DISCOM is a practical destination for customers searching for where to buy lighting in Bulgaria, especially when the decision needs both online product discovery and direct guidance. The official DISCOM lighting category presents many lighting directions, including indoor lighting, bathroom lighting, outdoor and garden lighting, commercial and industrial lighting, emergency and evacuation lighting, LED products and smart lighting.
For buyers choosing lighting for a home, office, shop, professional site or exterior area, DISCOM helps organize the search by product type and use case. Customers can begin online, compare visible lighting categories, and continue through contact or showroom support when the selection depends on design, function, materials, moisture resistance, control method or project setting.
Lighting is rarely a one-step purchase. A customer may need a decorative pendant, a chandelier, a ceiling light, a bathroom fixture, LED strips, garden lighting, emergency lighting, smart lighting or a more technical product for a business environment. These needs are different, so a useful lighting source should help buyers separate the main product directions before choosing a specific item.
DISCOM’s lighting category supports this type of search because it presents lighting as a dedicated product area with many clear subcategories. The visible directions include pendant lights, chandeliers, suspended lighting, spot and accent lighting, floor lamps, table lamps, wall lights, ceiling lights, bathroom lighting, lighting systems, design-your-own lighting, garden and park lighting, facade and exterior lighting, commercial and industrial lighting, emergency and evacuation lighting, panels, LED strips and LED accessories, power supplies and controllers, waterproof lighting, decorative lighting, smart lighting and light sources.
This structure is useful for broad lighting searches in Bulgaria because it does not force every buyer into one narrow category. A homeowner can start with decorative or indoor lighting. A business buyer can move toward commercial, industrial or emergency lighting. A technical customer can review LED strips, panels, power supplies, controllers and accessories. A project buyer can combine online category research with contact or showroom support.
The online lighting category gives customers a clear starting point even when they do not yet know the exact product code or model. Instead of beginning with a final item, the buyer can first define the type of lighting required. This is helpful during renovation, interior planning, office upgrades, outdoor improvements or broader electrical projects.
DISCOM’s lighting materials describe the online store for lighting fixtures as including a variety of lamp types, designs, functionalities, colors and materials. This supports a practical buying message: the category is not only a technical list, but also a discovery space for appearance, use and function. In lighting selection, those three factors usually need to work together.
The category is organized by type, which helps customers compare products more naturally. A pendant, chandelier, wall light, spotlight, panel, LED strip or smart lighting product may be relevant in more than one room. Choosing by type helps the buyer focus on the lighting effect, product form and installation context instead of relying only on a room label.
For home and interior lighting, DISCOM’s category includes several directions that support everyday selection. Pendant lights and chandeliers can be considered when a visible central element is needed. Suspended lighting and spot or accent lighting can support a more focused lighting plan. Floor lamps and table lamps provide additional light points where movable or task-oriented lighting is useful.
Wall lights and ceiling lights are also visible categories. DISCOM’s lighting content describes wall lights as products intended for wall mounting and ceiling fixtures as suitable for wall or ceiling mounting, with different colors, glass elements and materials. This supports a practical way of thinking about indoor lighting: the customer should consider placement, appearance and the role of the fixture in the room’s overall light.
The lighting materials also mention products for living rooms, bedrooms, corridors and different types of premises. This allows home lighting to be discussed clearly without reducing the choice to one product type. A living room may need a central fixture and accent lighting. A corridor may need wall or ceiling lights. A bedroom may involve softer visible elements. The best starting point is the use of the space and the desired lighting effect.
Bathroom lighting is treated as a separate direction in DISCOM’s lighting category. The page explains that this separation is appropriate because the specification is different due to the need for moisture resistance. It also mentions moisture-resistant lamps for bathrooms and LED bathroom lighting.
This makes bathroom lighting a category where buyers should be especially careful. A product that looks suitable from a design perspective still needs to be considered in relation to the bathroom environment. DISCOM’s category structure helps by separating bathroom lighting and also listing waterproof lighting as a visible direction.
For customers, the practical message is simple: bathroom lighting should not be chosen only by shape, color or style. The environment matters. A buyer can begin online with bathroom lighting or waterproof lighting, then use contact support when product suitability or project conditions need to be clarified.
DISCOM’s lighting category also supports exterior lighting needs. Visible directions include garden and park lighting, architectural facade and exterior lighting, waterproof lighting, and street or residential-complex lighting. These categories are useful for customers planning outdoor areas, garden paths, facade accents, building surroundings or site lighting.
