Features
- Energy-Efficient: Replaces 100-125W incandescent bulbs with 13W LED technology, largely reducing energy consumption while lowering heat output.
- Super Brightness: Build-in advanced LED technology, 100w LED light bulbs to emit with a full 1500 lumens of brightness and a stable daylight white color. With over 85+ CRI, the light bulbs 100 watts will provide you with natural and brilliant realistic colors, ideal for commercial lights or any space that needs bright home lighting
- Long Lifetime: The daylight LED light bulbs 100-watt equivalent has an outstanding long-lasting life which is rated at over 25,000+ hours, and lasts more 25 times longer than traditional halogen, incandescent and fluorescent bulbs, largely reducing the frequency of bulb changes
- No Flicker or Strobe: Meet strict test criteria including flicker, strobe, glare and color rendition, NO UV or IR radiation, non-dimmable 5000k led bulb 100w to prevent eye fatigue and provide instant bright light without buzzing or flickering, effectively protect your families’ eyesight and health
- Easy Installation: Traditional A19 shape with E26 American standard base, you can simply screw the led bulb into any standard E26 light socket or fixture, no wire needed, widely used in the kitchen, bedroom, living room, bathroom, hallway, entryway, dining room, garden, garage, porch, patio, front porch lighting, office, hotel
Specifications
Energy Efficiency Class | High (energy efficiency) |
Color | Daylight White |
Size | 4 Count (Pack of 1) |
Unit Count | 4 |
Related Tools
A19 LED bulbs that produce 1,500 lumens of daylight-white light (5000K) while consuming 13W, intended as a 100–125W incandescent replacement. They use a standard E26 base, are non-dimmable, have a color rendering index above 85, a rated life of over 25,000 hours, and are tested for low flicker with no UV/IR emission.
MAXvolador A19 LED Light Bulbs, 100 Watt Equivalent LED Bulbs, Daylight White 5000K, 1500LM, E26 Base, Non-Dimmable, 13W Bright LED Bulbs, 4-Pack Review
Why I chose these bulbs
I replaced a handful of household lamps and ceiling fixtures with the MAXvolador A19 LEDs to see if a brighter, daylight-style bulb could lift task areas without turning living spaces clinical. On paper, these check several boxes: a claimed 1500 lumens (100–125W incandescent equivalent) while drawing just 13W, a neutral daylight color temperature (5000K), a CRI above 85, and a standard E26 base. They’re non-dimmable, which sets expectations up front.
After several weeks in my kitchen, home office, garage, and a hallway pendant, I have a clear sense of where these bulbs shine and where they’re less ideal.
Installation and fit
Installation is as straightforward as it gets. The A19 shape and E26 base fit every standard socket I tried: pendant, semi-flush ceiling fixture with a diffuser, floor lamp, and a basic garage work-light. The bulbs seated cleanly and fired up instantly—no warm-up lag.
A quick note on fixtures: these bulbs are bright and run warmer than low-output LEDs (as any 1500-lumen bulb will), so I prefer them in open or well-ventilated fixtures. If you’re considering a small enclosed sconce, double-check the fixture’s heat rating and watch for hot spots.
Brightness and distribution
At 1500 lumens, each bulb delivers a substantial amount of light. In my kitchen (two bulbs in a semi-flush fixture with a frosted diffuser), they turned a previously dim prep area into something that feels closer to daylight. In a single-bulb hallway pendant without a diffuser, the output bordered on intense—great for visibility, a bit much if you’re sensitive to glare. A shade or diffuser makes a big difference with this output level.
Light distribution matched what I expect from a standard A19 profile: broadly omnidirectional with enough side and upward spill to fill a room evenly, particularly inside fixtures that rely on the bulb to bounce light off surfaces.
Color quality (CRI and 5000K feel)
The CRI 85+ spec is reflected in everyday use: colors look natural, whites are clean, and there’s no muddy cast. At 5000K, the light reads as neutral daylight—cooler than the 2700–3000K “warm” bulbs used for cozy spaces, but not blue. In practical terms:
- Excellent for task areas: kitchen prep, home office, garage benches, laundry rooms.
