Secure your Christmas lights effortlessly with our selection of professional grade clips
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Specialized clips for secure attachment along roof ridges and peaks, ensuring a perfectly straight light line on difficult angles.
Convenient pre-spaced clip strips for quick and uniform installation of light strings, saving time and effort.
Unique clips designed for specific surfaces or applications, such as brick, stucco, or wrapping lights around columns.
C7 Christmas Light Clips
Streamline your holiday light installation with our commercial-grade LiteClips. Available for both C9 and C7 bulbs, these versatile clips easily secure between the socket and bulb, allowing for downward, upward, or straight-out positioning. For a complete, safe, and secure setup, pair with our LiteClipStrip mounting system. These efficient tools ensure quick and professional-looking installations for homes and businesses alike. Available in White or Brown.
All-Purpose
Clip
The All-in-One Plus clip, favored by professional installers, accommodates C7, C9, C6, mini, and icicle lights, offering versatile horizontal gutter and vertical shingle mounting options, a tight grip for mini lights, layering capabilities for unique designs, and the ability to hang two light strings simultaneously, ensuring a perfect roof display.
Best Shingle
Tab Clip
This durable plastic shingle tab, more robust than standard versions, securely holds both C7 and C9 sockets, easily slides under shingles, and versatilely attaches to gutters, decks, and flat surfaces (when paired with a parapet clip), making it the perfect Christmas light accessory for various installation needs.
Tuff Tab
Clip
The durable Tuff Tabs, designed for C7 or C9 bulbs, feature Flex technology for easy installation over socketed bulbs, 360-degree rotation, outward-facing positioning on shingles or cedar shakes, two living hinges for secure hold, and weather-resistant construction for professional-grade Christmas light displays.
Christmas Light Ridge Clips
C9/C7 Best Enclosed
Ridge Clip
The C9/C7 Best Enclosed Ridge Clip (Patent Pending) is a durable, year-round solution for C7 and C9 socket strands and bulbs, featuring a fully enclosed design that securely holds lights in place without detachment, making it ideal for permanent or long-term installations.
Magnetic Christmas Lights Clips
Magnet Clip for C7/C9
Socket Wire
The Magnetic Clip for C7 or C9 Sockets, designed exclusively for SPT-1 wire (not compatible with LED stringer sets), features a high-strength solid magnet that securely holds lights horizontally or vertically on metal surfaces (excluding aluminum), allowing for quick, reusable installations year after year.
C9 Magnetic Spool
12" Spacing
This versatile lighting solution features heavy-duty, UV-protected 18-gauge SPT-1 wire rated for 840 watts, equipped with rust-resistant nickel-plated C9 magnetic sockets for secure attachment to ferrous metals, 12" spacing, 250' or 500' foot spool, compatible with E17 base incandescent and LED bulbs (sold separately), and suitable for both indoor and outdoor use.
C9 Magnetic Spool
15" Spacing
This versatile lighting solution features heavy-duty, UV-protected 18-gauge SPT-1 wire rated for 840 watts, equipped with rust-resistant nickel-plated C9 magnetic sockets spaced 15" apart on 250' or 500' spools, securely attaching to ferrous metals and compatible with E17 base incandescent and LED bulbs (sold separately) for both indoor and outdoor use.
Why Christmas Light Clips Are a Game-Changer
Transform your holiday decorating experience with professional-grade Christmas light clips. These versatile tools are the secret to creating clean, polished displays that withstand the elements all season long. Designed for various surfaces and bulb sizes, quality clips ensure your lights stay securely in place, avoiding the sloppy appearance and frequent adjustments often associated with cheaper alternatives. Easy to install and remove, these clips are favored by professionals nationwide for their durability and neat finish. By investing in commercial-grade clips, you'll save valuable time during both setup and takedown, allowing you to focus more on enjoying the festive season rather than fussing with your decorations. Make your holiday lighting effortless and impressive with the right clips, and elevate your display to a professional standard with minimal hassle.

Upgrade your holiday decorating technique by replacing staple guns and nails with versatile Christmas light clips. These innovative tools not only protect your home and lights from damage but also allow for easy adjustments after installation. Available in various designs to suit different surfaces like gutters, shingles, and flat areas, light clips can securely hold multiple bulb sizes, including C7, C9, icicle, and mini lights. By switching to clips, you'll preserve your property's integrity, extend the life of your lights, and gain the flexibility to perfect your holiday illumination with ease. Embrace this simple yet effective solution to elevate your decorating process and achieve professional-looking results without the hassle and potential harm of traditional fastening methods.



