Light Mounts
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Diode Dynamics SS3 Backlit Universal Bracket Kit (Pair) - DD7188P
Diode Dynamics
$39.95What is the primary purpose of the DIO Mounting Brackets Lighting?DIO Mounting Brackets Lighting securely holds one 3 inch Stage Series SS3 LED Pod, ensuring unwavering light stability on any terrain.How is the durability of these light mounts...$39.95 -
Cali Raised 2016-2023 Toyota Tacoma Low Profile Ditch Light Brackets Kit - Blue Backlight - Small - CR2856
Cali Raised LED
$189.99Will these CAL Ditch Light Brackets fit my 2023 Toyota Tacoma TRD Pro?Confirm vehicle fitment before purchase to ensure compatibility and proper installation of these CAL Ditch Light Brackets.How difficult is the installation process for these light...$189.99 -
Cali Raised 10-24 Toyota 4Runner Low Profile Led Ditch Light Brackets Kit - Brackets Only - CR2346
Cali Raised LED
$59.99Are these ditch light brackets compatible with my vehicle?Confirm fitment for your specific vehicle model to ensure optimal integration and secure installation of these ditch light brackets.How difficult is it to install these brackets?Professional...$59.99 -
Baja Designs XL Linkable LED Light Bar - 8 XL Clear - 740006
Baja Designs
$2,099.95What vehicles are these Baja Designs roof mounts compatible with?Baja Designs roof mounts are engineered for specific vehicle fitment; always confirm compatibility for your exact model before purchase.Are these Baja Designs roof mounts easy to...$2,099.95 -
Baja Designs XL Linkable LED Light Bar - 7 XL Clear - 740005
Baja Designs
$1,874.95Are these light mounts compatible with my vehicle?Confirm your vehicle's specific fitment details before purchasing to ensure optimal integration with these BAJ Roof Mounts.How difficult is the installation process?Professional installation is...$1,874.95 -
Baja Designs XL Linkable LED Light Bar - 6 XL Clear - 740004
Baja Designs
$1,674.95Are these mounts compatible with my specific vehicle model and year?BAJ Roof Mounts require careful fitment confirmation with your specific vehicle model and year to ensure proper integration.Is professional installation required for these BAJ Roof...$1,674.95 -
Baja Designs XL Linkable LED Light Bar - 5 XL Clear - 740003
Baja Designs
$1,499.95Are these mounts compatible with my specific vehicle model?BAJ Roof Mounts require careful fitment confirmation with your specific vehicle model before installation to ensure proper integration.What is the recommended installation method for these...$1,499.95 -
Baja Designs XL Linkable LED Light Bar - 4 XL Clear - 740002
Baja Designs
$1,249.95What is the general installation process for these roof mounts?BAJ Roof Mounts are designed for professional installation, ensuring a secure and optimal setup for your lighting system.Are these mounts compatible with all vehicle models?Confirm fitment...$1,249.95 -
Baja Designs Can-Am Maverick X3 S8 Shock Mount Kit - 707503
Baja Designs
$42.95How do I know if this light mount kit will fit my vehicle?Baja Designs Light Mount Kits require users to confirm specific vehicle fitment through our detailed compatibility checker before purchase.Can I install this light mount kit myself?Professional...$42.95 -
Baja Designs 2in LED Horizontal Mount - 617610
Baja Designs
$40.95Will these light mounts fit my vehicle?BAJ Light Mount Kits are designed for specific vehicle fitments; always confirm compatibility with your vehicle before purchase to ensure proper installation.What is the recommended installation type for these light...$40.95 -
Baja Designs 1.75in LED Horizontal Mount - 617608
Baja Designs
$40.95Are these lights compatible with my vehicle?BAJ Light Mount Kits require careful confirmation of your specific vehicle's fitment details before purchase to ensure proper installation.Is professional installation required for these light...$40.95 -
Baja Designs 1.5in LED Horizontal Mount - 617605
Baja Designs
$40.95What is the best way to ensure my BAJ Light Mounts are compatible with my vehicle?Confirming fitment with your specific vehicle prior to purchase guarantees proper installation and optimal performance of your BAJ Light Mounts.Are BAJ Light Mounts easy to...$40.95
Light mounts are the structural interface between your auxiliary, driving, or accent lighting and your vehicle — the wrong mount means vibration fatigue, misalignment, and failed electrical connections long before the light itself gives out. Motor Sport Mayhem stocks 163 in-stock light mount solutions across 45 brands, covering everything from sub-dollar hardware clips to precision-machined expedition brackets engineered for high-speed desert punishment.
