13 Products
Emergency light department
Shop emergency lights by category
Compare the main emergency lights paths before narrowing by application, rating, mounting, output, environment and project fit.
Coverage planning
Match head style, output and mounting height to the egress area.
Battery backup
Review voltage, runtime, remote capacity and replacement needs.
Environment rating
Choose wet location or hazardous fixtures when the jobsite requires it.
Quote support
Send specs, counts and project notes for guided pricing.
Emergency Lights buyer guide
How to choose remote emergency lights
Remote emergency lights help extend egress coverage from a compatible battery unit to nearby doors, corridors, equipment rooms and other areas that need emergency illumination without another full fixture.
- Confirm the remote head voltage and wattage match the battery unit before choosing a head or remote-capable fixture.
- Plan the distance, wire run and mounting location so coverage reaches the intended path.
- Use wet-location or outdoor-rated remote heads where moisture or exterior exposure is involved.
When do I need remote emergency lights?
Use remote heads when one emergency unit can power additional lamp heads in nearby areas that still need code-ready coverage.
Can any emergency light power remote heads?
No. The fixture needs remote capability and enough capacity for the connected heads.