Christmas light clips are superior to staples or nails because they don't damage your home or lights, allow for easy adjustments and removal, and provide a cleaner, more professional look. They also make it easier to reuse your lights year after year without causing additional wear and tear.
Yes, using Christmas light clips can significantly reduce setup and takedown time. They're designed for easy installation and removal, allowing you to spend less time on decorating and more time enjoying the holiday season.
By securely holding your lights in place without pinching or damaging the wires, Christmas light clips help extend the life of your holiday lights. They also protect lights from harsh weather conditions, reducing the need for frequent replacements.
Professional-grade clips ensure your lights stay in place, creating a neat and uniform appearance. They allow for precise positioning and spacing of lights, resulting in a polished, high-quality display that enhances your home's festive appeal.
Christmas light clips are designed for use on various surfaces, including gutters, shingles, and flat areas. There are also specialized clips for different applications, such as ridge clips and all-purpose clips.
Christmas light clips offer several benefits: they protect your home and lights from damage, allow for easy adjustments after installation, work on various surfaces, securely hold multiple bulb sizes, and help achieve a professional-looking display without the hassle of traditional fastening methods.

My first full Christmas light season, I grossed $40,000 and thought I was crushing it. I wasn't. I was just busy and broke on a ladder. Every dollar I left on the table that year came down to the same handful of pricing errors — the wrong price per foot, bad labor math, and no idea how to present a full job. The jobs kept coming, so I never stopped to ask why I was working harder than everyone and keeping less.
Here's the truth most installers never hear: the gap between a $40,000 season and a six-figure season usually isn't more hustle. It's knowing exactly where to quote and stopping the money that leaks out before the estimate ever gets sent. Below are the five pricing mistakes that quietly drain profit from established installation businesses — and how to fix each one this season.
This is the most expensive mistake in the business, and almost everyone makes it. You pull up to a $600,000 home, picture writing a check for $4,000 worth of lights yourself, flinch, and quote $1,500 instead. You just decided your customer's budget based on your bank account.
Your customer is not you. A homeowner in a $600,000 house with today's interest rates is likely paying $5,000 to $6,000 a month just to live there. To that person, a beautiful, fully installed display is a rounding error — and it buys them something they genuinely can't get any other way: time, safety, and the feeling of having the best-looking house on the block.
The numbers prove it. There are installers charging $6 a foot complaining they can't get more in their market, while another company a few miles away charges $12 to $15 a foot to the same customers and stays booked. One installer who attended training and charged what the market would actually bear did over $220,000 in his very first season hanging lights. Another, working in rural Tennessee, did $50,000 his first year charging $8 a foot in an area "experts" online swore would only pay $6.
The fix is simple to say and hard to live: price the job, then ask whether your best customer would flinch — not whether you would. Profit is not a dirty word. When you underprice, you aren't being generous; you're taking money out of your own pocket and convincing yourself the customer made you do it.
The second profit-killer hides in your time estimates. You bid a job assuming it'll take an hour. The roof is steeper than it looked, the access is awkward, and three or four hours later you're still up there. You priced for one hour of labor and bought yourself half a day.
Two things drive this. First, new crews are slow — and that's normal. A second-year crew will install dramatically faster than a first-year crew, even one that only completed a handful of jobs. Speed comes from reps, better gear, and getting comfortable on roofs, not from talent. If you're thinking about adding installation to your business, the takeaway is to start this season even if it feels late. Three or four jobs this year means you'll install twice as fast next year.
Second, most installers never build labor reality into their per-foot price. Your rate has to assume real-world conditions — difficult pitches, second stories, the time it takes to pre-bulb and pre-clip strands at the shop, drive time, and takedown in January. When your price only covers a perfect, fast install, every imperfect job eats your margin. Price for the job you actually get, not the job you hope for.
A homeowner calls and says, "I just want lights on the roofline." So you quote the front roofline, send an $800 estimate, and then wonder why your average ticket never climbs above $1,200.
You gave them exactly what they asked for and nothing more — and in doing so you skipped the entire job. The customer doesn't know what's possible. That's your job. Walk the property and present the whole display:
The full roofline, not just the front — peaks, ridges, and the back lines, which can easily double your linear footage.
A wreath over the garage or on the front of the house. A large statement wreath is one of the highest-margin, highest-visual upsells you can offer.
Columns and porch posts, priced individually.
Tree wrapping, priced by the foot of tree height — a single 20-foot evergreen wrapped properly can rival the price of the roofline.
Bushes and shrubs, lit with mini-light strands.
Walk through a typical home this way and an $800 "roofline only" quote becomes a $2,800 to $3,500 ticket — for the same trip, the same crew, the same drive time. The homeowner may not take everything, and that's fine. But if you only present the roofline, the roofline is all you'll ever sell.

