---
product_id: 2097930
title: "Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control"
brand: "westinghouse"
price: "VT20211"
currency: VUV
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
category: "Westinghouse"
url: https://www.desertcart.vu/products/2097930-westinghouse-7787500-wireless-ceiling-fan-and-light-wall-control
store_origin: VU
region: Vanuatu
---

# 120V/60Hz power 300W max light load 40ft wireless range Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control

**Brand:** westinghouse
**Price:** VT20211
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🌬️ Elevate your comfort and style—wireless fan & light control made effortless.

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control by westinghouse
- **How much does it cost?** VT20211 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.vu](https://www.desertcart.vu/products/2097930-westinghouse-7787500-wireless-ceiling-fan-and-light-wall-control)

## Best For

- westinghouse enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted westinghouse brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Triple Fan Speeds:** High, medium, and low settings to tailor your comfort with precision.
- • **Sleek Modern Design:** Matte white finish with included wall plate blends effortlessly into any professional space.
- • **Touch-Button Dimmer:** Smooth, full-range incandescent light dimming for ambiance and energy savings.
- • **Seamless Wireless Control:** Adjust fan speed & lighting up to 40 feet away—no pull chains, no hassle.
- • **Easy Two-Wire Installation:** Retrofit your existing single-switch setup without rewiring headaches.

## Overview

The Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control offers a modern upgrade to traditional fan controls by enabling wireless adjustment of fan speeds and incandescent lighting levels from up to 40 feet away. Featuring three fan speeds, a full-range touch dimmer, and easy two-wire installation, it eliminates pull chains and enhances convenience while supporting up to 300 watts of lighting load. UL/CUL listed and designed with a sleek matte white finish, this control is ideal for millennial professionals seeking smart, stylish home climate solutions.

## Description

Product Description The Westinghouse Ceiling Fan and Incandescent Light Wall Control lets you enjoy the convenience of adjusting your ceiling fan speed and lighting level without ever having to reach for a pull chain. The unit operates three fan speeds (high/medium/low) and an on-off button to help maximize your comfort. It also includes a full-range touch-button light dimmer for incandescent light bulbs to customize lighting levels and increase savings on your utility bill. The 120-volt/60-hertz wall control features a two-wire installation in a standard junction box to replace an existing wall switch. Once you install the receiver in the ceiling fan, the wall control communicates wirelessly with the fan up to a distance of 40 feet. UL/CUL listed, this unit can handle a fan maximum of 1-1/4 amps and a light maximum of 300 watts. A matching wall plate is included for installation. Product reference number 77875. From the Manufacturer The Westinghouse Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control lets you enjoy the convenience of adjusting your ceiling fan speed and lighting level without ever having to reach for a pull chain. The unit operates three fan speeds (high/medium/low) and off button to help maximize your comfort. It also includes a full-range touch-button light dimmer for a customized lighting level and increased savings on your utility bill. The 120-volt/60-hertz wall control features two-wire installation for use in a standard junction box to replace an existing wall switch. Once you install the receiver in the ceiling fan, the wall control communicates wirelessly with the fan up to a distance of 40-feet. CUL US-listed, this unit can handle a fan maximum of 1-1/4 amps and a light maximum of 300 watts. A matching wall plate is included for installation. Product reference number 77875.

