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// Buying guide · living room \\

What Size TV Is Best for a Living Room?

The ideal living-room TV size comes down to your seating distance. Find your sweet-spot size (most rooms land on 65″) with a to-scale calculator.

14 ft
off
Recommended size
100"
Sweet spot for 11.5 ft · range 84.9–115.3"
To-scale view of a 100-inch TV at 11.5 ft — fills 35° of your view.100" TV · 87.2" wide35°11.5 fttvcalc.com
How this is calculated

Room length → seating distance ≈ room − 2.5 ft → size = distance ÷ 1.6…1.2. Your 14 ft room (168″) minus 2.5 ft = 11.5 ft seating distance. At 11.5 ft (138″): relaxed 138 ÷ 1.6 = 84.9″, sweet spot ÷ 1.4 = 102.9″, immersive ÷ 1.2 = 115.3″. Snapped to a buyable 100″.

Your seating distance decides it

The best living-room TV size isn't a fixed number — it's whatever fills the right amount of your field of view from where you actually sit. Sit too far from a small screen and you lose the detail you paid for; sit close to a huge one and you can't take in the whole picture comfortably. The shortcut for a 4K TV: take your seating distance in inches and divide by about 1.4 for the sweet-spot size. Most living rooms land on 65 inches.

[ 01 / 03 ] · The room math

From room length to the right size

Start with the wall-to-wall length of the room the TV faces. Your sofa typically sits about 2.5 feet off the back wall, so the seating distance is roughly the room length minus that. Feed that distance into the viewing-angle standards and you get a range: the relaxed end (SMPTE's 30° minimum), the sweet spot (THX's ~36°), and the immersive end (THX's 40°). The calculator above does this for you and snaps the answer to a size you can actually buy.

As a feel for it: a typical 8–10 foot living room points straight at 65 inches, which is why it's the best-selling living-room size. Open-plan rooms where the sofa sits 10 feet or more back comfortably take a 75″ or larger. If you're unsure, err toward the bigger end of the range — people almost never wish they'd bought smaller.

[ 02 / 03 ] · Will it fit

Check the wall and the stand

Once you have a size, make sure it physically fits. Enter your wall or stand width above and we'll flag whether the TV fits with breathing room, sits tight, or is simply too wide for the space. A good rule is to leave a few inches on each side so it doesn't look crammed — and to check the TV's feet, which on many sets sit near the outer edges and can overhang a narrow console.

Can a TV be too big?

Mostly the worry is overblown. A 65″ is only "too big" if you sit closer than about 6 feet; from 8 feet or more it's the mainstream choice. A bigger screen at a sensible distance just feels more immersive, not overwhelming. The one real limit is sitting so close that you can't comfortably scan the whole frame — which the calculator's range warns you about.

[ 03 / 03 ] · How to use it

Find your size

  1. 1. Start from either your room length or your seating distance.
  2. 2. Read the recommended size and the relaxed-to-immersive range.
  3. 3. Optionally enter your wall or stand width to confirm it fits, and see it drawn to scale.
// The complete suite \\

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Jump into any tool — each is instant and drawn to scale.

[ 03 / 03 ] · FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What size TV for a living room?
55–75″; 65″ is the most popular at a typical 8–10 ft.
What size TV do I need for my room?
Divide your seating distance in inches by ~1.4 for a 4K sweet-spot size. An 8–10 ft living room → about 65″.
Is a 65-inch TV too big?
Not for most rooms at 8 ft+ — it’s the best-selling living-room size. Too big only under ~6 ft.