The development of artificial light-harvesting systems mimicking the natural photosynthesis method is an ever-growing field of research. Numerous systems such as polymers, metal complexes, POFs, COFs, supramolecular frameworks etc. have been fabricated to accomplish more efficient energy transfer and storage. Among them, the supramolecular coordination complexes (SCCs) formed by non-covalent metal-ligand interaction, have shown the capacity to not only undergo single and multistep energy migration but also to utilize the harvested energy for a wide variety of applications such as photocatalysis, tunable emissive systems, encrypted anti-counterfeiting materials, white light emitters etc. This review sheds light on the light-harvesting behavior of both the 2D metallacycles and 3D metallacages where design ingenuity has been executed to afford energy harvesting by both donor ligands as well as metal acceptors. Light harvesting scaffold: Pd(II)/Pt(II)-based supramolecular scaffolds are well known for providing a wide pool of discrete architectures with numerous applications in catalysis, guest encapsulation, proton conductivity, explosive detection etc. This minireview summarizes various such light harvesting metallacycles, and metallacages that have opened up a new direction in terms of their structural design as well as exciting new applications. image