Please don't tell me that you land at an airport and especially a major airport without landing lights if your lights are fully functional. Single pilot aircraft are capable to go down to 200' on a precision approach, so if you do not have another pilot in the right seat it is best to keep them on. At 200' you will easily be able to see an ALS. You are required to have operational landing lights at night and they are required for a purpose. So you can see, yes, but also so other aircraft can see you, aircraft in the air (in this case they probably won't be able to see you) but also aircraft on the ground (oops, a crew made an error and did't hear the hold short instructions or heard it and started taxiing across a runway anyway (yes they are wrong) but by you having the landing lights on popping out at 200' you and they both have time to get the hell out of each others way, (you may be under the base of the weather at 200' but they will be able to see your landing lights before you see the runway or ASL and break out at 200'). Yes they can be iritating to you, if you have an autopilot, use it, monitor it and before you get close to mins and before you disconnect the autopilot turn the lights on, that's my advice for a single crew aircraft. You want the aircraft fully configured and everything complete (including landing lights on) before you begin manually flying the approach and landing. You don't want any distractions. Do not continue and land without the lights on, lights are required by FARs and international flight rules as well for the reasons previously mentioned. If you have a two crew aircraft, now that is different. The PM (Pilot Monitoring or Non Flying Pilot) can turn the lights on the PF calls for it. The PF does not have to take his eyes off the intruments or runway or be distracted by trying to turn them on himself. So a 2 crew aircraft can wait a little longer before they turn them on, but they are still required to be turned on before landing.