Home » Which Look Better: Round Or Rectangular Headlights? This Is A Complicated Question

Which Look Better: Round Or Rectangular Headlights? This Is A Complicated Question

Square V Round Top

I was eating dinner with some friends at my local headlight-culture seafood restaurant/THC lounge, a place called High Breams, when I first heard the scuffle. I was already sort of lit after consuming a fillet of bream soaked in THC oil so initially I didn’t trust my senses. Then, after a flying chair caught me on the back of the head, sending my face smashing into my key lime pie, I realized what was happening around me was actually happening around me. What was going on was a brawl, a brutal, savage restaurant fight involving plates, forks, bottles of Worcestershire sauce and more, all over which shape of sealed-beam headlights – round or rectangular – was more appealing.

To people outside of the Headlamp Community, this may seem like a trivial, even inane distinction to make, but among sealed beam aficionados, this distinction has a near-religious impact. Even other members of the Headlamp Community, like the composite lamp subgroup, often fail to see the importance of this inter-nacine sealed beam headlight fighting, but I assure you, it’s real.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

After I awoke in my pie, hours after the restaurant had closed, I started to make my way back home, but the round vs. rectangular conflict stuck with me. I’ve been thinking about it a lot, and I think the very notion of a binary good/bad distinction is absurd, but there are contexts were round works better, and context where rectangular works better. I think it’s even possible to come up with some rules, or maybe guidelines, to help make this call. So, with that in mind, let’s look at some cars that have had both round and rectangular sealed beam headlamps on what is otherwise essentially the same car, and see what conclusions we can draw.

Headlights Rabbit
Image: Volkswagen

I think one of the best comparisons we can make is with the Golf/Rabbit design, which started with round headlamps and then switched to rectangular in 1979. I’ve written about this switch before, because I think it’s interesting.

Image: Volkswagen

I think it’s interesting because the original Italdesign prototypes of the Golf used rectangular lamps, which does seem, objectively, to fit better with the design. But when it came to the production car, round sealed-beam headlamps were used. This could be because when the car was launched, in 1974, the American market did not allow European-style composite headlamps, and the only headlights available were round, since rectangular sealed beams weren’t available until 1975.

I’ve also heard that VW wanted to differentiate the car a bit from other rectangular-lamped hatchbacks, but that’s just rumor. Personally, I think the round lights actually make the Golf/Rabbit far more interesting looking up front. This seems counterintuitive since the whole car is so unashamedly rectilinear, but I think the way the round lights break the boundary of the grille offers a sort of playful visual punctuation, and gives the front end a sort of willing, alert appearance.

I mean, look at the rectangular-lamped version from 1979:

Image: Volkswagen

The car now looks…stern, or at least somewhat displeased. Yes, these lights technically are more harmonious, but I can’t help feel that something was lost with the removal of the round lamps. The rectangular ones almost fit too well, and as a result the front end loses some charm.

Now, conversely, we can look at the Renault 5/Le Car:

Headlights Renault5
Image: Renault

The initial US-Market Renault LeCars (the silly name given to the Renault 5 in America) used round sealed beams, from 1976 to 1979, and in 1980 those were replaced with rectangular lamps. In this case, I think the rectangular lamps work better, because, unlike the Golf/Rabbit, where the headlights broke some of the boundaries of the Golf’s very straight-edged front end with playful aplomb, in the case of the LeCar the round lights were simply stuffed into the rectangular bezels that housed the Euro version’s rectangular composite headlights.

This was a case where the lights weren’t cleverly interacting with the existing design, but rather were being forced into a context they were never meant to be. These lights looked and felt like a clumsy compromise, and when rectangular lights were fitted into the rectangular bezels in 1980, the LeCar’s face felt harmonious again.

