Channel letter signs cost between $800 and $4,000 for a typical business storefront. Three variables determine where your sign falls in that range: the type of letters (face lit, backlit, front-and-back lit, RGB, or non-illuminated metal), the letter height, and – the biggest factor – who you order from.
Ordering factory-direct instead of through a local sign shop saves 30-50% on the same sign. A sign quoted at $3,000 through a local shop typically runs $1,500-$1,800 ordered directly from the manufacturer.
Quick Price Reference
| Sign Type | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Face Lit Channel Letters | $800 – $2,500 |
| Backlit / Halo Lit | $1,000 – $3,000 |
| Front and Back Lit | $1,200 – $3,500 |
| RGB Color-Changing | $1,500 – $4,000 |
| Metal Letters (Non-Illuminated) | $500 – $1,800 |
But a price range only helps if you know which type you need, what drives the cost up or down, and what should actually be included for that money. That’s what the rest of this guide covers, in plain English, without the jargon.
What Are Channel Letter Signs?
A channel letter sign is exactly what it sounds like: individual letters, each shaped like a three-dimensional channel or box. Each channel letter is fabricated from aluminum, has its own housing, and is mounted separately on your wall or on a metal raceway.
What makes them different from flat signs or printed panels is the dimension. Each letter stands out from the building surface, usually between 3 and 8 inches deep. During the day, they look sharp and architectural, more like a design feature than a sign. At night, the LEDs inside light them up from within.
They’re used by every type of business you can think of: restaurants, medical offices, gyms, retail shops, salons, law firms, car dealerships, hotels, and franchises. If you’ve seen a business sign that looks like individual raised letters, it was almost certainly a channel letter sign.

The 5 Types of Channel Letters
Not all channel letter signs are the same. The type you choose changes how your sign looks during the day, at night, and how it fits your building and brand. Here’s how each one works.

Face Lit Channel Letters
Face lit (also called front lit) is the most common type. The front face of each letter is made from translucent acrylic, and the LEDs inside shine directly through it. The result is a clean, evenly glowing face that reads clearly from a distance.
The acrylic face comes in any Pantone color, so your sign can match your exact brand colors, not a close approximation. White, red, blue, yellow, green. Whatever you need.
This is the right choice for most retail businesses, restaurants, salons, gyms, and medical offices. Bright, professional, and versatile.
Backlit Channel Letters (Halo Lit / Reverse Lit)
Backlit letters (also called halo lit or reverse channel letters) work differently. Instead of illuminating through the face, the LEDs project out through the open back of each letter, casting a soft halo glow onto the wall behind.
From the front, the letter itself reads as a solid, opaque form. By day it looks dimensional and architectural. At night the halo of light around each letter creates a floating effect that looks genuinely high-end.
If your business has a premium positioning (a law firm, medical practice, hotel, spa, upscale boutique, or corporate office), backlit is usually the right call. The effect is sophisticated without being flashy.

IMAGE PLACEHOLDER
backlit halo lit channel letters showing soft glow on the wall behind, at night
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Front and Back Lit Channel Letters
Front and back lit letters do both at the same time: glowing face on the front and halo on the back. It’s the most visually impactful option, and the most visible from any direction.
If you’re on a high-traffic street, in a competitive commercial area, or want your sign to make the strongest possible impression at night, front and back lit is worth the upgrade. Shopping center anchors, restaurants in busy corridors, and entertainment venues often go this route.
RGB Color-Changing Channel Letters
RGB channel letters are built on the same platform as face lit letters, but the LEDs inside are full-spectrum RGB units instead of single-color. That means your sign can display any color in the visible spectrum, and you can change it on demand from your phone.
Want red for Valentine’s Day, green for St. Patrick’s Day, orange for Halloween, and your regular brand color the rest of the year? Done. You can program static colors, color cycles, gradients, and timed schedules through a simple app. No technical knowledge required.
Bars, entertainment venues, seasonal businesses, and anyone who runs regular promotions tends to love RGB. It’s the same quality as standard channel letters, just with a lot more flexibility.


Non-Illuminated Metal Letters
Not every business needs an illuminated sign. If you’re in an office building, a professional complex, a hotel lobby, or an upscale location where ambient lighting is sufficient, solid metal letters are worth considering.
Metal channel letters are fabricated from aluminum or stainless steel with no electrical components at all. No LEDs, no wiring, no power supply. Just precision-cut, three-dimensional letters in brushed, painted, or powder-coated finishes.
They look incredibly clean and permanent. And because there’s no electrical work involved, installation is simpler and cheaper.
What Drives Channel Letter Sign Cost Up or Down
The price ranges at the top of this guide cover a typical business name sign: 8 to 12 letters, 12 to 24 inches tall, for a standard storefront. Here’s what moves your channel letter sign cost within (or beyond) those ranges.
The Biggest Factor: Who You Order From
A local sign shop typically adds a 30–50% markup on top of manufacturing costs because they’re ordering from a wholesale manufacturer and reselling to you. Ordering factory-direct eliminates that markup entirely. The same sign that costs $3,000 through a local shop might run $1,500–$1,800 ordered directly from the factory:
$3,000 local shop → $1,500–$1,800 factory-direct
That’s the model channel letter signs from ChannelLetter.com are built on: factory-direct to you, with no middleman pricing.
What to Look for When Ordering
Not all channel letter suppliers are equal. Here’s what matters when you’re comparing options.
What Comes With Your Sign
When you order channel letters from a quality factory-direct supplier, here’s what should arrive at your door:
Everything in one shipment, everything you need to install. Your electrician shows up, mounts the letters, connects one power feed, and the sign lights up. That’s what a plug-and-play kit means.
What you don’t need to supply: wire, hardware, tools specific to the sign, or an electrician who specializes in signage. Any licensed electrician can do the connection.
How Long Does It Take?
From the day you approve your order to the day your sign arrives, expect 10 to 15 business days for standard production and shipping.
Here’s how the timeline typically breaks down:
The most common delay is the artwork approval step. The faster you approve the proof, the faster it goes into production. If you have questions about the proof, ask them immediately rather than sitting on it. Rush production is sometimes available, worth asking about if you have a hard deadline like a grand opening.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to Order?
If you’re a business owner who’s been putting off getting a real sign, this is the right time. The ordering process is simpler than most people expect, the price is lower than local shops, and the quality speaks for itself. Request a free quote and get pricing within 24 hours, or browse storefront signs and outdoor business signs for examples that fit your location.
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