Review: Westinghouse, probably manufacturer for other brands - I purchased this unit to replace a failing Harbor Breeze wall control that appeared very similar. I suspected they were actually the same product, so far as I can see with the exception of branding, packaging and an information sticker on the switch they are identical. The patent info molded into the back was a direct match even. I made sure the DIP switches matched and then dropped this in as a direct replacement without replacing the receiver unit in the fan, it works flawlessly. I believe this is an older style fan control as I'm no longer seeing the Harbor Breeze or Hampton Bay (one is carried by Home Depot, the other by Lowes... forget which) branded units of this design in stores. Either Westinghouse is the manufacturer of these and sells them to be rebranded by the store brands or a different party is manufacturing them for all. Yes, this control is not a "standalone" unit. It requires being wired in line with a load, the fan itself. Attempting to wire it without a load on the line will destroy it! This is though a suitable replacement for a mechanical wall control switch, although since it doesn't come with a separate wireless remote (some kits do) a cheaper solution would be to stick with the mechanical controls. If your wall switch is only a whole unit on/off control, adding this will allow you to control the lights and fan separately right at the wall, the pull chains are no longer necessary. Given that this was a direct replacement for my existing Harbor Breeze (HB) setup, this kit should allow adding wireless remotes remotes into the mix. In our bedroom we currently have a HB fan with the original HB receiver in the fan and original HB wireless remote on my wife's bedside table. I also have a remote on my bedside table that looks like the original HB one, but I don't remember if it is branded at all. The original HB wall switch from that kit is now replaced with this Westinghouse wall switch, I never even took the Westinghouse receiver out of the package. I'd be willing to bet the Westinghouse 7787000 remote would be compatible to complete a similar setup, but the design of our remotes looks more like the Litex RC-103 units so those may work as well. This is just a guess based on outside appearances, so your mileage may vary. Keep in mind that if you buy remotes to add you will start accumulating unused receivers. I've never seen remotes sold alone and listed as "compatible with receiver kit X" but I suspect the market that wants to do that isn't big enough to worry about creating a separate packaging line, plus dealing with confusion of buyers who don't understand what they're buying. I (initially, see update below) clipped 1 star off the rating as being the same design as the previous switch it replaced, I'm expecting this one to have problems after about 5 years of use as well. The light toggle is the main switch we use, and on the original the contact for this button got flaky. Being free to take the old one apart now I think I cleaned it up to where it would work again, so I'll hold onto that for a future swap if needed. Update 11/26/2013: There was a discussion question asked today if 2 wall controls could be used with 1 fan. I wrote up a reply only to find that when I went to post it the discussion had been removed. Rather than just throw away what I had written I am adding it on here to my review. --start discussion response-- For the purpose of clarity in my answer I will be referring to this Westinghouse unit as the "wall control", normal wall toggle switches as "switches" and battery-powered hand-held remotes as "wireless remotes". As is noted in other reviews this Westinghouse unit is not truly wireless as indicated in its title. It is more simpler wiring than a normal combination fan/light control switch but it is by no means wireless in itself. You can definitely use 1 wall control and multiple wireless remotes as I mentioned in my review, although the wireless remotes I'm using I already had on hand and am not sure what desertcart item they match up with. Some wireless remotes come with a wall mount bracket to hold them so you could just put a wireless remote at the location of the 2nd existing switch. It wouldn't be as attractive but it would work. 2 wall controls might be possible but keep in mind you need to install these in line with a load, per instructions this would be the fan itself. If you've already got 2 standard wall switches for your fan then they are probably 3-way switches. If these wall controls can be wired in series then what you're looking for may be possible. A normal 3-way switch switches power between two leads. Since this wall control never disconnects the power itself (that is done at the receiver end that installs in the fan base) the wiring could be arranged to keep 2 controls powered in serial. As far as a circuit goes I don't see a problem with putting these in serial, BUT THAT DOES NOT MEAN IT WILL WORK. I don't know if the controlling logic would have any issues with it. That would be a question for Westinghouse support and I've got a suspicion that they wouldn't go into depth with it, that instead they would just stick with the printed instructions of 1 wall control to 1 fan. Unless you get lucky and get feedback from someone that has already tried this you will probably be going in on this as an untested experiment. As suggested in an earlier response I would get an electrician involved if you don't have that experience yourself. Make sure they understand what I mentioned earlier that these MUST be installed in line with a load. Installing without a load will blow out the wall control. I am curious about this though and will check back to see if anyone states they've done it. If you try it yourself please be sure to share your results. --end discussion response-- --June 2020 update-- The switch is still working properly. It is in a regular bedroom so it gets daily use, specifically the light on/off button. Nearly 8 years after install this is still working like new, as such I've reinstated the originally deducted star. In this time I even had to replace the fan, I think a winding went bad as the fan wouldn't run properly even when wired without the remote control. Re-used all the existing remote components that were previously in place when I installed the new fan and all is still working as it should.
Review: Economical and Logical Solution for Single Pole / Single Switch Rooms - Works beautifully. We bought this to use with a Hunter fan. Our problem was that the fan has lights (as most ceiling fans do), but the house only has a single-pole, single switch box in the wall. So, effectively, you would only be able to turn the whole fan unit, lights included, on or off, but not the individual components. This was especially important because the ceiling fan we installed was for a nursery, and we wanted to be able to quietly turn the fan on or off without turning on a light, or using a loud clicking pull chain. The receiver fits snuggly and nearly perfectly inside the mounting bracket for the ceiling fan. The instructions for wiring the remote in are fairly straightforward and easy to understand. For this part, and if you're installing a brand new fan, I would defer entirely to the instructions for the receiver and skip the instructions for the ceiling fan. The wall remote is easy to install and operate. I was hoping to find a model with larger, more tactile and responsive buttons, something a little more stylish and less like one of those dime-a-dozen hand remotes that all look the same. Unfortunately, after digging around on desertcart, this is just about the only wall remote with 4 or more stars, and certainly the only one that does not use batteries (why other models use batteries is entirely unknown to me; but another reviewer on one of those products pointed out that in order to replace the batteries you have to entirely remove the switch from the wall). There is minimal delay between hitting a button and the response on the fan (maybe half a second tops). We used the CFL bulbs that came with the fan, and this wall remote has a dimmer function, so the greatest delay in response is from the light button. All told, there is close to a one second delay on the bulbs coming on, then another half-second or so while they scale to full brightness. I'm not sure if this is a functionality of the wall switch, cheap CFLs or maybe both, but I didn't want to spend the money to get LEDs when I have free bulbs, and I don't want to waste energy and money on incandescents (which is what the instructions call for). In summary, this is an excellent solution to operating a ceiling fan with lights without having to hire an electrician to replace the electrical box in the wall and get a dual switch. And regardless, the ability to clearly and instantly designate your fan speed without using a linear action pull chain is wonderful. UPDATE: after using this with a Hunter ceiling fan for awhile, I noticed that the CFLs that came with the fan made an audible buzzing sound. I've since replaced them with dimmable LED bulbs and the sound is now gone. I post this on this product review and not on the listing for the fan itself because I'm almost certain the problem is created by the wall / receiver unit and the way the chip or the voltage metering works (especially since I've had this type of problem with another switch). So, I would definitely recommend ensuring you use dimmable LEDs with this unit. A note: not all LEDs are dimmable, or meant to be, so review the packaging carefully, because I'm pretty sure that is what creates a buzzing sound from the lights.

