If you ask me which single detail most makes a lake house kitchen feel special, it's the lighting. A lake kitchen has to work hard in daylight and then, at dusk when the lake turns pink and gold, become genuinely magical — and only the right lighting does both. It's the thing I obsess over most, and the pendants over the island are where it starts. Here's how I light a lake house kitchen.
Start With Pendants Over the Island
The centrepiece of lake kitchen lighting is the pendants over the island. They give task light for prep, a warm glow for evenings, and anchor the whole room visually — the signature lighting move in a lake house kitchen. I choose simple glass or modern pendants on warm bulbs, sized and placed to the island. Get the island pendants right and they set the tone for the entire kitchen's lighting. They're where I always begin.
Get the Pendant Numbers Right
The pendants only look intentional if the details are right — usually two or three depending on the island's length, evenly spaced, sized in proportion (too-small pendants look lost over a big island), and hung around 30 to 36 inches above the counter so they light the surface without blocking sightlines to the view. These measurements are the difference between island lighting that looks designed and lighting that looks like an afterthought. I get them right every time.
Layer, Don't Rely on One Light
The biggest lighting mistake is one overhead trying to do everything. A lake kitchen needs layers — pendants over the island, under-cabinet task light on the work zones, and sconces or ambient fixtures to fill in. Each layer does a different job, and together they make the kitchen both functional and atmospheric. Layered light gives a room depth and warmth; a single fixture flattens it. Layering is the core principle of good kitchen lighting.
Don't Skip Under-Cabinet Light
Under-cabinet lighting is one of the most useful and most overlooked layers. It lights the work surfaces directly for safe, easy prep, and it adds a beautiful warm glow along the counters in the evening. In a lake kitchen, warm under-cabinet task light combined with the island pendants delivers both the function and the atmosphere. It's a high-value layer that costs little and that I include in nearly every lake kitchen. Most kitchens are missing it, and it shows.
Warm Bulbs, Always
Every bulb in a lake kitchen is warm 2700K — no exceptions. Warm light makes the space inviting and delivers that golden dusk glow; cool or daylight bulbs make even a beautiful kitchen look clinical. And I keep every bulb in the room the same warm temperature, because one cool bulb among warm ones is a visible clash. Warm 2700K throughout is one of the most important and easiest things to get right, and it transforms how a lake kitchen feels at night.
Put It on Dimmers
A lake kitchen needs different light at different times — bright for prepping a big meal, low and golden for a glass of wine as the sun goes down over the water. So I put the key fixtures on dimmers, which let the same lighting go from practical to magical at the turn of a knob. Dimmable warm lighting is what lets a lake kitchen glow softly in the evening, and it's an inexpensive upgrade that pays off every single night. I rarely skip it.
Light Toward the View
I always light a lake kitchen with the view in mind — keeping pendant heights and fixture placement clear of sightlines to the water, and using warm light that complements rather than competes with the lake at dusk. The goal is for the kitchen to glow warmly while the lake glows outside, the two in harmony. Lighting that blocks or fights the view misses the whole point. The view is the star; the lighting is its warm supporting frame.
The Detail That Makes the Magic
Pendants over the island, layered task and ambient light, under-cabinet glow, warm 2700K bulbs, dimmers, and respect for the view — that's how I light a lake house kitchen. It's the detail that most turns a good lake kitchen into a magical one, the thing that makes the room sing when the light goes golden over the water. Of everything I do, the lighting is where the real lake-house magic happens, which is why I never treat it as an afterthought.
Lighting in this kitchen: pendant lighting over the island and warm wall sconces
My friend Clara at The Elmwood Home lights her coastal kitchens with the same warm-at-dusk philosophy — different water, exact same magic when the light goes golden.


