I have been growing lettuce, basil, and a couple of pepper plants under indoor lights for years, and I finally got tired of guessing whether my lights were close enough to the canopy. I bought five different light meters that work for hydroponic and indoor growing, from basic lux meters up to dedicated PAR meters, and tested them across my grow tent and a small kitchen herb shelf.
The price range was wide, from under 30 dollars up to around 250 dollars, and the accuracy gap was even wider. Here is which meters earned a place in my grow workflow.
Quick Comparison
| Product | Best For | My Rating |
|---|---|---|
| Hydrofarm LGBQM Light Meter | Brand standard hydroponic | 4.5/5 |
| Apogee MQ-500 Full Spectrum PAR Meter | Lab grade accuracy | 4.9/5 |
| Photone Pro PAR Light Meter | Phone based PPFD | 4.6/5 |
| Dr Meter LX1330B Digital Lux Meter | Budget lux readings | 4.3/5 |
| General Tools LM81 Lux Meter | Pocket reliability | 4.4/5 |
1. Hydrofarm LGBQM Light Meter
The Hydrofarm LGBQM is the meter most growers cut their teeth on. It measures both lumens and footcandles with respectable accuracy and the green and red indicator lights show you whether you are in the right range for vegetative or flowering growth. The probe on a cable lets you measure deep in a canopy without moving the plants.
2. Apogee MQ-500 Full Spectrum PAR Meter
The Apogee MQ-500 is the gold standard PAR meter, and it earned the rating. The full spectrum sensor reads PPFD accurately under any light source from LED to HPS to sunlight. I used it as my reference for the other meters in this test. The price is high but for serious growers it pays for itself by helping you tune fixtures to optimal levels.
3. Photone Pro PAR Light Meter
The Photone Pro is the clever pick. It uses your phone camera and a custom calibration to estimate PPFD, and the results are surprisingly close to the Apogee reference within about 10 percent on common LED spectrums. The included diffuser slips over the phone camera and stores in a small pouch. Great option for growers who do not need lab precision.
4. Dr Meter LX1330B Digital Lux Meter
For under 40 dollars the Dr Meter measures lux up to 200,000, which covers any indoor grow setup and full sun. It is not a PAR meter, but with a conversion factor for your light spectrum you can estimate PPFD reasonably. The auto ranging display and data hold function are nice quality of life features.
5. General Tools LM81 Lux Meter
The General Tools LM81 is the pocket meter I keep in my grow tent bag. It is the smallest meter I compared, runs on a 9V battery for months, and the readings track close to the Dr Meter at a slightly higher price. The plastic feels lighter duty but the sensor calibration is solid.
What Matters Most
Decide whether you need PAR or whether lux is enough. For serious growing with modern LED fixtures, PAR or PPFD is the relevant unit. Lux meters work if you have a conversion factor for your light source. After that, sensor cosine correction matters. A meter without cosine correction reads inaccurately at angles, which is exactly when you want to measure spread across a canopy.
My Setup
I keep the Apogee as my reference, the Hydrofarm for quick checks at canopy level, and the Photone Pro for friends who come over wanting to know about their plant lights. I tape a small chart on the wall of my grow tent listing target PPFD ranges for vegetative and flowering stages so I am not Googling it every time.
Common Mistakes
Reading at the top of the plant instead of canopy level is the first mistake. The light at the leaf is what matters, and it is significantly lower than at fixture height. The second mistake is buying a lux meter and trying to compare across different LED brands. Different spectrums confuse lux readings and only PAR is comparable across fixtures.
Final Recommendation
For most home growers the Hydrofarm LGBQM is the right starting point. It is accurate enough for everyday grow decisions and the price is fair. Serious growers should save up for the Apogee MQ-500. The Photone Pro is a clever middle option for anyone who wants PAR data without dedicated hardware.
Frequently asked questions
Is a lux meter the same as a PAR meter?+
No. Lux meters measure visible light in a way that matches human eye sensitivity. Plants care about photosynthetic active radiation in the 400 to 700 nanometer range. For real grow decisions you want a PAR or PPFD meter.
How often should I check my grow light intensity?+
I take readings whenever I move a plant up to a new height, when I change a fixture, and every two weeks during a full grow cycle. LED degradation is real and a meter catches it before the plants tell you.