Our Top Picks for Light Mounts
Each of these selections was chosen by our performance specialists based on engineering quality, real-world application fit, and proven durability across street, trail, and competition use.
ACB VSL
Acerbis | $158.98
A competition-grade headlight support assembly built to absorb the repeated shock loading of aggressive off-road riding without cracking or loosening.
- High-impact polymer construction resists UV degradation and flex fatigue on rough terrain
ADD Light Hoops
Addictive Desert Designs | $798.98
Laser-cut and CNC-formed steel light hoops that bolt directly to existing bumper hardware, positioning auxiliary lights precisely at the optimal aiming height for high-speed desert running.
- Fully welded DOM tube construction handles the harmonic vibration loads of sustained high-speed off-road use
ADG Indicator Lights
AirDog | $105.00
A dedicated low-pressure indicator light kit designed to mount cleanly into a fuel system assembly and deliver an immediate visual warning before a pressure drop causes engine damage.
- Purpose-built mounting hardware eliminates the improvised bracket failures common to generic indicator installs
ARX NOVA Headlights
AlphaRex | $1,795.00
A full LED projector headlight assembly with integrated sequential DRL and active light functions, built to drop into OEM mounting positions without custom fabrication.
- Projector optics deliver a sharp, controlled beam cutoff critical for legal street use and oncoming traffic safety
ANZ LED/Projector Headlights
ANZO | $1,124.00
A black-housing full LED projector headlight unit with integrated sequential light bar DRL, engineered as a direct OEM housing replacement requiring no bracket modification.
- Sequential turn signal function is programmed to SAE J588 flash rate standards for street legality
ARB Driving Lights
ARB | $1,995.95
High-output auxiliary driving lights with integrated smart wiring that interfaces directly with a vehicle's existing lighting circuits for clean, relay-free installation on expedition builds.
- Die-cast alloy housing and stainless hardware deliver the corrosion resistance demanded by prolonged overlanding use in wet and muddy conditions
ART LED Light Kit
Artec Industries | $24.19
A complete license plate LED illumination and wiring harness kit that mounts cleanly to custom bumper and tire carrier fabrications where factory plate lighting is no longer present.
- Pre-terminated harness with weatherproof connectors eliminates field splicing and the corrosion failures that come with it
BAJ LP6 Lights
Baja Designs | $3,089.95
A bull bar-integrated LP6 light kit with upfitter wiring compatibility, delivering race-proven illumination output through a mounting system designed to survive the structural loads of high-speed desert terrain.
- LP6 optic technology produces a focused long-range beam pattern optimized for sustained speeds above 60 mph on unlit trails
BKM Headlight Accessories B
BikeMaster | $101.99
A 7-inch slim-profile headlight side mount in black finish, offering a clean, minimalist mounting solution for custom motorcycle headlight conversions without adding bulk to the front end.
- Slim bracket geometry maintains fork clearance on tight custom builds where standard-width mounts cause fitment conflicts
BKC Headlights C
Bikers Choice | $399.99
A chrome sunray bottom-mount headlight assembly designed for universal custom applications, accepting 55–60W H4 bulbs and providing a period-correct aesthetic with a stable lower-pivot mounting configuration.
- Bottom-mount geometry lowers the headlight's center of gravity, reducing the leverage-induced stress cracking common in top-mount designs on vibration-heavy custom builds
How to Choose the Right Light Mounts
The mount is the single most overlooked component in any auxiliary lighting build — enthusiasts will spend four figures on a light and then bolt it to a stamped steel tab that cracks at the weld after 500 miles of washboard. What separates a functional mount from a liability is material grade, joint geometry, vibration isolation design, and corrosion resistance — not price alone. A properly engineered mount keeps your beam aimed correctly, protects the light housing from stress fractures, and maintains electrical continuity at every connector under continuous vibration loading.