This issue – cramming a round light into a square hole – I feel like comes up surprisingly often, and it almost never works. Take the Studebaker Avanti, for example. Original Avantis had wonderfully unabashedly round headlights:

Avanti Palm Springs Resize
Source: Studebaker

Much like the VW Golf/Rabbit’s round headlights, these worked because of their contrast with the more linear forms of the rest of the car. But, after Studebaker passed onto the great factory in the sky, the Avanti lived on as the Avanti II, which for some reason featured round lights in rectangular chrome bezels:

Cs Avanti 3
Source: Avanti

 

That’s not an improvement! I’m not sure what the goal was there, exactly, but it just makes the front end look fussier and dowdier. Later neo-Avantis moved to rectangular headlamps, which was better than the round-in-chrome-squares of before, but still not great:

Avanti Sedan 1

…and then eventually came all the way back to bold round headlamps:

Cs Avanti 5
The Mustang-based Avanti convertible. Source: Avanti

Overall, I think the Avanti works better with round lamps, for reasons similar to the Golf/Rabbit.

Headlights Chevette
Image: Chevrolet

The Chevette is yet another example of how round lights work best when not surrounded by square holes. The early Chevette face is a little friendlier, perhaps, but the later rectangular-lamped front end is much cleaner and works better with the overall design. Somehow, unlike the Rabbit/Golf, it doesn’t suffer from the stern/suspicious look issue, though I’m not sure I can pinpoint exactly why.

I think intent is important here, or perhaps something closer to acceptance? What I mean is that designs where a round light is appreciated as a round light and no attempts are made to shoehorn it into a design never really intended for a round light are the ones that tend to work. Really, the same goes for rectangular lamps: is the overall design one that appreciates the shape of the lights? Look at these Monte Carlos compared to the Golf/Rabbit:

Images: GM/VW

When the Monte Carlo switched from round lights to quad stacked rectangular ones, the impression one gets is that the overall design was adapted to make those work; I get a sense that the designer was eager to try these new headlights. With the Golf/Rabbit, the switch feels more like an obligation, something done because one is expected to do it, and without passion.

Some round-to-rectangular changes are a little baffling, as in the famous case of the Citroën 2CV:

Images: Citroën

I’ve gotten used to the rectangular-lamp 2CVs but it does seem a pretty arbitrary choice; in a way it’s like the opposite of the Golf/Rabbit situation, only in this case rectilinear lights on a curvy car.

Image: Honda

The Honda Accord is another interesting example of a car that tried both; of all of these, I think this one may be closest to a wash. I think it looks pretty damn good either way. The quad round lamps somehow manage to have a slightly sportier look, partially because of traditions involving using lights that were quick to change in rally contexts. But the rectangular ones do look pretty smart!

So what have we decided here? I think if there’s any takeaways, it’s that you can’t beat intention and enthusiasm when it comes to car design. If you have a round headlight, own that round headlight. Let the light define its space, don’t try and force it into another shape. Let it push against other elements of the design! And, conversely, harmony can work, too! Sometimes a rectangular lamp in a rectangular hole just feels right!

My point is, sealed-beam enthusiasts, it’s time to stop fighting. Put down the shrimp forks and chairs, and accept that you are all beautiful children of light, with so much to offer, all in your own brilliant ways.

 

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Jorge Gonzales
Jorge Gonzales
14 hours ago

Square, but really, the shape needs to integrate with the overall design.

Christocyclist
Christocyclist
14 hours ago

Round but not when they are in square/rectangular housings

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
13 hours ago
Reply to  Christocyclist

Early Squarebody Chevys have entered the chat.

Aracan
Member
Aracan
14 hours ago

Not sure how this was handled in the U.S. versions, but the 1st and 2nd Gen Jettas had square headlights, differentiating them from the round-headlight Rabbit/Golf.

Jonathan Green
Member
Jonathan Green
14 hours ago

You have no idea how freakin’ cool square headlights were in 1975. But putting square headlights in cars designed with round ones is like seeking your granny wear a hello kitty backpack. It looks tacked on and not appropriate.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
9 hours ago
Reply to  Jonathan Green

You leave Grandma alone! She can wear whatever she wants!

