Park your vehicle 25 feet from a flat vertical wall on level ground, measure the height from the ground to the center of each light, then run a horizontal tape line across the wall 2 inches lower than that measurement. Loosen the mounting and hinge bolts, point each light straight forward, and adjust until the center of the beam’s hot spot lands on the tape line. Keep both lights equidistant from the vehicle’s centerline, tighten everything down, and you’re done. The whole job takes about 20 minutes and makes the difference between lights that reach far down the road and lights that blind oncoming drivers.
Key Takeaways
- Park 25 feet from a vertical wall on flat, level ground before touching any adjustment bolts.
- Mark a reference line on the wall 2 inches lower than the measured height of your light centers.
- Aim each light so the center of its hot spot sits on the line, with both beams equidistant from the vehicle’s centerline.
- Fog lights follow a different spec: the top of the beam should sit 4 inches under the lamp center at 25 feet.
- Re-aim any time ride height changes, such as after a lift kit, new tires, or a heavy cargo setup.
Why Proper Aiming Matters
Aiming is the most important part of any auxiliary light installation. A light that points too high throws its beam pattern into oncoming traffic and can briefly blind other drivers. A light that points too low dumps its output onto the pavement a few car lengths ahead and wastes the distance performance you paid for.The procedure here follows common industry practice, which traces back to the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) J583 standard, and it works for round driving lights, pods, and light bars alike.
What You’ll Need
- Flat, level ground: A driveway or garage floor works well.
- A vertical wall: It needs to be wide enough to project both beams. A garage door is ideal.
- Measuring tape: For light height and the 25-foot distance.
- Masking tape: To mark the reference line on the wall.
- Hand tools: Whatever fits your light’s mounting and hinge bolts, usually a hex key or small socket.
Load your vehicle the way you normally drive it. On a motorcycle, this means having the rider seated and the bike held upright while you measure and adjust, since suspension sag changes where the beams land.
How To Aim Your Lights Step-by-Step
Position the Vehicle
Park 25 feet from the wall with your vehicle pointed squarely at it. Measure the distance from the face of the lights, not the front bumper. Confirm the ground is level, because any slope between the vehicle and the wall skews the result.
Measure the Light Height
Measure from the ground to the center of each light pod or light bar. Call this measurement H. If your lights sit at slightly different heights, record each one separately.
Create the Reference Line
Run a horizontal strip of masking tape across the wall at H minus 2 inches. This 2-inch drop over 25 feet sets a slight downward angle that keeps the hot spot on the road surface at distance instead of climbing into oncoming windshields.
Adjust Each Light
Loosen the mounting and hinge bolts just enough to move the housing. Aim each light so the center of its hot spot, the brightest part of the beam, sits on the tape line. Keep the beams pointed straight forward and equidistant left and right of your vehicle’s centerline rather than crossed or angled outward. Tighten the bolts, then recheck, since housings often shift a few degrees as you torque them down.
Finish with a test drive on a dark, empty road. If oncoming drivers flash you, the beams are still high and need another pass.
Aiming Specs by Light Type
Driving Lights vs. Fog Lights
Driving lights typically mount above the front bumper, roughly 14 to 30 inches off the ground, and supplement your high beams with long-distance illumination. Aim the hot spot 1.5 to 2 inches under the lamp center at 25 feet with the lamp facing straight forward. The round 2-inch figure is the easy field spec, and 1.5 inches is the traditional SAE-derived number. Either lands you in the safe range.Fog lights mount under the bumper, usually 10 to 24 inches off the ground, and spread a wide, low beam. Aim them so the top edge of the beam sits 4 inches under the lamp center at 25 feet. The goal with fog lights is putting maximum light on the road while minimizing glare back into your own eyes and into oncoming traffic.
Light Bars and Spot Beams
Single-row and double-row light bars use the same wall method. Treat the brightest concentration of the combined pattern as your hot spot and set it on the reference line. Tightly focused spot beams reward careful aiming most of all, since a couple of degrees of error moves the hot spot dramatically at distance.
Tips for an Accurate Aim
- Short on space: If you can’t get 25 feet of run, park 6 feet from the wall and set the tape line at H minus 1/2 inch instead.
- Match real-world load: Aim with passengers, gear, or trailer tongue weight in place if that’s how your vehicle usually runs.
- Recheck seasonally: Vibration loosens mounts over time, and a quick wall check twice a year keeps the beams honest.
One safety note: auxiliary lights supplement your factory high beams, so wire them to shut off with the high beams and switch them off whenever traffic approaches. If a light won’t hold its aim after tightening, inspect the bracket and hardware before your next night drive.
FAQ
What lights do you turn on when driving at night?
Use low beams whenever other vehicles are around, andswitch to high beams plus your auxiliary lights only on dark, empty roads. Fog lights help in fog, heavy rain, or dust. Turn off high beams and auxiliary lights as soon as you see oncoming headlights or close on a vehicle ahead.
Are aux driving lights street legal?
Rules vary by state and country. Most regions allow them when they’re aimed correctly, wired to operate with the high beams, and switched off for oncoming traffic. Check your local vehicle code before wiring them for on-road use.
How far should the vehicle sit from the wall?
The standard distance is 25 feet, measured from the face of the lights to the wall. If space is tight, the 6-foot shortcut with a 1/2-inch drop gives a close approximation.
Do I need to re-aim after a lift or new tires?
Yes. Anything that changes ride height changes where the beams land, so repeat the wall procedure after a suspension lift, a tire size change, or adding a steel bumper or winch.
Why does my light have two adjustment bolts?
Most housings use a mounting bolt for vertical tilt and a hinge or pivot bolt for side-to-side movement. Loosen both slightly, set the aim, then snug them in turn so the housing doesn’t rotate as you tighten.
Upgrade Your Night Driving
Well-aimed lights only perform as well as the hardware behind them. CarParts.com carries driving lights, fog lights, light bars, and the wiring harnesses and brackets to mount them correctly, all matched to your vehicle’s year, make, and model. Order today and see the road the way you’re supposed to.
Any information provided on this Website is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace consultation with a professional mechanic. The accuracy and timeliness of the information may change from the time of publication.