Key Specifications
Material and Construction: Billet aluminum and DOM steel tube mounts represent the performance tier for a reason — they machine to tight tolerances, don't develop the micro-cracks that plague cast zinc and stamped steel under cyclic loading, and accept anodizing or powder coat finishes that resist the salt, mud, and UV exposure of real-world use. For motorcycle applications, bracket wall thickness matters as much as material: a thin-wall aluminum bracket on a high-vibration twin will fatigue faster than a heavier mild steel equivalent. When weight is critical — enduro, desert racing — billet aluminum at appropriate thickness is the correct call. For truck and 4x4 builds where weight is secondary to strength and weld repairability, steel DOM tube fabrication wins.
Mounting Interface and Load Path: Every light mount transfers dynamic load — bump inputs, vibration, wind load at speed — directly into whatever structure it's bolted to. The mount's attachment point must be evaluated against that structure's strength: a heavy auxiliary light on a thin bumper skin will tear out the mount before it fails at the bracket itself. Look for mounts that spread load across multiple fastener points rather than cantilevering off a single bolt, and verify that the attachment hardware spec (bolt grade, thread engagement depth) matches the expected load. For fabrication-based builds, gussets at bracket-to-tube junctions are non-negotiable on anything seeing sustained off-road use.
Vibration Isolation: Solid-mount brackets transmit 100% of chassis vibration directly into the light housing and lens — over time, this causes solder joint failure in LED drivers, lens seal degradation, and housing cracks. Quality mounts for high-vibration applications incorporate rubber-isolated stanchions or compliant bushings at the light attachment point to attenuate high-frequency inputs. This matters most for motorcycle applications and any 4x4 running on rocky terrain; it matters less for highway-only street builds where vibration inputs are low amplitude and low frequency.
Adjustability and Aiming: A mount that doesn't allow precise vertical and horizontal adjustment of the light forces you to compensate with aim after install — which is often impossible or impractical depending on mounting location. Ball-joint style mounts, slotted adjustment channels, and pivot-lock designs give you the freedom to set beam aim correctly the first time and re-aim after the mount settles under use. For driving and spot lights where beam aim directly determines illumination distance and road legality, adjustability is a specification requirement, not an optional convenience.
Light Mount Load and Material Selection Reference
| Light Weight / Application | Recommended Mount Material | Minimum Fastener Grade | Vibration Isolation Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 1 lb — accent / marker lights | Stamped steel, ABS polymer | Grade 5 / M8 8.8 | No — low mass, low inertia load |
| 1–3 lbs — small cubes, pods | Billet aluminum or 3/16" steel plate | Grade 8 / M10 10.9 | Recommended for off-road use |
| 3–6 lbs — single light bars, driving lights | DOM steel tube or 1/4" billet aluminum | Grade 8 / M10 10.9 | Required for rock crawling and desert running |
| 6–12 lbs — large light bars (40"+) | 1.75" DOM steel tube, gusseted weld mount | Grade 8 / M12 10.9 | Required — use rubber-isolated end caps |
| Motorcycle headlight (any weight) | Billet aluminum, 6061-T6 minimum | Grade 8 / M8 10.9 stainless | Required — engine vibration is constant |
| Competition / high-speed desert (any weight) | 4130 chromoly or aerospace-grade billet | Grade 8 / AN hardware throughout | Mandatory — safety-critical application |
Price Guide
Entry ($0.20–$193): This tier covers hardware-level mounts — simple brackets, clamps, adapter plates, and indicator light kits that serve a defined single purpose. Build quality varies widely; focus on material spec and fastener grade rather than brand at this price point. Ideal for supplemental lighting, license plate mounts, and indicator installations where load and vibration demands are minimal.
Mid-range ($193–$1,000): This is where the majority of serious street and weekend off-road builders land, and for good reason — this tier delivers billet or tube-steel construction, adjustable mounting geometry, proper corrosion finishing, and compatibility with quality auxiliary light bars and cubes. Expect proper vibration isolation design and multi-point load distribution at this price level.
