Skip to content
When choosing a ceiling fan, decide if you want it to blend with the ceiling or stand out. If you want a statement fan, as pictured here, tie the color into the room’s décor. (Photo courtesy of Dan’s Fan City)
When choosing a ceiling fan, decide if you want it to blend with the ceiling or stand out. If you want a statement fan, as pictured here, tie the color into the room’s décor. (Photo courtesy of Dan’s Fan City)
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

“Don’t look up!” I say to my husband, who, naturally, immediately zooms in on the outdoor ceiling fan precariously swinging from its rod like Tarzan, threatening to fall and decapitate us.

Wouldn’t that be a fitting end? “Home columnist beheaded by her own ceiling fan!”

While I duck for cover, he calmly turns the fan off. “Time for a new fan,” he says.

Until now, I’d never paid much attention to our ceiling fans, indoors or out. They were givens. They came along with the house, like doors and sinks. But now that decapitation was imminent, I’m noticing that the two, once-white outdoor fans had become rickety and yellow with age.

The next minute, my husband is on his laptop shopping for ceiling fans. Now we’re in real trouble. He is out of his depth.

“Look at this one,” he points to one with oversized palm fronds as blades.

“Uh, no, this isn’t a Tommy Bahama store,” I say.

“Oh, this one is cool!”

“It looks like a helicopter propeller.”

“Well, what do you want?”

“A fan that doesn’t say look at me — like we have now, but newer.”

To nip this fast, I call Darby Serra, the national sales director for Dan’s Fan City, where he’s worked for 30 years. The company sells fans online and through 50 stores in a handful of states.

“Many people don’t appreciate the comfort and cost savings ceiling fans provide,” said Serra, sounding well-scripted. “By evening out the temperature in a room, ceiling fans make air conditioners work less. Fans blow air down into a room like a cone, pushing the air at the base of the cone up the wall and back into the fan, to circulate.”

But what I really want to talk about is how to pick a fan before my husband hits the buy-now button. Happy to oblige, Serra offered the following fan-picking tips:

Style: Fans come in dozens of styles: rustic, traditional, tropical, industrial, modern and more. Many are beautiful and yet would be wrong for your house. Consider your home’s architecture and look for a fan that suits it.

Size: The biggest mistake homeowners make is putting in a fan that’s too small. The result looks wrong and doesn’t work. In rooms that measure 10-feet square up to 16-feet square, go for a fan that’s at least 52 inches. In larger rooms, go bigger.

Height: Rod length from ceiling also matters. For eight-foot ceilings, fan blades need eight inches between the blades and ceiling for proper circulation. On higher ceilings, fan blades should sit between eight and 11 feet from the floor.

Color: Do you want a fan you notice or one that blends? “You don’t get tired of white,” Serra said. “It goes up, does its job and matches the ceiling.” Usually, designers don’t want a fan to upstage the décor, or the view out your window. But if you do want a statement fan, choose a color and style that ties into the décor or the hardware.

Overall, Serra said, 60 percent of the indoor fans his company sells are white. If a designer is picking, that number jumps to 80 percent. The rest are mostly tan, brown, silver or black. Outside the reverse is true: 60 percent of outdoor fans are dark. Dark finishes, mostly oil-rubbed bronze, are more popular outdoors because they don’t show dirt. They’ll look good for years.

Control: Wall switches now come with fan-speed adjusters that work to power fans on and off and control their speed, eliminating the not-always-convenient chain and easy-to-lose remote.

Run them: Keeping fans running will extend their life, said Serra, who runs his 24/7, which he says costs only $1 a month. A fan can last 50 years or more.

The spin: Most fans have a switch that reverses their direction. In warm weather, when the air conditioning is on, ceiling fans should move counterclockwise. In cool weather when the heat is on, they should rotate clockwise. I always found the opposite to be true until Serra straightened me out. I’d been determining the clock-face direction by looking up at the fan. The orientation should be as if you’re looking down on it from the ceiling. (I’m sorry, but who does that?) So, yes, counterclockwise in warm weather, and clockwise in cold weather — if you’re lying on the ceiling.

Cost: Fans range from $99 to $1,000. The average homeowner spends $350 to $400 on a fan, plus installation.

Indoor vs. outdoor: Any outdoor fan will work inside, but not vice versa. Outdoor fans are designed to resist moisture and rust, and are rated to use in wet locations. Outdoor fans will also have weather-resistant blades and stronger finishes.

Join the Conversation

We invite you to use our commenting platform to engage in insightful conversations about issues in our community. We reserve the right at all times to remove any information or materials that are unlawful, threatening, abusive, libelous, defamatory, obscene, vulgar, pornographic, profane, indecent or otherwise objectionable to us, and to disclose any information necessary to satisfy the law, regulation, or government request. We might permanently block any user who abuses these conditions.