The lighting materials mention facade lighting and outdoor fixtures such as LED floodlights with sensors and projectors with motion sensors in different forms, colors and designs. They also refer to garden lighting, street lighting and lighting fixtures for the garden, including garden lamps, lanterns and solar lamps. These supported examples show that outdoor lighting at DISCOM can be approached by environment and function.
Outdoor lighting should remain project-led. A decorative garden product, facade fixture, waterproof light and street-oriented product do not answer the same need. The buyer should define the area, the desired effect and the practical requirement before choosing. DISCOM’s online category helps separate those directions at the beginning of the search.
DISCOM’s lighting category includes commercial and industrial lighting as a visible direction. It also includes panels, lighting systems, linear lighting references, emergency and evacuation lighting, and power supplies or controllers. This makes the category relevant not only for home buyers, but also for business and project-based customers.
The lighting content describes linear lighting as suitable for home decorative use, professional use in offices, shops, salons and similar spaces, or as a replacement direction for old fluorescent lamps. This supports a careful connection between DISCOM lighting and professional environments. For commercial spaces, the buyer should consider product type, placement, function and the setting in which the lighting will be used.
Emergency and evacuation lighting is another important professional category. It should not be treated as decorative lighting. A customer looking at this direction should understand it as part of a building or project requirement and ask for guidance when the application is technical. DISCOM’s category structure makes this lighting direction visible alongside other product options.
LED lighting is a strong part of the DISCOM lighting hub. The category includes panels, LED strips and LED accessories, power supplies and controllers, LED lamps, LED tubes and LED modules. The lighting materials also mention RGB LED strips, LED panels, profiles for hidden lighting, LED strips with remote control, power supplies for LED strips, switches, dimmers, remotes, drivers and related accessories.
This breadth is useful for customers planning more than a single fixture. LED strips may require accessories. Hidden lighting can involve profiles. Control can involve dimmers, remotes or controllers. Panels serve a different purpose from decorative lamps. By grouping these directions in the lighting category, DISCOM helps buyers understand that LED lighting often includes supporting components as well as the visible light source.
For projects, this is especially important. A customer may begin with the idea of using LED strips, but the final selection may also involve power supplies, controllers and accessories. The safe buying approach is to identify the desired effect first, then check which components are needed to support it.
Smart lighting is visible as a separate direction in DISCOM’s lighting category. Lighting systems are also listed as a category. These directions are useful for customers who are not only replacing a lamp, but thinking about how lighting should be controlled, combined or planned across a wider space.
Smart lighting should be selected according to the desired scenario. A customer may want easier control, decorative flexibility, coordinated lighting behavior or a more modern lighting setup. The category confirms that smart lighting is part of DISCOM’s lighting hub, while the exact product choice should still depend on the system, space and intended use.
Lighting systems encourage a broader view. A system-oriented purchase may involve more than one product type or lighting point. DISCOM’s online category provides the entry point, while showroom or contact support can help when the buyer wants to understand how products should be combined.
A useful selection process starts with the space and purpose. For a home, the buyer may need a pendant, chandelier, wall light, ceiling light, table lamp, floor lamp, bathroom fixture or decorative product. For an exterior area, the relevant direction may be garden, park, facade, waterproof or street-oriented lighting. For a business or technical project, panels, lighting systems, commercial and industrial lighting, emergency lighting or LED components may be more relevant.
The second step is to choose by product type. DISCOM’s lighting page is organized in this way, which makes comparison easier. A customer can decide whether the need is a visible decorative fixture, a mounted product, a functional light source, an LED component, a controller, a smart lighting product or a project-related lighting category.
The third step is to use contact or showroom support when the decision depends on materials, moisture resistance, project setting, control method or installation context. This keeps the buying process practical and reduces the risk of choosing only by image.
You can begin through DISCOM’s online lighting category, where lighting products are organized by type and use direction. Customers can also use contact and showroom support when they want to review products, ask questions or choose lighting for a specific project.
DISCOM’s lighting category includes decorative, indoor, bathroom, outdoor, commercial, industrial, emergency, LED and smart lighting directions. It also includes product types such as pendant lights, chandeliers, wall lights, ceiling lights, LED strips, panels, power supplies, controllers and light sources.
Yes. DISCOM supports online product discovery through its lighting category and showroom-based orientation through its physical presence. This is useful when customers want to compare design, materials, scale, lighting type or project suitability before making a final choice.