## Features

- Three Fan Speeds
- Three-Wire Installation
- Wall Plate Included

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B000WEIJ8O |
| Batteries Included? | No |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | #308,582 in Tools & Home Improvement ( See Top 100 in Tools & Home Improvement ) #90 in Ceiling Fan Wall Controls |
| Certification | cul |
| Color | White |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (710) |
| Date First Available | August 17, 2005 |
| Finish | Matte |
| Horsepower | 7787500.00 |
| Included Components | Plastic |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Package Quantity | 1 |
| Item Weight | 9.6 ounces |
| Item model number | 7787500 |
| Manufacturer | Westinghouse |
| Material | Plastic |
| Mounting Type | Ceiling Mount,Wall Mount |
| Number Of Pieces | 1 |
| Part Number | 7787500 |
| Power Source | Corded Electric |
| Product Dimensions | 8 x 3 x 11 inches |
| Size | 1 Pack |
| Style | Modern |
| Switch Style | Dimmer Switch, Touch Switch |
| Voltage | 120 Volts |
| Warranty Description | 1 year. |
| Wattage | 300 watts |

## Images

![Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/31bb-nKT4FL.jpg)
![Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41ix-T5ulkL.jpg)
![Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41uuqrdfBQL.jpg)
![Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/513miySlh8L.jpg)
![Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51KA+YnnDaL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Westinghouse, probably manufacturer for other brands
*by C***G on November 12, 2012*

