You can safely cut LED strip lights as long as you only cut at the marked points and power is disconnected first.

Quick Scoop

  • Unplug the power before you do anything.
  • Find the small scissor icons or copper pads on the strip – those are your cut points.
  • Use sharp scissors or a utility knife and cut straight through the line between the copper pads.
  • Make sure copper pads are intact on both sides if you plan to reconnect pieces later.

What You Need

  • Sharp scissors or utility knife.
  • Measuring tape or ruler for accurate length.
  • Optional: LED strip connectors or soldering kit if you want to reconnect pieces, plus heat‑shrink or electrical tape to insulate.

Step‑by‑Step: How to Cut LED Strip Lights

  1. Power down completely
    • Unplug the power supply or turn off the circuit so the strip has no power at all.
 * This protects you and prevents short circuits.
  1. Measure and plan the length
    • Measure the surface where the strip will go and mark roughly where the strip should end.
 * Then locate the nearest cut mark on the strip to that measurement (you often can’t cut at an arbitrary point).
  1. Find the cut marks
    • Look for a printed scissor symbol, a dotted line, or a gap between a pair of copper pads on the strip.
 * These marks repeat every 1–6 inches depending on the strip type.
 * Never cut through an LED or other component; that section will likely stop working.
  1. Make the cut
    • Place the strip on a flat surface.
    • Align your scissors or knife right in the center of the cut line, between the copper pads.
 * Cut straight down with firm, clean pressure to avoid tearing the circuit pads.
  1. Inspect the ends
    • Check that each new end still has a full pair of copper pads exposed.
 * If the pads are damaged or half‑missing, that end may not work for power or connectors.

If You Want to Reconnect or Extend

  • Use clip‑on LED strip connectors that clamp onto the copper pads; match the + and − markings on both sides.
  • For a more permanent solution, solder wires to the copper pads, then protect the joint with heat‑shrink tubing or electrical tape.
  • Always double‑check polarity (+ to +, − to −) before powering up, or the strip may not light or could be damaged.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Cutting anywhere that doesn’t have a cut symbol or copper pad gap.
  • Cutting while the strip is still plugged in.
  • Bending the strip sharply right at the cut, which can crack the circuit.
  • Letting bare copper pads touch metal surfaces without insulation.

Mini TL;DR

Only cut LED strip lights at the printed scissor/copper‑pad marks, with the power disconnected, using sharp scissors or a knife, and keep the copper pads intact if you plan to reconnect pieces.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.