- Mixed for bathrooms: great for clarity around mirrors, but it can make some finishes feel cooler.
- Not my first choice for a bedroom or den if you want a warm, relaxed vibe. If you prefer a softer ambiance, stick with warm-white bulbs for those rooms.
Flicker, glare, and eye comfort
These bulbs pass the everyday comfort test. They turn on at full brightness instantly, produce no audible buzz, and I couldn’t detect flicker in normal use. A quick slow-motion phone camera check didn’t reveal obvious PWM banding either, which aligns with the “low flicker” claim. If you’re sensitive to glare, note that in fixtures with exposed bulbs, the 1500-lumen punch can be hard on the eyes—use a shade, a frosted globe, or a diffuser.
Energy use and heat
Swapping a 100W incandescent for a 13W LED is an immediate and noticeable efficiency jump. Here’s what that looks like in practice:
- Per-bulb savings: roughly 87W less while on.
- Typical usage (3 hours/day): about 95 kWh saved per year.
- At $0.15/kWh: around $14 saved per bulb annually.
Multiply that across fixtures and you can see why high-output LEDs make sense where you need a lot of light. Heat output is modest compared to incandescent; the bulb’s base gets warm to the touch after extended use but not dangerously hot.
Non-dimmable reality check
These are non-dimmable bulbs. On a dimmer switch, expect misbehavior: flicker, dropout, or shortened life. If you need control over brightness, either change the switch to a standard on/off or look for a dimmable bulb in the same output class. Given the brightness, dimming would be nice to have in living areas; in utility spaces, I didn’t miss it.
Use cases where they shine
- Kitchen ceilings and islands: crisp light and color clarity for prep work.
- Home offices: boosts contrast on documents and screens without feeling cold.
- Garages, basements, and laundry: the output helps with visibility and safety.
- Hallways and entryways: one bulb can cover more area, reducing dark corners.
Places I’d be more cautious:
- Bedrooms and living rooms geared toward relaxation: the 5000K tone can feel too alert.
- Small fixtures without diffusers: the naked bulb can produce harsh hotspots.
Build quality and consistency
The build feels solid for a value LED: no rattle, consistent finish, and identical color across the set I tested. All bulbs produced uniform brightness and color, with no noticeable tint shift or variance between units.
Longevity expectations
The stated 25,000-hour rating is in line with modern LEDs in this output class. I can’t validate that claim over a short test window, but there are some practical steps to get the most out of them:
- Avoid enclosed fixtures unless the fixture is rated for higher-output LEDs.
- Keep them off dimmer circuits.
- Use in well-ventilated housings where possible.
Those small choices can significantly influence lifespan for any LED bulb, especially brighter ones.
How they compare to typical 100W-equivalent LEDs
- Brightness: at 1500 lumens, these sit at the top end of “100W equivalent” offerings; some competitors settle around 1350–1450 lumens.
- Color fidelity: CRI 85+ is good for general use, though not a replacement for high-CRI bulbs if you do color-critical work (photography, art).
- Comfort: low flicker and instant-on behavior are on par with better LEDs.
- Dimming: the lack of dimming is the main functional omission compared to premium options.
Practical tips for setup
- Choose bulbs by task: use these in work areas and high ceilings; go warmer for relaxation spaces.
- Pair with diffusers: frosted shades or globes tame glare without losing too much brightness.
- Plan the count: in a typical 10×12 kitchen, two of these in a central fixture provided excellent coverage; in a garage, a single bulb per bay was sufficient near the workbench.
- Match color temperature: keep 5000K consistent within the same visual zone to avoid jarring color shifts between rooms.
Value
Between the strong lumen output, reasonable color quality, and very low energy use, the value proposition is compelling—especially if you’re upgrading from incandescents or older CFLs. In spaces where brightness directly improves usability, the energy savings pay for the bulbs quickly. The only value trade-off is the lack of dimming, which would expand their versatility in mixed-use rooms.