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
14 hours ago

Why no poll?

I’d say round, for sure.

Johnologue
Member
Johnologue
15 hours ago

I agree with Jason, the problem is the mismatch with the overall design and especially when – ah, yes. There’s a meme for this.
“This one goes in the square hole!”

Dave Larkman
Dave Larkman
17 hours ago

Can we all agree that rear lights should be round, and their number should be four?

Even when in a mostly rectangular housing, like on the facelift FC RX7s.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
13 hours ago
Reply to  Dave Larkman

Same as the Nissan Skyline Chevy Impala.

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
12 hours ago

What if it’s six, like a 60s Impala? Or two?

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
12 hours ago

Things to ponder while you’re cruising down the street in your 64.

Dave Larkman
Dave Larkman
11 hours ago

Two like the Lotus Evora? Half as good as four.

The 60’s Impala has the best taillight graphic ever.

Dave Larkman
Dave Larkman
11 hours ago

God yes.

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
18 hours ago

Round, always. They look better and more importantly, they function better as lights. Though American craptastic sealed beams need to die in a fire – the only advantage to them is you can easily upgrade them to European not-sealed H4 headlights and actually have decent headlights for relatively cheap.

And now Toyota will sell you e-code round H4s with proper Euro beam pattern and an excellent relay wiring harness dirt cheap. My eventual next Alfa Spider thanks whomever it was who passed along that tip!

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
13 hours ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

Can confirm. I was very gruntled to find my JDM Rover Mini has H4 bulbs and not sealed beams.

Dave Larkman
Dave Larkman
20 hours ago

My view, as a non-US lighting enthusiast, is that sealed beam lights are stupid regardless of shape.

My 2CV was a rectangular headlight model, and they never stopped looking wrong. Plus they were slightly bigger, and added drag to an already draggy and underpowered car. Urgh.

FuzzyPlushroom
FuzzyPlushroom
20 hours ago

> This seems counterintuitive since the whole car is so unashamedly rectilinear, but I think the way the round lights break the boundary of the grille offers a sort of playful visual punctuation, and gives the front end a sort of willing, alert appearance.

This has me imagining a Fiat Ritmo/Strada with quadrilateral headlamps and door handles and… nah, I’m team round most of the time.

Cheers to Mark for pointing out the Volvo 240.

Ford_Timelord
Ford_Timelord
20 hours ago

My VW T3 is a tricky one. Like the Golf it was adorned with both round and square headlights over its 12 year production run. Like the Golf it has a chunky angular shape that looks like it was carved out of something solid.
To me the original pair of single headlights framed in a delicate grill looks too old fashioned and a throwback to the old Type 2 bay window but the later quad square headlights look the biz.
However. there is a special place in my heart for the round headlights and driving light combo of the South African grill that was built up to 2005 as the grille and surround are more fitting of the vehicle with chunky slats and less fussy look

Early round and square. https://campwestfalia.com/2023/wp-content/uploads/Evolution-Vanagon-New-Old-2-1024×576.png

South African Grille is the winner!
https://bringatrailer.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/1990_volkswagen_vanagon-westfalia_1e6a1126-91379.jpg

Last edited 19 hours ago by Ford_Timelord
Lori Hille
Member
Lori Hille
20 hours ago

When Torch wrote High Breams, I thought he wrote High Beams. I was thinking it would have made a good alternate name for Hooters.

Lori Hille
Member
Lori Hille
20 hours ago

Let’s avoid the travesty of the melted egg shaped 911 headlights.

Emil Minty
Emil Minty
22 hours ago

The best headlights are pop-ups!

And the best pop-ups are the 928, which are round.

Dave Larkman
Dave Larkman
20 hours ago
Reply to  Emil Minty

They are pop-forwards.

The best pop-ups are the FC RX7 parallel motion lights where at great expense the lamp is always vertical just so it could flash the full beams through a little window without popping up.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
13 hours ago
Reply to  Dave Larkman

My FB just always looked so happy with it’s popups.

