Not so critical if not colour work
I do colour work, and so I use a photflood, which gives 3400K. It is a mix between the temperature of daylight (500K +) and household incandescant which I recall is lower than 2500K. It only lasts about 6 hours, but that translates into about a year in terms of the amount of time that I actually have it on in my facility. It emulates the bright light conditions that a room illuminated by daylight gives when I place my prints in rooms with with windows.
The photo flood also cooks out a lot of heat, which when doing gray card colour test strips can be a benefit. Colour RA-4 prints are overly blue in cast until dry, so after squeegeing them dry I hold them at an angle a few inches from the light. They dry there within a short number of seconds, and I am then able to stick them into my colorstaranalyser to re-calibrate it for the new grey for that session's combination of bulb, paper, chemistry and temperature to bring my process under control.
For general white light darkroom illumination I use a couple of improved colour rendering incandescant lights. Stay away from fluorescent lamps; they continue to glow after you turn them off, and are dicontinuous in thier spectral output. If there a re optical brighteners in your paper that do not respond at the wavelengths that your fluorescents are emitting, then you could have quite a different look to the print when it is exposed to a continuous spectrum light source.