Vertical indoor hydroponic farm with LED grow light bars showing plant light intensity setup

PPFD and PAR Explained: How to Measure Light for Plants

When comparing grow lights, you will inevitably encounter terms like PAR and PPFD and DLI. These concepts are essential for objectively evaluating grow lighting, but they are also frequently misused or misrepresented in the industry. This article explains what each term means, how to interpret the values and how to use them to make informed purchasing decisions.

What is PAR?

PAR stands for Photosynthetically Active Radiation. It refers to the wavelength range of 400 to 700 nm, the portion of the light spectrum that plants use for photosynthesis. PAR is a wavelength range, not a unit. It tells you which part of the spectrum is relevant for plants, but not how much light is actually present. For that, we need PPFD.

What is PPFD?

PPFD stands for Photosynthetic Photon Flux Density. It is a measure of the number of photons in the PAR range that fall per second on a surface of one square meter. The unit is micromoles per m² per second (µmol/m²/s). PPFD is therefore the most direct measure of the amount of plant-growth-promoting light a lamp delivers at a specific position. Our Titan Grow 900, for example, publishes a full PPFD map at multiple hanging heights so you can verify actual values before buying.

PPFD target values by application

Application Recommended PPFD (µmol/m²/s)
Seedlings and cuttings 100 to 250
Low-light houseplants 50 to 200
Herbs and lettuce (vegetative) 200 to 400
Tomato, pepper (vegetative) 400 to 600
Flowering phase, demanding crops 600 to 900
Professional growing (CO2 required) 900 to 1500

What is DLI?

DLI stands for Daily Light Integral, the total daily light dose. It is the total quantity of PAR photons a plant receives over a full day. DLI is calculated by multiplying PPFD by the photoperiod in hours and a conversion factor. The formula is: DLI = PPFD x hours of light x 3600 / 1,000,000. A lettuce plant typically needs a DLI of 12 to 17 mol/m²/day for optimal growth, a tomato in flowering requires 20 to 30 mol/m²/day. While a cannabis plant needs a DLI of 30 to 40 mol/m²/day.

How to spot misleading specifications

Not every manufacturer is transparent. Watch out for these warning signs: PPFD values that do not state the hanging height, only the peak PPFD in the centre without a uniformity map, lumen values instead of µmol/s or PPFD (lumen measures human visual perception, not plant growth), and the absence of an independently tested report or IES file. Understanding the diodes inside your lamp is also key — see our Samsung LM281B vs LM301H comparison to learn how diode choice directly affects efficiency.

Conclusion

PAR, PPFD and DLI are the three concepts every serious grower needs to understand. They give you the tools to compare grow lights objectively and optimise the lighting in your space. Trust manufacturers who publish PPFD maps and independently verified specifications, and use these values as your guide when designing your lighting schedule.

Browse our full LED grow light range, all supplied with complete PPFD maps and efficiency documentation. If you are just starting out, the Titan Start is designed specifically for seedlings and cuttings at the lower end of the PPFD range.