Pros and cons
Pros:
- Very bright for an A19: true 100W-equivalent light at 13W
- Clean, neutral 5000K daylight tone with CRI 85+
- Instant-on, quiet, and low flicker
- Standard E26 base; easy fit across common fixtures
- Strong energy savings and reduced heat
Cons:
- Non-dimmable limits flexibility in living spaces
- Can feel harsh in small or exposed fixtures without a diffuser
- Longevity always depends on fixture ventilation and proper switch compatibility
Recommendation
I recommend the MAXvolador A19 LEDs for anyone who needs bright, neutral light in task-focused or utility spaces. They’re efficient, consistent, and easy to live with, and their output genuinely replaces a 100W incandescent without the heat penalty. Use them in kitchens, home offices, garages, hallways, and laundry rooms; pair them with diffusers in exposed fixtures; and avoid dimmer circuits.
If you’re outfitting a bedroom or a living room where ambiance matters, consider a warm-white alternative or a dimmable bulb. But for clarity, brightness, and energy savings where you work and move, these bulbs are a smart, reliable choice.
Project Ideas
Business
Lighting Retrofit Service for Small Businesses
Offer turnkey bulb-replacement audits and installations for cafés, offices, and retail—swap old incandescents/halogens for A19 LED bulbs, provide ROI/energy-savings estimates, and charge for labor + a markup on bulbs. Emphasize lower energy bills, less heat, and 25k+ hour lifetime.
Rental Kits for Photographers & Realtors
Assemble and rent portable lighting kits (softbox, stand, 5000K bulbs) to photographers, videographers, and real estate agents who need consistent daylight-balanced light. Low-cost bulbs make replacement affordable and the non-flicker feature is a selling point for video.
Etsy/Shopify Ready-to-Assemble Lamp Kits
Create branded lamp kits (base, cord, E26 socket, hardware, one A19 bulb) marketed as easy DIY gifts. Provide multiple finish options, instruction PDFs, and upsell additional bulbs. Kits have low shipping weight and strong margin potential.
Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Lighting Upgrade Pack
Sell or install a pre-selected lighting pack for hosts that replaces warm/yellow bulbs with daylight A19s for better listing photos and perceived cleanliness. Bundle with installation and a one-page energy-savings summary to justify cost to hosts.
Paid Workshops: Build Your Own Lamp Night
Run local craft nights where attendees build jar lanterns, desk lamps, or mini-chandeliers using supplied A19 bulbs and materials. Charge per seat, sell take-home bulbs/kits, and market as team-building or date-night experiences.
Creative
DIY Daylight Desk Lamp
Build a sleek wooden or metal desk lamp that accepts the E26 A19 LED. The 5000K daylight color and high CRI produce true-to-life color for drawing, reading, or crafting, while low heat and long life (25,000+ hrs) let you place the bulb close to work without burning materials.
Portable Photo/Video Softbox
Create a collapsible softbox using a lightweight frame, white diffuser, and the 1500 lm daylight LED for product shots or vlogging. High brightness + low flicker and good CRI reduce post-editing and give consistent natural light for small-studio setups.
Upcycled Mason Jar Lanterns
Turn mason jars into hanging or table lanterns by fitting an E26 socket into the lid. The daylight bulb gives crisp outdoor-porch or patio illumination (use under cover), looks vintage-modern, and is energy-efficient for seasonal displays.
Seed-Starting / Terrarium Supplement Light
Make a modular grow-light rack for seedlings or indoor plants using the bulbs on adjustable hangers. The 5000K spectrum and low heat are good for vegetative growth and close placement, and the bulbs’ long life reduces maintenance between growing seasons.
Industrial Cluster Chandelier
Assemble a statement chandelier by grouping the 4-pack bulbs on an industrial pipe or wooden cross frame. The bright, daylight output works well over dining tables, studio islands, or workshop benches—easy to swap and simple to wire with standard E26 sockets.