Lanterns

Light the room, the tent, and the outage.

A flashlight helps you move. A lantern lets everyone stay put. These area lights are built for blackout rooms, campsites, shelters, garages, and the places where hands-free light matters.

Trusted & Proven
Lab-Verified Lumens Aircraft-Grade Aluminum Water-Resistant USA-Designed & Supported ★ 4.9 / 5 Owner Rating
6 products
2,000 LumensMonster 2000
4.9 / 5 (22)

Monster 2000

Massive 360-degree area light with full dimming and up to 31 hours of runtime.

2,000 lm · 31 hr · Dual 360
$ 29.99 $ 39.99 View
180 LumensSupernova Halo 180
4.9 / 5 (17)

Supernova Halo 180

Pocket-sized rechargeable lantern with hook, magnet, and room-ready glow.

180 lm · 5+ hr · Rechargeable
$ 19.99 $ 24.99 View
Halo 150Supernova Halo 150
4.9 / 5 (9)

Supernova Halo 150

Small battery-powered overhead light for tents, closets, and kits.

150 lm · 5 modes · Hook + magnet
$ 15.99 $ 19.99 View
LanternInternova 1000
4.9 / 5 (10)

Internova 1000

Bright when you need the room lit. Dimmable when you need the night to stay quiet.

1,000 lm · 360 degree · 5 hr
$ 25.99 $ 39.99 View
How To Choose

How to choose a lantern

The right lantern spreads usable light without making the night harsher than it needs to be.

/ 01

Cover the main room first

One dependable lantern can keep the kitchen, living room, or storm shelter usable during an outage.

/ 02

Use brightness with control

High output helps in large rooms and campsites. Dimming matters when you need softer light for hours.

/ 03

Plan for runtime

Area lights run longer when you match output to the moment instead of leaving them on full power.

/ 04

Expect rough conditions

Camping, storms, and garage work all ask more from a lantern than a shelf test ever will.

Common Questions

Good to know.

Use both if you can. A lantern lights the room hands-free. A flashlight gives you a focused beam for moving around, checking outside, or finding the breaker box.
The Monster 2000 is the best starting point when you want a strong area light that can brighten a room or campsite and dim down when full output is too much.
Yes. The same features that matter during outages also matter outdoors: broad light, runtime, simple controls, and durable construction.
Most homes should start with one main-room lantern, then add another for upstairs, the garage, or the emergency bin if needed.
Build Your Readiness

Add area light to the plan

A lantern turns a dark room into a usable room. Pair it with a flashlight for movement and a headlamp for hands-free work.

Shop Home Readiness