Kitchen island lighting has exact answers — how many pendants, how far apart, how high. Get the numbers right and the island becomes the anchor of the kitchen; get them wrong and it looks accidental. Here are the rules.
How Many Pendants?
The formula: island length ÷ (pendant diameter + 30") = number of pendants, rounded down. In practice:
- Up to 5 ft island: 2 pendants, or 1 linear fixture
- 6–7 ft island: 2–3 pendants
- 8 ft and longer: 3 pendants, or 1 large linear fixture
Odd numbers read as more intentional than even — 3 pendants over a long island almost always beats 4.
Spacing
Keep 24–30 inches between pendant centers, and at least 6 inches from each end of the island to the nearest pendant edge. Easiest method: mark the island's center point, place one pendant there (odd count) or split the difference (even count), and work outward.
Hanging Height
The bottom of each pendant should sit 30–36 inches above the countertop — roughly 66–72 inches off the floor. Lower than 30" blocks sightlines across the island; higher than 36" and the light spreads too wide to work as task lighting.
One Linear Fixture Instead of Three Pendants
For islands 7 feet and up, a single linear fixture is the cleaner solution — one electrical box, perfectly even light, no spacing math. It suits modern kitchens especially well:

Industrial Wood Linear Island Chandelier with Cage Shade — warm wood tones that soften modern kitchens, from $398.95
For a more minimal look, a slim LED bar disappears into the architecture and puts all the attention on the light itself:

Minimalist Rectangular LED Suspension Lamp — clean integrated LED, from $199.95
If You Go With Multiple Pendants
Choose shades that direct light downward — the island is a work surface first. Glass and open-bottom metal shades give the best task light; fully enclosed shades are prettier but dimmer at counter level:

Brass Drop Pendant in Handmade Tan Glass — a trio of these over a 7-ft island is a classic, from $131.95
Bulbs and Dimming
Aim for 350–500 lumens per pendant at 2700–3000K, always on a dimmer — full brightness for prep, low for evenings when the island becomes a bar. If pendants are your kitchen's only ceiling light, add recessed cans or a flush mount elsewhere; pendants alone leave the room's corners dark.
Browse the full kitchen island lighting collection, or see everything in pendant lights and kitchen lighting.