How to hire holiday light installation in Warwick, RI
Holiday lights are not a product purchase — they are a full-service contract. Design, install, maintenance, takedown, and off-season storage are five different jobs. The pros who do all five well are booked by mid-November.
What to know before booking holiday lights in Warwick
Warwick is predominantly ranch-style and Cape Cod homes built between the 1940s and 1970s, with pockets of older Buttonwoods and Pawtuxet Village colonials. Many properties have basements prone to moisture, original oil tanks, and HVAC systems nearing end of life.
Warwick sits on Narragansett Bay, exposing homes to coastal humidity, nor'easters, and salt air. Freeze-thaw cycles are common from November through March and ice dams are frequent on older homes with shallow attics.
How we price it
These are the factors that move a quote up or down. Knowing them helps you share the right context upfront so we can quote your specific situation accurately — and so you can compare bids on apples-to-apples scope.
Roofline is the per-LF anchor — eaves, gables, dormer trim, ridges, and any other run that gets lit. A typical 2,000 sqft colonial has 120–180 linear feet of primary roofline. Tree wraps, window frames, wreath hangs, and column wraps are priced separately because they are different SKUs of installation time. Most full-service quotes itemize roofline, trees (per tree, by trunk diameter and wrap height), and accent runs — ask for it broken down so you can scale up or down on what you actually want lit.
C9 LED (the large strawberry-shape bulb on commercial-grade wire) is the residential standard for roofline — visible from the street, rated for outdoor exposure, 50,000+ hour life. C7 is the same form factor smaller, used for window frames and detail work. Mini-lights are for tree wrapping and indoor displays. LED versus incandescent is not close anymore — same display draws roughly 90% less power, lasts 10x longer, and runs cool enough not to melt snow or warm shingles. The premium for commercial-grade LED over big-box retail strands is real, but if the installer owns the lights and re-fits them every year, the math works out fast.
A single-story ranch with a 4/12 pitch is a ladder-and-walk job — one installer, 2–3 hours. A two-story colonial with a 10/12 pitch needs two installers, harness anchors, and roughly twice the time. Three stories or anything with a steep slate or metal roof needs scaffolding or a lift, which is what pushes large Victorian or contemporary homes into the $2,000+ band. Ridges and gables that can only be reached from the roof itself (not the eaves) require fall protection regardless of how the rest of the house gets lit.
Tree wraps are priced by trunk diameter, wrap height, and bulb spacing. A 6-inch evergreen wrapped to 15 ft with mini-lights at 3-inch spacing takes 1,500+ bulbs and 90 minutes per tree. Wrapping the canopy of a mature deciduous (above the lowest branches) is a different conversation — usually quoted per hour or declined entirely because it requires a lift. Window candles, wreath lighting, garland with bows, pathway stake lights, and inflatables all add line items. Decide what story you want the house to tell, then ask the pro to scope to that.
A bare install is half the job. A full-service package includes: design consult, install before Thanksgiving, mid-season service call within 48 hours for outages or wind damage, takedown in the first two weeks of January, and off-season storage on labeled racks in a climate-controlled warehouse. The same lights re-fit your roofline next November — no measuring, no untangling, no buying replacements because the strands sat in a hot attic all year. The full-service package usually runs 1.4–1.7x the bare install number, and it is what makes the program sustainable year over year.
Trimlight, Jellyfish Lighting, Everlights, and Gemstone Lights are app-controlled RGB LED strips installed once into a custom-bent aluminum channel along your eaves and gables. They disappear into the trim during the day, run any color or animation at night, and work for holidays from Halloween through July 4th. Up-front cost is significant ($30–55 per linear foot installed) but there is no annual install or storage charge. The math breaks even against full-service C9 in roughly 5–7 years, and after that it is free year-round trim lighting. Worth a quote if you plan to be in the house long-term.
Most full-service installers in southern New England book their fall calendars by mid-November. New customers calling on Black Friday are usually offered a January install for next year or a stripped-down "lights only" package. Book by October for the full design conversation and your choice of install date. Existing customers get re-booked automatically each summer for the same week as the prior year — that is part of how full-service works.
