Creating Zones in the TruLight App
Learn how to split your lights into separate zones so different areas of your home can run different colors, patterns, and effects at the same time.
This module walks you through one of the most powerful features of your TruLight system: zones. Zones let you split your lights into separate groups so different areas of your home can run different colors, patterns, and effects at the same time — independently. By the end of this module, you'll be creating zones, assigning patterns to them, and controlling each section of your home like a pro.
By the end of this module, you will be able to:
- Identify which physical lights correspond to which numbers in the TruLight app
- Create and name a custom zone with a specific light range
- Apply different colors and patterns to separate zones simultaneously
- Toggle individual zones on and off
- Reverse a zone's direction so chase patterns flow correctly
What Are Zones and Why Do They Matter?
Zones are how you take control of your full lighting system. Instead of your whole house always doing the same thing, zones let you run the front yard in one pattern while the backyard runs something completely different.
Key Concepts
What a zone actually is
A zone is just a named group of lights — defined by a starting light number and an ending light number. Once you've named it, you can target that zone independently in any color or pattern setting. Think of it like creating playlists for different rooms: each playlist (zone) plays its own music (pattern) without affecting the others.
When you'd use zones
The most common reason to set up zones is when different parts of your home need to do different things. For example: the garage lights running a static Christmas pattern while the rest of the house runs a warm white glow. Or the front yard doing a chase effect going left to right, while the backyard does the same — but without zones, those two sides might fight each other and look chaotic.
Action Step
Before you create anything, just think about your house. Mentally divide it into sections — front, back, left side, right side, upper level, lower level, garage, etc. Write down 2–3 zones you'd eventually want to set up. This will make the next lessons much more concrete.
Finding Your Lights — Mapping Which Light Is Where
Before you can create a zone, you need to know which light number corresponds to which physical location on your house. This lesson shows you the fastest way to figure that out.
Key Concepts
Using the DIY Pattern Tool to Identify Lights
The easiest way to find your light numbers is to use the DIY pattern feature as a testing tool. Here's how it works:
- Go to Patterns in the app
- Tap DIY and add a new DIY pattern — name it something like "test" so you know it's temporary
- In the DIY editor, you'll see individual light slots. Light the first one up (light 1, port 1) and look at your house to see where that first light is physically located
- Keep adding lights in groups (10, 20, 30...) and check your house each time to see how far the lit section extends
Counting Your Way to the Edge
Once you know where light 1 is, you walk through the numbers until you reach the last light in the section you want to zone. In the video example, the zone covers lights 1 through 90 — the upper garage run. The process looks like this:
- Activate lights 1–10 — look at the house, see how far that covers
- Extend to 1–20 — check again
- Keep going in increments (30, 40, 50...) until you've reached the last light in the section
When you hit the right number (90 in this example), you now have your range: 1 to 90.
Action Step
Open your TruLight app and create a temporary DIY test pattern. Light up your first light (port 1, light 1) and look at your house to identify where light number 1 is physically located. Then try to find where the first natural "section" of your house ends — note that light number. You'll use this in the next lesson.
Creating and Naming Your Zone
Once you know your light range, creating the actual zone takes about 30 seconds. This lesson walks you through it step by step.
Key Concepts
Creating a Zone in the App
Here's the exact process from the app:
- Tap Zones in the navigation menu
- Tap Create (or the + icon) to add a new zone
- Give your zone a clear, descriptive name — something like "Upper Garage," "Front Left," or "Backyard." Good naming makes everything easier later.
- Enter your start light number (e.g., 1) and your end light number (e.g., 90)
- Tap Create to save
That's it. Your zone now exists and can be targeted independently.
Testing Your New Zone
A quick way to verify your zone was set up correctly: go to Colors, select your new zone, pick any color, and tap Save. Only the lights in that range should change color. If the wrong section lights up (or too many/too few lights), go back and adjust your start/end numbers.
Action Step
Using the light range you found in Lesson 2, go create your first real zone right now. Name it clearly based on the section of your house it covers. Then test it by turning it a single solid color — confirm it lights up exactly where you expected.
Controlling Multiple Zones — Patterns, Colors, and Direction
This is where zones really shine. You'll learn how to assign different patterns to different zones, toggle zones on and off, and fix direction issues with the zone reverse feature.
Key Concepts
Running Two Zones at the Same Time
Once you have multiple zones set up, you can run them with completely different settings simultaneously. Here's how:
- Go to Patterns and pick a pattern (e.g., a Christmas pattern)
- In the pattern settings, click in the middle of the pattern (not the toggle — the center area to configure it)
- Assign it to your specific zone (e.g., "Upper Garage") — tap Save
- Nothing happens yet — that's normal. The pattern is assigned but not executing
- Now tap Static (or whatever execution mode you want) to actually run it
- Repeat the process for your second zone — go find or create another pattern, assign it to a different zone, execute it
- Now both zones are running independently at the same time
Toggling Zones On and Off
You don't always want every zone running. To turn off a specific zone:
- Go to the Zones menu
- Find the zone you want to turn off
- Toggle it off — that section of lights will go dark while everything else keeps running
This is useful if you want, say, the garage lights off while the rest of the house stays lit for a party.
Reversing a Zone's Direction
Sometimes during installation, lights on one side of a house run in one direction and lights on the other side run the opposite direction — because of how the wiring had to be routed. This causes chase patterns to look like they're fighting each other (one side going left, the other going right).
The fix is the Reverse option when creating or editing a zone:
- When you set up (or edit) the zone for the section that's running "backwards"
- Enable the Reverse toggle — this is called a "Master Reverse"
- Now when a chase pattern runs, both sides will flow in the same direction (e.g., left to right across the entire house)
This is a set-it-and-forget-it fix — you only need to do it once per zone.
Action Step
If you have more than one zone set up: assign a different color to each zone right now and confirm they work independently. If you only have one zone, toggle it on and off from the Zones menu to see how zone control works. Bonus: if you've noticed any patterns that look like they're running backwards on part of your house, try editing that zone and enabling Reverse.
Summary
What You Learned:
- Zones are named light ranges that let different sections of your home run independently
- The DIY pattern tool is the fastest way to identify which light numbers correspond to which physical locations
- Creating a zone takes 30 seconds once you know your range — just name it and enter your start/end numbers
- You can run completely different colors and patterns on multiple zones at the same time
- The Reverse toggle fixes chase direction issues caused by the way lights were wired during installation
Next Steps:
Now that you've got zones down, check out the next tutorial: How to Use and Adjust Patterns — where you'll learn how to customize the timing, speed, and color makeup of each pattern to get exactly the look you want.