I also found I had fantastic nighttime visibility, since the car was so low and the headlights pointed pretty much directly forward.

Dave Larkman
Dave Larkman
11 hours ago

I love FBs too.

When I was 21 I inherited £4000. I was still driving a 2CV, my first “car”, so I immediately went shopping for an actual car.

I ended up buying a Citroen AX GT for £3995, but the car next to it at the dealer was an FB RX7, for the exact same price.

I regretted that choice until I bought my first FC. RX7s use a lot more fuel than 750kg hatchbacks…

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
11 hours ago
Reply to  Dave Larkman

The FB is actually pretty fuel efficient. The combination of the smaller 12a engine, and the fact that the car weighs 1000 kilos to the FC’s 1300 kilos, really helps.

Also, that classic wedge cuts the air.

Dave Larkman
Dave Larkman
10 hours ago

I would pick the least economical option.

The Diesel version of the Citroen AX did 100mpg!

Yung
Yung
22 hours ago

Round

Utherjorge, who is quite angry about the baby FJ
Member
Utherjorge, who is quite angry about the baby FJ
22 hours ago

Round

Done

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
23 hours ago

The rounds on the Le Car are cold-hearted orbs, rule the night, while the rounds on the 2CV are the story in her eyes.

Eggsalad
Member
Eggsalad
23 hours ago

I tend to be objective when it comes to my headlight choice. The objectively best reflector for a headlight is a parabola, the cross-section of which is a circle. Round wins, hands down.

Ikara_JackRabbit
Ikara_JackRabbit
23 hours ago

Land Cruiser 70 series has oscillated between round and rectangular for years. Not sealed beam in more recent years but the look is certainly round or rectangular. A cheap “upgrade” for Toyota and one that will get the bar flys talking at the High Breams.

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
22 hours ago

I prefer the current US Land Cruiser with the “1958” rounds.

Timothy Swanson
Timothy Swanson
23 hours ago

My favorite example: GM square body trucks. Not only did rectangular replace round, there were multiple ways of stacking things. I prefer the rectangular. Your mileage may vary.

Another would be the Econoline of the same area, which IMO looks a LOT better with rectangular.

Oberkanone
Oberkanone
23 hours ago

Round.

Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
23 hours ago

Stacked rectangular headlights almost always replaced round ones, and they never made anything look better. I feel like they mostly defaced personal luxury coupes such as that Monte up there or the Cordoba. I guess when every model had to get at least a slightly new face every year, it was an easy solution.

What I miss about sealed beams is the ease of replacement. Sure, you might have to turn a few screws, but it beats jamming your hand into the space in front of the washer fluid bottle or whatever is in the way, fumbling blindly for the socket to twist and pull from the back of the headlight.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
23 hours ago
Reply to  Flyingstitch

I think the only “car” to have stacked square headlights as part of the original design were the first Chrysler minivans. By that time the only new vehicles still using them were the big Dodge vans and GM pickups in their deluxe trims. They were a fad in the late ’70s mostly to get one more facelift onto aging early ’70s designs.

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
12 hours ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

Ford LTD II had stacked square light from the get-go in 1977.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
10 hours ago

It was a reskinned 1972 Torino, though. The front sheetmetal was reused from the Gran Torino Elite; sedans, coupes and Rancheros(!) got new door skins and rear fenders while the one-year-only wagons used the same rear fenders Mercury Montego wagons had since ’72.

Robert Swartz
Member
Robert Swartz
1 day ago

the round light in a square hole brings back memories of the dual headlight versions of the ’57 Chryslers and DeSotos,each surrounded by a two-lamp surround. At least the Imperials that year got massive single lights – which look better than the available dual light option.

Flying Squirrel
Member
Flying Squirrel
1 day ago

Round signals alertness for me and, perhaps, eagerness. Which has its place.

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