Project sizes we handle
Three scopes that cover almost everything in this trade. We'll help you place your project on the right tier based on the property, what you've already tried, and how long you plan to stay.
You buy retail mini-lights or C9 strands at a big-box. The installer hangs them on roofline and a tree or two using clips you provide or supply at cost. No design, no service calls, no takedown included. Cheapest option, but you own the storage problem and the next-year detangling.
- Retail-grade strands (Home Depot / Lowe's) — 1-year typical outdoor life
- Plastic clip-on roof clips at $0.10–0.20 each
- Standard outdoor extension cord with weatherproof inline timer
Best for: Owners who want a simple roofline display, already have lights from prior years, and are happy to take them down themselves in January.
Commercial-grade C9 LED strands custom-cut to your roofline, professional install with proper clips for your gutter or shingle type, mid-season service for outages, January takedown, and off-season storage on labeled racks. Same lights re-fit your home year after year. The standard residential package in southern New England.
- Commercial C9 LED on 18 AWG SPT-2 weatherproof wire
- Insulated clips matched to your trim — gutter clip, shingle clip, or magnetic clip on metal
- Outdoor GFCI splitters and weatherproof timer or smart plug
- Custom-cut to your roofline — no excess wire, no daisy-chained extension cords
Best for: Most single-family homes. Owners who want a polished display, want someone to fix outages, and never want to handle lights themselves.
App-controlled RGB LED pucks installed once into a custom aluminum channel along eaves and gables. Programmable for any holiday or sports color from your phone. Invisible during the day, runs cool, manufacturer warranties of 3–25 years on the LEDs. One-time install — no annual install, takedown, or storage charge.
- Trimlight / Jellyfish Lighting / Everlights / Gemstone — RGB LED in extruded aluminum channel
- Color-matched channel painted to fascia or soffit color
- Low-voltage transformer mounted at the panel
- App control (iOS / Android) with scheduling and preset scenes
Best for: Homeowners staying 5+ years who want year-round trim lighting (Halloween through July 4th), and want to stop the annual install conversation entirely.
What we reach for and why
The materials and techniques behind a job that lasts — so you know what's in the quote and why it's there.
Strawberry-shape bulb on 18 AWG SPT-2 weatherproof wire. Each bulb is roughly 0.4 watts (versus 7 watts incandescent), rated for 50,000+ hours of outdoor use, and stays cool to the touch. The wire is heavier gauge than retail strands, can be cut to exact length and re-ended with new male/female plugs, and survives 5-8 seasons of install/takedown cycles without insulation cracking.
No staples, ever — they puncture the wire jacket and start fires. The clip choice depends on what you are clipping to. Gutter clips (the all-in-one that grabs both the gutter lip and the shingle edge) are the most common. Shingle-only clips with a sharp inside angle slip under the first row of shingles without lifting. Magnetic clips are mandatory on standing-seam metal roofs — anything else damages the panel coating. Snap-on clips are for K-style gutters specifically.
Mini-lights wrapped from the base of the trunk upward in a tight spiral, 2-3 inches between wraps. A 15-ft trunk wrap takes 1,000-1,500 bulbs and 60-90 minutes per tree. The wrap should be tight enough that wind cannot whip the strands but loose enough that the bark is not girdled — too-tight wraps left on for years can damage living trees. Always wrap with the cord plug at the base, never at the top.
A typical 150-LF C9 LED display draws about 60 watts total — runs comfortably on a single 15-amp GFCI outdoor outlet. Incandescent versions of the same display would draw 1,000+ watts and require multiple circuits. Every outdoor extension run must be GFCI-protected at the outlet. The installer should map out which outlet feeds which run before install — not figure it out with extension cords on install day.
Standard practice is a weatherproof outdoor timer that runs dusk-to-midnight, or a smart plug (Wemo, Kasa, Lutron outdoor) on a schedule. Avoid leaving lights on 24/7 — even LED lights running constantly for 6 weeks shortens the strand life and runs up the kWh count. A dusk sensor plus a midnight off is the standard schedule.
