White is the neutral. Pull them down so you have enough slack to work with the new kit.If the cap won't pop out, look around the housing for a small access panel or a screw on the underside. Some manufacturers tuck the leads behind a sliding cover instead of a cap.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":5,"title":"Feed Light Kit Wires Through the Center","text":"Hold the new light kit body in one hand and push its black and white leads up through the threaded collar in the fan housing.Thread the locking nut onto the collar from above and snug it by hand. Leave a little room - the pull chain still needs to drop through the same hole cleanly.Most light kits come with the collar pre-attached to the kit body. If yours is loose, screw it on first before you feed the wires up.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":6,"title":"Connect Wires with Wire Nuts","text":"Pair the black wire from the light kit with the blue wire from the fan. Hold the two stripped ends side by side, twist them clockwise about a turn, then spin a yellow or orange wire nut on clockwise until it bites.Do the same for the whites: white from the light kit to white from the fan, cap with a wire nut.Tug each connection to confirm it holds. A solid splice doesn't slip. If a wire pulls free from the nut, redo it with a smaller-gauge nut.Tuck the bundle back up into the housing so nothing pokes out the bottom.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":7,"title":"Reconnect the Harness and Mount the Light Kit","text":"Plug the quick-connect harness back together until it clicks. If you photographed the orientation in step 3, double-check it now.Lift the light kit body up against the fan, line it up with the three screw holes where the old shroud was, and drive each screw home. Don't overtighten - just snug enough that the kit sits flush against the fan housing.The pull chain should now hang down through the center of the light kit body.Watch this moment in the video."},{"number":8,"title":"Mount the Glass Shade and Test","text":"Thread the light pull chain down through the center hole in the shade, then line up the second hole with the fan's own pull chain. Lift the shade into place and spin the retaining nut on by hand until it stops.Twist in your LED bulbs. Match the wattage marked on the kit - going over the rated wattage burns out the socket and can melt the shade.Restore power at the breaker and pull the chain. The light should come on with a soft click. If it doesn't, kill the breaker again and check the wire nuts on the blue and white splices first - a loose nut is the most common cause.Watch this moment in the video."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-22T18:41:02.799Z","published":"2026-05-22T18:28:57.794Z","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."}