Kingsnake · UVB and shade

Does a kingsnake need UVB?

Kingsnake care should include the measured low-output UVB gradient below. Preserve complete shade and switch every light off at night.

The amount reaching the snake changes with its distance from the lamp and anything positioned between them.

Use the practical checks
Adult California kingsnake with glossy black-and-cream bands and a clear eye using a measured UVB-and-shade gradient with a clear route into complete cover.

The short answer

Offer gentle UVB with an immediate route to shade for kingsnakes

Kingsnake care should include the measured low-output UVB gradient below. Preserve complete shade and switch every light off at night.

Adult home
For the California kingsnake reference, at least 120 × 60 × 60 cm (48 × 24 × 24 in), securely locked
Warm zone
Basking surface around 30–32°C (86–90°F)
Cool and night
Cool covered end around 22–25°C (72–77°F); All visible lights off; use controlled non-light heat only if the room falls below the reviewed safe range
Humidity
About 40–60%, with fresh water, ventilation, dry footing, and a clean humid retreat during shed
UVB
Low-output linear UVB measured around UVI 1.0 at basking level, grading to zero in shade
Food
Appropriately sized fully thawed whole rodents offered with long tongs; house kingsnakes separately

The honest fit

Would the adult routine work in your home?

Do this

  • Measure exposure where the snake can actually sit.
  • Provide an immediate route from light into complete shade.
  • Keep fresh water and monitor kingsnake behavior every day.
  • Record changes so a reptile veterinarian receives useful evidence.

Avoid this

  • Do not choose a lamp by percentage without distance guidance.
  • Do not leave visible lighting on overnight.
  • Do not copy another reptile species' setup.
  • Do not treat a persistent health change as a shopping problem.
01

Design light and shade together

For a kingsnake, use low-output linear UVB measured around UVI 1.0 at basking level, grading to zero in shade. Group the brighter zone with daytime warmth while preserving dark retreats and foliage or hide cover nearby.

A lamp percentage cannot predict the dose on its own. Follow the fixture maker's distance chart, account for mesh, and measure at the highest place the snake can actually reach when possible.

Adult California kingsnake moving across chaparral rock with its complete black-and-cream banded body and small glossy head in clear view.
02

Keep the cycle predictable

Run the daytime lighting on a timer for roughly 12 hours, then make the enclosure dark overnight. Replace the lamp on schedule or verify output with an appropriate meter.

Secure or guard fixtures so the snake cannot contact hot glass or a breakable lamp. After rearranging climbing routes or hides, re-check distance and shade instead of assuming the old setup still applies.

Alert adult California kingsnake exploring a secure naturalistic enclosure with its glossy black-and-cream banded body and small clear-eyed head in view.
03

Coordinate food and UVB

UVB, heat, calcium, and the rest of the diet work as one husbandry system. More supplement is not a safe substitute for unmeasured lighting, and more UVB is not automatically better.

Discuss supplement choice with a reptile veterinarian, especially for a albino or unusually light-sensitive morph, a growing juvenile, an egg-producing female, or a snake showing weakness or skeletal change.

Keep deciding

See the complete care picture

Sources and further reading