After January takedown, full-service installers store each home's lights on a custom rack labeled with the address — strands rolled (not balled), wreaths in covered bins, tree wraps spooled separately. Climate-controlled warehouse keeps the plastic from getting brittle and the LEDs from heat damage. Same lights re-fit the same house next year because nothing got mixed up or replaced.
RGB LED pucks (each puck is one addressable pixel) installed into a custom-bent aluminum channel that runs along the underside of the eave or fascia. Channel is color-matched to the trim so it disappears in daylight. App control runs preset color scenes for every holiday, sports teams, and custom programs. Manufacturer warranties on the LEDs range from 3 years (entry) to 25 years (Gemstone). Installed once — no annual touch.
What to watch for
A short list of the things that actually matter for safety, code, and your peace of mind. Worth confirming with any pro before you sign — we expect these questions and we're happy you ask.
What else might come up
Most projects touch more than one trade. Here's where this one usually overlaps with others — so you can plan ahead instead of scrambling.
Holiday lights need GFCI protection on every outdoor circuit. Many homes built before 1990 have a single non-GFCI exterior outlet that is not adequate for a full display. An electrician can add a GFCI outlet at the soffit or eave for $200-450 — done once, useful forever. Permanent integrated LED systems also need a low-voltage transformer wired in at the panel.
Installers work directly on the roof and at the eaves — they often see roof issues homeowners do not. A good installer will tell you about a soft fascia board, a lifted shingle, or rotted soffit before they clip into it. Get the roof repair done before install so the clips have something solid to grab.
Clean gutters mean clean gutter clips. Gutters full of wet leaves are heavy, sag, and pull the entire light strand down in the first wind. Schedule the gutter cleaning the week before light install so the clips snap on clean and the gutters hold the load through January.
Wrapping a tree with broken or dead branches just lights up the deadwood. Have an arborist remove deadwood and rub points before the installer wraps. For mature trees being wrapped to 15+ ft, the same lift that the arborist uses can sometimes be shared with the installer — coordinating saves on lift fees.
Heavy snow on lit roofs and trees can pull strands loose. A snow removal plan that includes raking the lower 3 ft of roof edge after major storms (roof rake on a long pole) prevents both ice dams and strand damage. Coordinate so the snow crew does not pile snow on a tree wrap or shovel salt onto a low-mounted pathway light.
Most southern New England single-family homes land at $500–1,500 for a full-service roofline package with C9 LEDs. Wrap a few trees and add window candles and you are at $1,200–2,500. Permanent integrated LED systems (Trimlight, Jellyfish Lighting, Everlights) run $3,500–8,000 one-time install plus app control year-round.
Linear footage of roofline drives the base number, but two-story access, the number of tree wraps, and whether the package includes service and storage move the total more than bulb count does.
See what drives priceWhat we show up with
The equipment we bring is part of what separates a real job from a shortcut. Here's what to expect on a typical visit.
Surface-specific attachment for C9 / C7 strands. Gutter clips for K-style or half-round gutters, shingle clips for direct shingle mount, magnetic clips for standing-seam metal roofs. Multiple types stocked per job — never staples or nails.
Build C9 strands to exact length on-site. Cut SPT-2 wire to the run, crimp on socket connectors at the correct spacing (8-inch or 12-inch standard), terminate with male/female end caps. No excess wire, no chained extension cords, clean look.
OSHA-compliant fall protection for any work above 6 ft on a residential roof. Anchor screws into rafters under the shingle, harness clips to anchor with retractable lanyard. Mandatory on two-story and steeper-pitch work.
Extends 12-25 ft for hanging strands on eaves, wreaths on high gables, and lights on tree branches from the ground — reduces the amount of ladder and roof work needed.
Single-story and most two-story work. Fiberglass (not aluminum) because lights are electrical. Stabilizer arm prevents gutter damage and keeps the ladder off the strand being installed.
Wraps tree-wrap mini-lights onto labeled spools at takedown. Each spool tagged with the tree it came from, so the same lights re-fit the same tree next year with no measuring or recutting.
