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Foot-candle to Lux Converter — Building Converter
Lux ↔ Foot-candle Converter
Architectural
0

Formula
01

What this converter does

This converter turns foot-candles into lux and back. The foot-candle is the US illuminance unit; lux is the metric one. One foot-candle equals 10.764 lux. Type a value and read the result instantly, or swap direction.

A 50-foot-candle workspace equals about 538 lux. For the reverse, use the lux to foot-candle converter.

02

The units it covers

Illuminance is luminous flux per unit area. Every unit converts through the lux with a fixed ratio.

View all units & their values
UnitSymbolValueMainly used
Luxlx1SI unit (lumen per m²)
Foot-candlefc10.764US lighting design (lumen per ft²)
Lumen per m²lm/m²1Same as lux
Photph10000CGS unit (lumen per cm²)
03

The formula

Each unit has a fixed value in lux, so converting between any two goes through lux once:

Conversion
result = value × factor_from ÷ factor_to

Where:

  • value = the illuminance you typed, in the “from” unit
  • factor_from = the “from” unit’s value in lux
  • factor_to = the “to” unit’s value in lux
04

Worked example

Convert a task level of 50 foot-candles to lux.

Step 1 · The factor
1 fc = 10.7639 lx
Step 2 · Multiply
50 × 10.7639 = 538.2 lx

So 50 foot-candles is about 538 lux — good for detailed work.

05

The units in this example

Foot-candlesymbol: fc

The US illuminance unit — one lumen per square foot, common in North American lighting codes.

Common illuminance conversions
  • 1 fc = 10.764 lx
  • Office ≈ 46 fc
  • Parking lot ≈ 2 fc
  • Detailed task ≈ 75 fc
Luxsymbol: lx

The SI illuminance unit — one lumen per square metre, used in metric lighting standards.

Common illuminance conversions
  • 1 lx = 0.0929 fc
  • Office ≈ 500 lx
  • Corridor ≈ 100 lx
  • Overcast day ≈ 1,000 lx
06

FAQ

QHow many lux is 50 foot-candles?
About 538 lux — multiply the foot-candle figure by 10.764.
QWhich unit do US codes use?
US lighting codes and guides generally use foot-candles, not lux.
08

Sources

NIST — SI units · US DOE — lighting

InfoCalculator Editorial Team Fact-checked
Updated Jul 2026 · 3 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team