I purchased this unit to replace a failing Harbor Breeze wall control that appeared very similar. I suspected they were actually the same product, so far as I can see with the exception of branding, packaging and an information sticker on the switch they are identical. The patent info molded into the back was a direct match even. I made sure the DIP switches matched and then dropped this in as a direct replacement without replacing the receiver unit in the fan, it works flawlessly. I believe this is an older style fan control as I'm no longer seeing the Harbor Breeze or Hampton Bay (one is carried by Home Depot, the other by Lowes... forget which) branded units of this design in stores. Either Westinghouse is the manufacturer of these and sells them to be rebranded by the store brands or a different party is manufacturing them for all. Yes, this control is not a "standalone" unit. It requires being wired in line with a load, the fan itself. Attempting to wire it without a load on the line will destroy it! This is though a suitable replacement for a mechanical wall control switch, although since it doesn't come with a separate wireless remote (some kits do) a cheaper solution would be to stick with the mechanical controls. If your wall switch is only a whole unit on/off control, adding this will allow you to control the lights and fan separately right at the wall, the pull chains are no longer necessary. Given that this was a direct replacement for my existing Harbor Breeze (HB) setup, this kit should allow adding wireless remotes remotes into the mix. In our bedroom we currently have a HB fan with the original HB receiver in the fan and original HB wireless remote on my wife's bedside table. I also have a remote on my bedside table that looks like the original HB one, but I don't remember if it is branded at all. The original HB wall switch from that kit is now replaced with this Westinghouse wall switch, I never even took the Westinghouse receiver out of the package. I'd be willing to bet the Westinghouse 7787000 remote would be compatible to complete a similar setup, but the design of our remotes looks more like the Litex RC-103 units so those may work as well. This is just a guess based on outside appearances, so your mileage may vary. Keep in mind that if you buy remotes to add you will start accumulating unused receivers. I've never seen remotes sold alone and listed as "compatible with receiver kit X" but I suspect the market that wants to do that isn't big enough to worry about creating a separate packaging line, plus dealing with confusion of buyers who don't understand what they're buying. I (initially, see update below) clipped 1 star off the rating as being the same design as the previous switch it replaced, I'm expecting this one to have problems after about 5 years of use as well. The light toggle is the main switch we use, and on the original the contact for this button got flaky. Being free to take the old one apart now I think I cleaned it up to where it would work again, so I'll hold onto that for a future swap if needed. Update 11/26/2013: There was a discussion question asked today if 2 wall controls could be used with 1 fan. I wrote up a reply only to find that when I went to post it the discussion had been removed. Rather than just throw away what I had written I am adding it on here to my review. --start discussion response-- For the purpose of clarity in my answer I will be referring to this Westinghouse unit as the "wall control", normal wall toggle switches as "switches" and battery-powered hand-held remotes as "wireless remotes". As is noted in other reviews this Westinghouse unit is not truly wireless as indicated in its title. It is more simpler wiring than a normal combination fan/light control switch but it is by no means wireless in itself. You can definitely use 1 wall control and multiple wireless remotes as I mentioned in my review, although the wireless remotes I'm using I already had on hand and am not sure what Amazon item they match up with. Some wireless remotes come with a wall mount bracket to hold them so you could just put a wireless remote at the location of the 2nd existing switch. It wouldn't be as attractive but it would work. 2 wall controls might be possible but keep in mind you need to install these in line with a load, per instructions this would be the fan itself. If you've already got 2 standard wall switches for your fan then they are probably 3-way switches. If these wall controls can be wired in series then what you're looking for may be possible. A normal 3-way switch switches power between two leads. Since this wall control never disconnects the power itself (that is done at the receiver end that installs in the fan base) the wiring could be arranged to keep 2 controls powered in serial. As far as a circuit goes I don't see a problem with putting these in serial, BUT THAT DOES NOT MEAN IT WILL WORK. I don't know if the controlling logic would have any issues with it. That would be a question for Westinghouse support and I've got a suspicion that they wouldn't go into depth with it, that instead they would just stick with the printed instructions of 1 wall control to 1 fan. Unless you get lucky and get feedback from someone that has already tried this you will probably be going in on this as an untested experiment. As suggested in an earlier response I would get an electrician involved if you don't have that experience yourself. Make sure they understand what I mentioned earlier that these MUST be installed in line with a load. Installing without a load will blow out the wall control. I am curious about this though and will check back to see if anyone states they've done it. If you try it yourself please be sure to share your results. --end discussion response-- --June 2020 update-- The switch is still working properly. It is in a regular bedroom so it gets daily use, specifically the light on/off button. Nearly 8 years after install this is still working like new, as such I've reinstated the originally deducted star. In this time I even had to replace the fan, I think a winding went bad as the fan wouldn't run properly even when wired without the remote control. Re-used all the existing remote components that were previously in place when I installed the new fan and all is still working as it should.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Economical and Logical Solution for Single Pole / Single Switch Rooms
*by A***Y on August 9, 2017*