Test every outdoor outlet for GFCI protection before connecting load. Set the display to dusk-to-midnight on a smart plug (Wemo, Kasa, Lutron) or weatherproof mechanical timer — never on a 24/7 schedule.
How a job goes
Design consult & roofline measure
Walk the property with you. Measure roofline footage from the ground or with aerial imagery, identify trees to be wrapped, confirm bulb type and color, locate outdoor outlets, and discuss display priorities. Quote follows this — itemized roofline, trees, accents, and full-service add-ons.
What you see: The installer at the curb with a tape, a phone for aerial measurements, and a clipboard — walking the house and asking what you want lit.
Strand build & pre-fit
Custom-build SPT-2 strands to the exact lengths measured. Sockets crimped at standard spacing, ends terminated with male/female plugs. Done at the shop before install day so the crew arrives with strands labeled per house. For returning customers, last year's strands come off the rack pre-fit to the house.
What you see: Nothing — this happens at the installer's warehouse before install day.
Install day
Two installers for a typical two-story — one on the ladder or harness, one feeding strands and clips from below. Roofline clipped first, then trees, then accents and wreaths. GFCI outlets tested, smart plug or timer set, lights turned on for the customer walk-through.
What you see: Crew arrives early morning with strands pre-labeled per house. Ladders or lift in place, harnesses on for any two-story work, finished display lit by mid-afternoon.
Mid-season service (as needed)
Outages, wind damage, or animal damage during the season are repaired within 48 hours of the call. Crew arrives with matched spare strands and parts. Included in the package — no per-call charge.
What you see: Same crew, same truck, usually a day or two after you flagged the outage. Strand swapped, bulb replaced, or section re-clipped.
January takedown
Lights come down within the first two weeks of January. Strands rolled (not balled) onto labeled spools, tree wraps spooled separately, wreaths in covered bins. Everything tagged with the house address. Quick check for damage; failed bulbs and strands replaced at the warehouse before next season.
What you see: Same crew on a milder January day. Lights off the house, everything packed onto the truck for warehouse storage.
Off-season storage & next-year re-fit
Lights stored on labeled racks in a climate-controlled warehouse. Damage assessed and repaired in spring. Re-booking happens in summer for the same week as the prior year. Next November, the same lights return to the same house, pre-fit and ready to clip — no measuring, no detangling, no replacements.
What you see: A re-booking email or call from the installer in July or August to confirm next year's install date.
- Address of the house (so the installer can pull aerial imagery and measure roofline before quoting)
- Photos of the front, sides, and rear elevations — especially of any trim, gables, or dormers you want lit
- Approximate stories (1, 1.5, 2, 3) and rough roof pitch if you know it
- What you want lit: roofline only, or also trees, windows, columns, wreaths, pathway
- Whether you want full-service (install + service + takedown + storage) or install-only
- Photos from prior years if you have had lights before — easiest way to show "we want this again, but better"
- Color preference (warm white, cool white, multicolor, RGB programmable)
- Number and approximate height of trees you want wrapped
- Whether you have outdoor GFCI outlets and roughly where they are
- Target "on by" date — most installers run Thanksgiving through first week of January
- Steel or copper gutters (need different clips than aluminum)
- Standing-seam metal roof on any part of the house (mandatory magnetic clips, not standard)
- Slate, tile, or cedar shake roof (often needs lift access — no walking on the roof)
- No outdoor outlets near the front of the house
- Mature trees you want wrapped above 20 ft (lift required — confirm before booking)
Permits, timing, and what's local to Warwick
Permits & regulations
Warwick issues permits through the Building Official's office in Apponaug. Coastal and bay-front properties commonly fall in FEMA AE/VE zones and require elevation certificates plus a CRMC Assent for work within 200 ft of tidal water.
Permit authority: Warwick Building Department / Building Official (https://www.warwickri.gov/building-department)
What's local to Warwick
Flood-zone exposure along Greenwich Bay and the Pawtuxet River drives recurring sump-pump, backflow-valve, and elevation work.
What homeowners ask us
Where else we serve
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