Premium ($1,000–$3,899.99): At this level you're buying complete integrated lighting systems where the mount, the light, and the wiring are engineered as a single unit — not a bracket with a light bolted to it. This tier is justified for competition builds, serious expedition rigs, and OEM-replacement headlight assemblies where beam optics, legal certification, and long-term reliability are non-negotiable. The premium reflects engineering validation, certified beam patterns, and production tolerances that aftermarket-only product cannot match.
Who Is This For?
Light mounts span one of the widest application ranges of any accessory category — from a $0.20 clip holding a marker light to a $3,900 integrated race lighting system — and usage data reflects that breadth across eight distinct use cases.
High Speed Desert Running — 8.4/10
This category's highest-scoring use case is no accident — at sustained speed on unlit desert terrain, the quality of your lighting mount is as mission-critical as the light itself. A failed mount at 70 mph in the dark is a safety failure, not just an inconvenience. The combination of high-output driving lights and purpose-engineered tube mounts rated for harmonic vibration is what scores this application so high, and it drives demand for the premium end of the catalog.
Easy DIY Install — 8.3/10
A strong 8.3 out of 10 reflects the fact that most light mount products are intentionally designed for owner installation — no specialized tooling, no cutting or welding required for the majority of applications. Bolt-on brackets with pre-drilled hardware patterns, plug-and-play wiring adapters, and universal clamp mounts make this one of the most accessible performance categories for a home builder. The key is selecting a mount that matches your specific tube diameter or mounting surface without requiring modification.
Weekend Off-Roading — 8.2/10
Weekend trail runners score this category at 8.2 because auxiliary lighting mounts are a near-universal modification for anyone spending real time on unlit forest roads, canyon runs, or trail systems. The variety of tube clamp, A-pillar, roof rack, and bumper-integrated options means almost every trail rig has a bolt-on solution without requiring custom fabrication. Durability over rocky terrain is the primary selection driver at this application level.
Overlanding / Expedition — 7.9/10
Overlanding scores slightly lower than pure off-road racing because expedition builds prioritize long-term reliability and multi-year service life over peak performance — and that means mount selection is more conservative, favoring corrosion-resistant finishes, proven hardware, and designs that can be serviced or replaced in the field. The best overlanding mounts are those that never require attention after initial installation, and that longevity criterion filters toward higher-quality materials and finishes across the board.
Serious Rock Crawling — 7.7/10
Rock crawling scores a solid 7.7 because low-speed technical terrain puts a different stress profile on mounts than high-speed desert running — the concern shifts from vibration fatigue to impact resistance and flex-induced stress at chassis mounting points. Crawling rigs experience significant body flex that can crack rigid bracket welds, making gusseted or tube-clamp designs with some compliance preferable to stiff single-point mounts. Light placement also matters more at crawling speeds, where proper aim on specific obstacles is more important than raw long-range output.
Trusted Light Mounts Brands We Carry
The brands that dominate this category earned their position through engineering validation and real-world performance — not catalog marketing. Baja Designs brings race-proven auxiliary lighting system design with mounts engineered to the same vibration and impact standards as their lights, validated across Baja 1000 and desert race use. Rigid Industries manufactures mounts to mil-spec corrosion resistance standards, with die-cast alloy and stainless hardware throughout. ARB designs their mounting hardware as integrated expedition systems, where the bracket, light, and wiring are validated as a unit for multi-year backcountry service life. ANZO and AlphaRex approach mounts from the OEM-replacement angle — precision injection-molded and stamped housings that replicate factory tolerances for headlight assemblies, ensuring correct beam geometry without adjustment. KC HiLiTES carries five decades of 4x4 auxiliary lighting heritage, with mount designs that have been refined through direct feedback from competitive off-road racing. New Rage Cycles and Kuryakyn serve the motorcycle segment with application-specific bracket systems built to the tight tolerance demands of custom bike builds where aesthetics and fitment are equally weighted.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are AlphaRex headlights DOT approved and street legal?
