Why $1 LED Bulbs Aren’t Worth It

You’ve seen them: Those $1 LED bulbs at Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, even some gas stations. Tempting, right? Name-brand LEDs cost $3-4, but here’s the same thing for a buck!
Except it’s not the same thing. And that dollar might cost you twenty.
Here’s what’s wrong with bargain-bin LEDs:
- They lie about brightness
I tested three $1 LEDs against a name-brand. Claims: “60W equivalent, 800 lumens.” Reality: 450-550 lumens. That’s 40% dimmer than promised. Your room will be dark. - They lie about color
Packaging says “warm white (2700K).” Reality: Some are 3000K, some 3500K, some even 5000K. No consistency. Your house will look like a mismatched hotel. - They die young
Name-brand LEDs: 15,000-25,000 hour rating (15+ years). Dollar store LEDs: Maybe 5,000 hours if you’re lucky. I bought 10; 4 failed in the first year. - Poor color rendering
CRI (Color Rendering Index) measures how accurate colors look. Good LEDs: 90+. Dollar store LEDs: 70-80. Your food looks dull, skin looks washed out. - They often aren’t dimmable
Even if marked “dimmable,” they buzz or flicker with most dimmers. Or just fail.
The real cost comparison:
Option A: Dollar Store LED
Cost: $1
Actual lifespan: 5,000 hours
Brightness: 500 lumens (so you might need two)
Electricity: 9 watts × 5,000 hours ÷ 1000 × $0.15 = $6.75
Total cost per 5,000 hours: $7.75
Option B: Name-brand LED (on sale)
Cost: $2.50 (sale price common)
Lifespan: 15,000 hours
Brightness: 800 lumens (as promised)
Electricity: 9 watts × 15,000 hours ÷ 1000 × $0.15 = $20.25
Total cost per 15,000 hours: $22.75
Now equalize to 15,000 hours:
Dollar store: $7.75 × 3 = $23.25 (and you’re changing bulbs 3x)
Name-brand: $22.75 (change once)
The “cheap” bulb actually costs more. And gives worse light. And fails more often.
The sweet spot: Wait for sales at Home Depot, Lowe’s, or Costco. I regularly see:
8-pack Philips LEDs: $15 ($1.87 each)
4-pack GE LEDs: $7 ($1.75 each)
EcoSmart (Home Depot brand): Often $1.50 each
Better bulbs, real warranties (5-10 years), consistent quality, actual brightness as promised.
That dollar store “deal”? It’s lighting’s version of fast food – cheap upfront, costs more long-term, leaves you unsatisfied.
Buy once, buy right. Your eyes and your wallet will thank you.