Works beautifully. We bought this to use with a Hunter fan. Our problem was that the fan has lights (as most ceiling fans do), but the house only has a single-pole, single switch box in the wall. So, effectively, you would only be able to turn the whole fan unit, lights included, on or off, but not the individual components. This was especially important because the ceiling fan we installed was for a nursery, and we wanted to be able to quietly turn the fan on or off without turning on a light, or using a loud clicking pull chain. The receiver fits snuggly and nearly perfectly inside the mounting bracket for the ceiling fan. The instructions for wiring the remote in are fairly straightforward and easy to understand. For this part, and if you're installing a brand new fan, I would defer entirely to the instructions for the receiver and skip the instructions for the ceiling fan. The wall remote is easy to install and operate. I was hoping to find a model with larger, more tactile and responsive buttons, something a little more stylish and less like one of those dime-a-dozen hand remotes that all look the same. Unfortunately, after digging around on Amazon, this is just about the only wall remote with 4 or more stars, and certainly the only one that does not use batteries (why other models use batteries is entirely unknown to me; but another reviewer on one of those products pointed out that in order to replace the batteries you have to entirely remove the switch from the wall). There is minimal delay between hitting a button and the response on the fan (maybe half a second tops). We used the CFL bulbs that came with the fan, and this wall remote has a dimmer function, so the greatest delay in response is from the light button. All told, there is close to a one second delay on the bulbs coming on, then another half-second or so while they scale to full brightness. I'm not sure if this is a functionality of the wall switch, cheap CFLs or maybe both, but I didn't want to spend the money to get LEDs when I have free bulbs, and I don't want to waste energy and money on incandescents (which is what the instructions call for). In summary, this is an excellent solution to operating a ceiling fan with lights without having to hire an electrician to replace the electrical box in the wall and get a dual switch. And regardless, the ability to clearly and instantly designate your fan speed without using a linear action pull chain is wonderful. UPDATE: after using this with a Hunter ceiling fan for awhile, I noticed that the CFLs that came with the fan made an audible buzzing sound. I've since replaced them with dimmable LED bulbs and the sound is now gone. I post this on this product review and not on the listing for the fan itself because I'm almost certain the problem is created by the wall / receiver unit and the way the chip or the voltage metering works (especially since I've had this type of problem with another switch). So, I would definitely recommend ensuring you use dimmable LEDs with this unit. A note: not all LEDs are dimmable, or meant to be, so review the packaging carefully, because I'm pretty sure that is what creates a buzzing sound from the lights.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Works fine so far, relatively easy to install.
*by D***X on January 20, 2018*

Installed on a 6yr old 52in Hampton Bay ceiling fan w/light. Good installation instructions and generally easy installation as long as you have a deeper style cover cap to put the transmitter in. So really, any fan thats not a flush mount this should work. My fan has a pullchain for the light(on/off) and another for the speed(3 spd). So I left the speed switch at high and the light switch on, before removing both pull chains after installation. Took me about an hour and a half to install; would've been a half hour less as I put a longer downrod on the fan at the same time I installed this. So I have dimmable LED bulbs and I noticed that the dimming function relies on holding the light button to dim the lights. It does not completely dim the lights (off), and the lowest level leaves lights about 20% I would estimate. Also when you hold the button to dim to lowest dim level, if you hold button too long it jumps back to full brightness level, so it's something to get used to with this design of switch. But for <$30, its fine. Larger buttons would be nice though. All in all, I'm pretty satisfied so far after a few days of installing this :)

## Frequently Bought Together

- Westinghouse 7787500 Wireless Ceiling Fan and Light Wall Control, 1 Pack, White
- Westinghouse 7787000 Ceiling Fan and Light Remote Control, White
- Westinghouse 7233600 Comet Indoor Ceiling Fan with Light, White

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*Product available on Desertcart Vanuatu*
*Store origin: VU*
*Last updated: 2026-05-03*