Here's where most pricing problems actually start: in how you talk about the work. If you describe the right bulb size, the clip spacing, and how you "pick the bulbs and cut them to length," you've already lost — because your customer doesn't care about any of that.
You are not selling Christmas lights. You're selling the feeling a family gets when they pull into the driveway at night, the grandkids in the back seat, coming home from Christmas Eve service, and the whole house is glowing. You're selling the magical look on a child's face, the neighbors' jealousy, and the relief of a homeowner who knows they will never have to climb a ladder in December. Some customers cry when they see their finished home. That is the product.
When you sell the magic, price stops being the conversation. A homeowner deciding between two installers who both quote "lights on the roof" will pick the cheap one. A homeowner who can picture their home as the most beautiful house on the street — and trusts you to deliver it — will happily pay a premium. Lead with the feeling, then put the line items underneath it.
You can fix the first four mistakes and still bleed profit if you can't sell on the phone. The first ten to twenty seconds of a call set the tone for the entire sale — and plenty of installers lose the job in the first five seconds without realizing it.
Speed matters more than almost anything: the faster you respond to a new lead, the higher your win rate. So does language. Never use the word "minimum" — it sounds like a barrier. Say "our packages start at $1,200," which is an invitation. Lead by asking what the homeowner is hoping for and whether they've ever had lights professionally installed; their answer tells you exactly how to position yourself.
If you're not sure where your calls fall apart, record yourself and review the transcripts honestly. You don't have to be a natural salesperson — you have to know where you talk too much, where you should listen, and where you fail to paint the picture. Then close the loop after the install: get the review. Reviews are still king, and they matter more than ever for how AI tools and search engines recommend local businesses. Use tap cards or QR codes to make leaving a review effortless, and collect them on Google, Yelp, and beyond — because plenty of platforms and AI assistants pull from those sources.
Use these field-tested ranges as your starting point. Adjust for your market, but resist the urge to drop below them:

Here's the math that should change how you think. An installer doing 35 jobs at a $1,000 average ticket makes $35,000. The same installer doing the same 35 jobs at a $2,000 average ticket makes $70,000 — double the money for the exact same work, the same drive time, the same number of roofs.
That's the whole game. You don't need more jobs; you need a higher average ticket. And the only thing standing between most installers and that number is the belief that their market "won't pay it." Find out where that belief came from. Usually it's advice from someone who underprices their own work or wants to sell you cheaper product. Surround yourself instead with operators charging premium rates and getting it.
A six-figure season is achievable in your first year. Seven figures is achievable for installers who treat this like a real business — set their prices with confidence, present the full display, sell the feeling, and pick up the phone. Whatever you decide today won't matter unless you take action on it. Price the next job the right way, and watch what happens.
Want hands-on help pricing, selling, and scaling your installation business? Explore the training and marketing resources at ChristmasLights.io.

Most professional installers charge between $8 and $12 per linear foot for roofline installation, and many in stronger markets charge $12 to $15 or more. If you're charging $6 to $7 a foot, you're almost certainly leaving significant profit on the table. Price based on what your best customer will pay, not on what you personally would spend.
A healthy target average ticket is $1,500 to $2,000 per job. Raising your average from $1,000 to $2,000 doubles your revenue without adding a single extra job, which is why your average ticket — not your job count — is the number to focus on first.
Price tree wrapping by the foot of tree height rather than charging a flat fee per tree. A common range is $30 to $60 per foot of height, so a 10-foot tree runs roughly $300 to $600 and a 20-foot tree runs $600 to $1,200. Charging one flat rate per tree almost always undercharges the tall, high-value trees.
Yes. In nearly every market there are installers charging double what their cheapest competitors charge, serving the same customers and staying booked. Premium homeowners care about quality, reliability, and not climbing a ladder — not about finding the lowest price. The belief that your area "won't pay" is usually the only thing holding your prices down.
Because the customer doesn't know what's possible — that's your expertise to bring. If someone asks for "just the roofline," presenting the full display (back rooflines, peaks, wreaths, columns, trees, and bushes) can turn an $800 estimate into a $2,800 to $3,500 ticket on the same visit. Always present the complete vision and let the homeowner choose.
Build real-world conditions into your pricing instead of assuming a perfect, fast install. Account for steep pitches, second stories, difficult access, shop prep time, and drive time. New crews are also naturally slower — that's normal — so price for the job you actually get, and your speed will improve dramatically by your second season.
No. Starting late and landing even three or four jobs this year is far better than waiting, because the experience makes you roughly twice as fast next season. Every install builds the reps, confidence, and gear knowledge that let you charge more and work faster going forward.
Reviews are critical, and they matter more than ever as AI tools and search engines increasingly recommend local businesses based on reputation signals. Make leaving a review effortless with tap cards or QR codes, and gather reviews across multiple platforms — including Google and Yelp — since many search and AI systems pull from those sources.
Pricing from their own wallet. They imagine paying for the lights themselves, get sticker shock, and quote low. The fix is to price the job and then ask whether your best customer would flinch — not whether you would. Your budget should never set your customer's price.
Because price objections shrink when a homeowner can picture their finished home and trusts you to deliver it. Customers don't buy bulbs and clips; they buy the feeling of the best-looking house on the street and the joy on their family's faces. Lead with that feeling and the line-item price becomes a much easier conversation.
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