Cheap brass spotlight option
There’s a low‑voltage brass spotlight on DealNews for about $17 — a Coloer 5W 2700K brass landscape spotlight is listed at $17.09 with coupon pricing. (DealNews lists the Coloer 5W 2700K brass low‑voltage spotlight at $17.09 with coupon/Prime shipping.) (dealnews.com) That’s a neat low‑risk buy if you want to try accent lighting on stonework or specimen plants without spending on premium fixtures.
# Cheap brass spotlight option A basic landscape-lighting project usually starts with one question: how much do you need to spend just to see whether uplighting even looks good in your yard. Right now, DealNews is highlighting a Coloer 5-watt, 2700-kelvin brass low-voltage landscape spotlight for $17.09 with coupon pricing, with Prime shipping noted on the listing. (dealnews.com) That price puts this light in “try it and see” territory rather than “commit to a full fixture set” territory. DealNews says the offer uses coupon code VYFSMFKL, and the page lists an expiration date of May 1, 2026. (dealnews.com) The fixture itself is aimed at the common do-it-yourself landscape-lighting setup: 12-volt low voltage. DealNews says it uses 12-volt alternating current or direct current power, which is the standard format used by many outdoor landscape-lighting systems with a separate transformer. (dealnews.com) The material is a big part of why this deal stands out. The Amazon product page describes the body as die-cast brass, and brass fixtures generally sit above plastic and many entry aluminum fixtures in the outdoor-lighting pecking order because they resist corrosion better over time. (amazon.com) This is not a giant floodlight meant to wash an entire backyard in light. The listing says it includes a replaceable MR16 bulb rated at 5 watts, 2700 kelvin, about 450 lumens, and Color Rendering Index 85+, which points to a compact accent light meant for focused illumination on a wall, trunk, statue, or planting bed. (amazon.com) The 2700-kelvin color temperature is the warm-white range that reads more like incandescent porch lighting than the cooler white often used in security lights. That warmer tone is usually the safer bet for stonework, brick, and specimen plants because it adds contrast without making the yard look like a parking lot. (amazon.com) There is also a practical detail that matters for cheap fixtures: the bulb is replaceable. DealNews and Amazon both describe this as an MR16-based spotlight, which means you are not locked into a sealed fixture that becomes e-waste when the original lamp fails. (dealnews.com, amazon.com) Aiming flexibility is another reason a single spotlight can be useful even if you are not ready for a full yard plan. DealNews says the fixture has a 180-degree vertical adjustment range, which is enough to experiment with grazing a stone column, lighting the underside of a small tree canopy, or putting a narrow beam on a house number. (dealnews.com) The included lead wire is short, but it is normal for this category. DealNews lists a 6-foot lead wire, while similar Coloer spotlight listings on Amazon mention cord lengths around 3.28 feet on some variants, so buyers should still expect to connect the fixture into an existing low-voltage run rather than plug it directly into household power. (dealnews.com, amazon.com) The real comparison here is not against another $17 light. It is against the kind of solid-brass landscape spotlights that often sell in the $40 range before you even add a bulb, like the Gardenreet brass 12-volt spotlight currently listed at $41.20 on its site. (gardenreet.com) That gap is why this looks like a sensible low-risk buy for homeowners who want to test one focal point before designing a whole system. If your plan is to uplight a Japanese maple, skim light across a stone retaining wall, or add a warm beam to a front entry bed, a single brass fixture at about $17 is cheap tuition for figuring out what works in your yard. (dealnews.com, amazon.com)