Outdoor Lights Not Working: PIR Sensors, Photocells, IP Ratings & Earthing Faults

Quick Answer: Most outdoor light failures are caused by: a failed lamp (LED driver or bulb), a failed PIR sensor or photocell, a wiring fault exacerbated by moisture ingress (poor IP-rated fitting), or an RCD trip from a ground fault. Start by confirming 230V at the fitting, then test the lamp independently. If the lamp is fine and power is present, suspect the PIR/photocell control. Always verify the IP rating is appropriate for the mounting location before condemning the fitting as faulty.

Summary

Outdoor lighting faults are one of the more common callbacks for domestic electricians. The outdoor environment is hostile to electrical equipment — UV, temperature extremes, rain, frost, and insects all attack fittings and connections. A fitting that worked for 5 years may fail because the IP gasket has degraded and water has entered, corroding a terminal.

The diagnostic approach for outdoor lights follows the same logic as all electrical fault finding: confirm supply, then confirm control, then confirm lamp. The additional outdoor-specific steps are: check the IP rating of the fitting (is it appropriate?), check for moisture ingress in the fitting or back-box, and check the RCD has not tripped on a ground fault.

Understanding how PIR (passive infrared) motion sensors and photocells (light sensors/dawn-to-dusk sensors) work is essential because these controls are common on outdoor lights and their failure modes are specific.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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SYMPTOM: Outdoor light doesn't come on at all
     |
     ├── Other outdoor lights working?
     │   No → Outdoor circuit RCD/MCB tripped? Reset and test.
     │   Yes → Fault is at this fitting only ↓
     ├── Check supply at fitting terminals (multimeter)
     │   No 230V → Trace back through outdoor socket/spur FCU
     │   230V present ↓
     ├── Bypass PIR or photocell (connect direct to live supply for test)
     │   Lamp lights → PIR/photocell failed — replace
     │   Lamp still doesn't light ↓
     └── Remove lamp and test in a known-good fitting
         Lamp works → Fitting or driver faulty
         Lamp doesn't work → Lamp (or driver) faulty — replace
SYMPTOM: PIR light doesn't trigger reliably
     |
     ├── Check time-of-day: is it daylight? (if photocell-linked, won't trigger in daylight)
     │   Yes → Normal operation
     │   No ↓
     ├── Walk in front of PIR at close range (2m)
     │   No trigger → Check PIR power supply, clean lens, check sensitivity setting
     │   Triggers close → PIR range set too low — increase sensitivity ↓
     ├── Does PIR trigger on animals/cars but not people?
     │   → Sensitivity too low or lens obstructed — adjust and clean
     └── PIR triggers for no apparent reason (false alarms)
         → Adjust aim to remove heat sources from field of view
         → Reduce sensitivity
         → Check for spider webs on lens

Detailed Guidance

Moisture Ingress Diagnosis

Outdoor light failures are frequently caused by moisture entering the fitting or junction box. Signs of moisture ingress:

Fixing moisture ingress:

  1. Remove the fitting and back-box
  2. Dry out thoroughly (hair dryer on low heat, or leave in a warm dry environment)
  3. Identify the ingress point — often a failed gasket, cracked fitting body, or cable entry not sealed
  4. Replace the fitting if the body is cracked or the gasket is perished
  5. Ensure cable entry is sealed with appropriate gland or silicone
  6. Check the IP rating of the replacement fitting is appropriate for the mounting position

PIR Sensor Testing and Adjustment

Testing a PIR:

  1. Confirm power at the PIR terminals (230V between live and neutral)
  2. Cover the PIR lens with tape (to simulate darkness)
  3. Walk in front of the PIR — if properly functioning, it should switch the output on within a few seconds
  4. Uncover the lens — the PIR should switch off after the set hold time

Adjustment settings (on most PIRs):

PIR not detecting:

PIR wiring (4-wire type): Live in, live out to lamp, switched live from the lamp switch, and neutral. The 4th wire (switched live) allows the PIR to be bypassed from a wall switch.

Photocell (Dusk-to-Dawn) Faults

A photocell switches the light on at dusk and off at dawn. It consists of an LDR (light-dependent resistor) and a switching relay.

Photocell runs all day (light on in daylight):

Photocell doesn't activate at night (light off):

Replacing photocell: Most external photocells are standard Schuko-type plugged into the top of the fitting (twist and remove). Universal replacement photocells (B22 or GU10 types, or external screw-cap type) are available from electrical wholesalers.

LED Driver Failure

LED lights use a driver (power conversion unit) to convert 230V AC to the low-voltage DC required by the LED chips. Drivers fail — typically after 3–8 years depending on quality. Symptoms:

Testing: With power isolated, disconnect the driver. Apply 230V AC to the input terminals. Measure DC voltage output — should match the specification (typically 12V or 24V DC). No output = failed driver.

Replacement: Many fitting-specific drivers are not interchangeable. Check the output voltage, current rating (mA), and LED array connection type before ordering a replacement. Some fittings are more economically replaced as a complete unit.

IP Rating Check for Installation Location

Location Minimum IP Recommended
Sheltered soffit (under eaves, not directly rained on) IP44 IP65
Wall mounting, exposed position IP44 IP65
Above front door, exposed IP44 IP65
Buried ground fitting (uplighter in ground) IP67 IP68
Swimming pool surrounds IP68 Consult specialist
Greenhouse interior IP44 IP55

Using a fitting with insufficient IP rating in an exposed position is a guarantee of early failure and potentially a safety hazard. If in doubt, use IP65.

Frequently Asked Questions

The outdoor RCD keeps tripping after rain. What do I do?

This indicates a ground fault — water is creating a conductive path between live conductors and earth in one or more outdoor fittings. To trace: isolate each outdoor circuit branch one at a time and test for insulation resistance (IR) between line and earth with a Megger. The fault is in the branch that fails the IR test. Check every fitting in that branch for moisture ingress.

My PIR triggered reliably for 3 years and now it won't detect people but still detects warm cars. Why?

The PIR lens is most likely contaminated. Spiders build webs across PIR lenses — the fine filaments absorb warmth and the PIR responds to the warm web instead of a person. Cars have much greater thermal mass and will trigger even through a moderately contaminated lens. Clean the lens with a dry cloth.

Can I install outdoor lighting myself without being an electrician?

If you are replacing like-for-like (same fitting position, same wiring), this is generally not Part P notifiable. If you are adding a new outdoor circuit or spur, this is notifiable (special location — outdoors) and must be done or certificated by a registered electrician or notified to Building Control.

Regulations & Standards