Light Bar Mounts
A light bar is only as good as the bracket holding it — flex and vibration blur the beam and crack lenses. This is the full light bar mount catalog: vehicle-specific roof, bumper, and windshield-pillar brackets cut for a bolt-on fit rather than universal clamps. Each mounts to factory holes where possible, so there's no drilling into a new truck. Filter by year, make, and model, or browse the full Light Mounts & Brackets range.
Light Bar Mounts FAQs
Where should I mount a light bar on my truck?
The roof line and the front bumper are the two main locations, and each does a different job. Roof mounts throw light far down the trail but can cause hood glare and catch branches; bumper or lower mounts light the near field with less glare and keep the profile low. Many builds run a lower bar for driving and pods elsewhere. Choose a bracket made for your exact truck.
Do light bar mounts require drilling?
Most vehicle-specific mounts do not require drilling. They bolt to existing factory holes at the roof channel, A-pillars, or bumper, which keeps a new truck watertight and rust-free. Universal brackets and some roof setups may need drilling, so check the listing. Filter by year, make, and model to find a no-drill bracket designed for your rig.
Will a roof-mounted light bar cause hood glare?
It can, especially with a taller hood or a bar sitting too low. Glare comes from light spilling onto the hood and reflecting into your eyes; a proper windshield-pillar or roof-channel bracket sets the bar high enough to clear it. Bumper and ditch mounts avoid the problem entirely. Aim and shim the bar after install to kill any remaining reflection.




