AlphaRex headlight assemblies are designed to meet FMVSS 108 standards and carry DOT compliance markings on units intended for street use — look for the DOT stamp on the lens itself before purchasing for road use. DOT compliance means the optic design, beam pattern, and output have been tested to federal standards for minimum illumination, maximum glare, and proper aim geometry. It is critical to distinguish between AlphaRex units marked DOT compliant and units sold explicitly for off-road use only, as the latter do not meet on-road requirements. Installation on a public road vehicle of an off-road-only unit is a legal liability regardless of how the light performs. Always verify the specific unit's compliance marking against your state's vehicle equipment laws, as some states impose additional requirements beyond federal minimums.
Are ANZO headlights and tail lights street legal?
ANZO produces both DOT-compliant street-legal assemblies and off-road-only units, and the distinction is product-specific — the DOT compliance mark must appear on the lens housing for the unit to be legal on public roads. ANZO's projector and full LED headlight assemblies in their street series are engineered to FMVSS 108 beam pattern requirements, which govern cutoff sharpness, output intensity, and aim. Their tail light assemblies must comply with SAE J585 for stop function and J586 for tail function; compliant ANZO units carry these markings. Aftermarket tail lights without proper SAE compliance markings can result in failed inspections in states with lighting equipment checks. Verify compliance markings on any specific unit before installation on a daily-driven or registered vehicle.
Are aftermarket LED tail lights legal to use on the street?
Aftermarket LED tail lights are legal for street use when they carry SAE and DOT compliance markings certifying that the light output, color, and visibility angles meet federal and state standards. The key compliance marks to look for are DOT (federal minimum compliance), SAE J585 (stop lamp), SAE J586 (rear position lamp), and SAE J588 (turn signal) — all must be present on a full tail light assembly for complete legal coverage. Units sold as "for off-road use only" or "show use only" explicitly do not meet these standards and are not street legal. LED retrofit bulbs installed into OEM housings fall into a separate compliance gray area — the housing must be designed for the specific beam pattern of the bulb installed. Most quality aftermarket tail light manufacturers design and test for SAE compliance; non-compliant units typically reflect this in significantly lower pricing and absence of any compliance markings.
Are Baja Designs and similar high-output auxiliary lights worth the premium?
For applications where lighting directly affects safety at speed — high-speed desert running, nighttime overlanding on unmaintained roads, and competitive off-road racing — the engineering premium of top-tier auxiliary lighting brands is justified by measurable differences in beam distance, beam consistency, thermal management, and housing durability. The optical design of premium auxiliary lights uses precision-formed reflectors and lens profiles that produce specific beam patterns — spot, driving, or combo — rather than the scattered output of commodity lights. Thermal management engineering in premium units protects the LED junction from heat soak that degrades lumen output and shortens diode life, while commodity units often run diodes significantly above their rated junction temperature. The mount systems engineered for these lights are also validated to the same vibration and impact loads — mixing a premium light with a budget mount defeats the engineering investment. For purely aesthetic installations at low speeds, the premium is harder to justify; for sustained performance use, it is the right call.
What makes a light bar or auxiliary light mount fail, and how do you prevent it?
The primary failure modes for light mounts are fatigue cracking at weld junctions, fastener loosening under vibration, corrosion at dissimilar metal interfaces, and bracket flex causing repeated stress concentration at the attachment point. Vibration-induced fastener loosening is the most common field failure — it is prevented with either thread-locking compound on fine-thread fasteners or nylon-insert locknuts on coarse-thread hardware, combined with correct torque on initial installation. Fatigue cracking concentrates at sharp inside corners and at weld toes where stress risers exist; quality brackets are designed with generous radii at bends and full-penetration welds. Dissimilar metal corrosion — most commonly aluminum bracket against steel tube — is prevented with an isolating washer or stainless interface hardware. Inspecting mounts for micro-cracks, fastener movement, and corrosion every 5,000 to 10,000 miles or at each seasonal service interval catches developing failures before they become complete losses.
Building something specific? Our performance specialists can help you select the right Light Mounts for your application — street, track, or full race build.