Swapping a standard switch for a dimmer is straightforward if you know what you are dealing with. The complication comes from three directions: dimmer type (TRIAC vs ELV vs forward-phase vs reverse-phase), load type (incandescent, halogen, LED, CFL), and location (single-pole vs 3-way). Get the match wrong and you get buzzing, flickering, or a dimmer that runs warm enough to trip its internal thermal cutout.
This guide covers single-pole dimmer wiring, 3-way dimmer wiring, and the neutral wire situation that trips up smart-dimmer installs.
Safety
Warning: Turn off the circuit breaker and verify with a non-contact voltage tester at the switch box before touching anything. Dimmers have internal capacitors that can hold a charge briefly -- wait a few seconds after cutting power before handling the device. Never install a dimmer on a circuit feeding a motor, a garbage disposal, a refrigerator, or standard fluorescent lights. Check the dimmer's compatibility list before buying if the load is LED.
Dimmer Types
Knowing the technology matters because the wiring can differ slightly and the load compatibility is entirely different.
- TRIAC / forward-phase dimmers: The most common type. Works well with incandescent and halogen. LED compatibility varies -- always check the manufacturer's compatibility list.
- ELV (Electronic Low Voltage) / reverse-phase dimmers: Designed for magnetic and electronic low-voltage fixtures (MR16 transformers, some LED drivers). Trailing-edge switching produces a cleaner waveform. Quieter and gentler on LED drivers.
- MLV (Magnetic Low Voltage) dimmers: Specifically for magnetic transformer loads. Rarely used in new installs.
- Smart dimmers (Lutron Caseta, Leviton Decora Smart, Kasa KS220): Need a neutral wire in most cases. The neutral powers the internal wireless radio. Lutron Caseta is an exception -- it uses a proprietary "no-neutral" topology, but still requires a ground.
Single-Pole Dimmer Wiring
A single-pole dimmer replaces a single-pole switch controlling a light from one location.
What You Need
- Single-pole dimmer rated for your load (check wattage and load type)
- Non-contact voltage tester
- Wire stripper, flathead screwdriver
- Wire nuts or lever connectors
Wiring Steps
Step 1: Turn off the breaker. Verify power is off at the switch with a voltage tester.
Step 2: Remove the old switch. Note which wire is on which terminal -- take a photo.
Step 3: Most single-pole dimmers have two black lead wires (or two labeled LINE/LOAD -- check the instructions). Unlike a standard switch, polarity matters on some dimmers.
- Line (hot) wire from the panel: Connect to the terminal or lead labeled LINE or HOT.
- Load wire to the fixture: Connect to the LOAD terminal or lead.
- Neutral: If the dimmer has a neutral wire (white lead or white terminal), connect it to the neutral bundle in the box. Basic dimmers without a neutral use a "stolen" current path through the load, which is why minimum-load requirements exist.
- Ground: Connect the green lead or green screw to the ground wire.
Step 4: If the dimmer has an adjustment screw for minimum brightness (a small trim pot accessible through a small hole on the face), set it after installation. Turn the light on, dim it to its lowest setting, and turn the trim screw until the bulb just holds steady without flickering or going out.
Step 5: Fold wires into the box, fasten the dimmer, attach the cover plate. Restore power and test across the full range.
Neutral-Required Dimmers
Smart dimmers and some standard dimmers now require a neutral:
- Neutral lead (white): Connect to the neutral wire bundle in the box using a wire nut.
- Without a neutral in the box, you cannot install these devices without re-pulling cable.
Check your box before ordering. A 2-wire switch loop (old power-at-fixture wiring) has no neutral at the switch.
3-Way Dimmer Wiring
A 3-way dimmer setup has one dimmer and one companion (or "slave") switch -- you cannot put a standard dimmer at both ends. Buy a matched pair from the same manufacturer: for example, a Lutron DVCL-153P paired with the MA-R remote, or a Leviton DSM15 with a matching remote.
Key Rule
One end gets the dimmer. The other end gets the companion remote switch (not a standard 3-way switch, not a second dimmer). The companion has no internal dimming circuitry -- it just signals the dimmer.
Wiring: Dimmer End
The dimmer end wires identically to a standard 3-way switch location:
- Identify the common wire (the single wire that was on the dark/common screw of the original 3-way switch).
- Connect it to the dimmer's COMMON terminal.
- Connect the two traveler wires to the dimmer's two TRAVELER terminals.
- Connect neutral (if required) to the neutral bundle.
- Connect ground to the green screw.
Wiring: Companion End
- Connect the two traveler wires to the companion's two terminals (order usually doesn't matter -- check the instructions).
- No common terminal on the companion.
- Connect ground.
- Connect neutral if the companion requires it.
One Important Check
Confirm which wire is the common at each box before removing the old switches. It is the wire on the differently-colored screw (usually black, darker brass, or explicitly labeled COM). Mark it with tape. Confusing a traveler for the common is the most frequent 3-way dimmer wiring mistake, and the result is a light that only works from one location.
LED Dimmer Compatibility
LED dimmers are not interchangeable with incandescent dimmers in practice. Problems with a mismatched dimmer + LED bulb combination:
- Flickering at low end: The LED driver can't maintain stable operation at low phase-cut angles.
- Minimum load dropout: The dimmer steals a small current to power itself; if the total LED wattage is too low, the dimmer can't sustain operation.
- Buzzing from bulb or fixture: The transformer or driver resonates at the switching frequency.
- Reduced dimming range: The bulb may only dim from 100% to 40% before dropping out.
Fix: Use a dimmer rated for LED/CFL loads and confirmed on the manufacturer's compatibility list with your specific bulb. Lutron and Leviton publish searchable compatibility databases. Aim for a minimum load of at least 10W LED on most residential dimmers.
Wiring a Smart Dimmer (Neutral Required)
Smart dimmers (Wi-Fi, Z-Wave, Zigbee) typically have four connections:
| Terminal / Lead | Connection |
|---|---|
| LINE (black) | Hot wire from panel |
| LOAD (black/red) | Wire to the fixture |
| NEUTRAL (white) | Neutral bundle in box |
| GROUND (green/bare) | Ground wire |
Some models add a traveler terminal for 3-way setups. In that case, the companion is also a smart switch, and both communicate over the traveler wire or wirelessly.
Create Your Own Dimmer Switch Diagram
Before you buy anything, diagram your existing switch situation. With CircuitDiagramMaker you can:
- Map out power-source location (at the switch vs at the fixture) to check for neutral availability
- Place 3-way switch symbols and label which end gets the dimmer
- Document traveler and common wire colors with labels
- Simulate the circuit and verify control from both switch locations
- Export the diagram to reference during installation
Create your own dimmer switch wiring diagram -- free
Key Takeaways
- Single-pole dimmers connect LINE (hot from panel) and LOAD (to fixture) -- polarity matters on many models, unlike a basic switch.
- 3-way dimmer setups use one dimmer and one companion remote switch -- never two dimmers.
- The common terminal on a 3-way switch location feeds the dimmer's COMMON; the two travelers go to the TRAVELER terminals.
- Most smart dimmers require a neutral wire in the box -- a 2-wire switch loop won't work without re-pulling cable.
- LED compatibility depends on the specific bulb and dimmer combination -- always check the manufacturer's list.
- Adjust the minimum-trim pot after installation to eliminate flicker at the low end.
- TRIAC dimmers suit incandescent and many LEDs; ELV/reverse-phase dimmers suit electronic low-voltage and some LED drivers.
Originally published at https://circuitdiagrammaker.app/blog/dimmer-switch-wiring-diagram.
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