📺 TV Distance from Sofa Calculator
Find the ideal viewing distance based on your TV size, resolution, and room dimensions — using SMPTE & THX standards.
| TV Size (inches) | 1080p HD (feet) | 4K UHD (feet) | 8K (feet) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 32" | 4.0 – 6.7 | 2.7 – 4.0 | 2.0 – 2.7 |
| 40" | 5.0 – 8.3 | 3.3 – 5.0 | 2.5 – 3.3 |
| 43" | 5.4 – 9.0 | 3.6 – 5.4 | 2.7 – 3.6 |
| 50" | 6.3 – 10.4 | 4.2 – 6.3 | 3.1 – 4.2 |
| 55" | 6.9 – 11.5 | 4.6 – 6.9 | 3.4 – 4.6 |
| 65" | 8.1 – 13.5 | 5.4 – 8.1 | 4.1 – 5.4 |
| 75" | 9.4 – 15.6 | 6.3 – 9.4 | 4.7 – 6.3 |
| 85" | 10.6 – 17.7 | 7.1 – 10.6 | 5.3 – 7.1 |
| 98" | 12.3 – 20.4 | 8.2 – 12.3 | 6.1 – 8.2 |
Distances in feet. Based on SMPTE & THX industry standards. Min = closest comfortable, Max = farthest beneficial distance.
| Resolution | Pixels | Multiplier Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1080p HD | 1920 × 1080 | 1.5× – 2.5× screen size | Larger rooms, older content |
| 4K UHD | 3840 × 2160 | 1.0× – 1.5× screen size | Most living rooms, streaming |
| 8K | 7680 × 4320 | 0.75× – 1.0× screen size | Close viewing, max immersion |
Higher resolution = more pixels per inch = you can sit closer without seeing pixel structure.
| Viewing Mode | Angle (FOV) | Standard | Experience |
|---|---|---|---|
| Comfortable / Casual | 15° | General reference | Relaxed, low fatigue |
| Standard / Balanced | 20° | SMPTE reference | Good detail, comfortable |
| Immersive / Cinema | 30° | THX / SMPTE recommended | Fills peripheral vision |
| Ultra Immersive | 36°+ | THX maximum | Full cinema feel, short dist. |
THX recommends a 36° field of view for a true cinema experience. SMPTE recommends 30° as the standard for home viewing.
The distance between the sofa and the TV is more important than many people think. If the screen is too small or too far, you will be distracted and will lose details of your favourite series Hence, you must consider this space when you put the sofa in the room.
Standards of THX and SMPTE suggest that the TV fill 30 to 40 degrees of the horizontal field of vision. The Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers suggest you sit so that the screen takes up at least 30 degrees for a cinematic feeling. To feel like you are in a movie, a 45-degree angle is ideal, although some recommendations give only 30 degrees, which for some can seem too far.
How Far Should the Sofa Be from the TV
A classic formula is multiply the size of the TV by two to find the ideal distance in inches. For instance, for a 55-inch TV, the sofa should sit around 110 inches, or almost 9 feet, away. Another way is multiply the size by 1.2 to 1.5 times.
The minimum distance should be at least 1.5 times the screen size. For wide-screen devices with DVD or HDTV, sitting as close as 1.5 times the diagonal works well without losing much quality. Even so, if you sit more than three times the screen size away, you will start to lose detials.
To find the minimum screen size in inches, divide the viewing distance by three. For the maximum, divide by 1.5. Do you already have a TV?
Use those rules to position your sofa. Another way to think about that: divide the space by two, and that will give you the right TV size for your room.
One important thing is to measure from where the viewer actually sits. Measure from the back of the sofa to the screen, not from wall to wall. Indeed, you should measure the distance from the panel to the eyes of the person.
A measure of three metres to the sofa probably means three metres from the TV to the feet, not the eyes.
A 75-inch TV at 10 feet gives very good image quality. Also a 73-inch OLED at 8 feet works well. Even so, some with a 32-inch TV at 3 feet and some with a 75-inch TV at 6 feet both can feel comfortable, depending on preference.
In the AV industry there is an unwritten rule about the limit of ten feet, which means that after ten feet the clarity of the image can drop.
With today’s flat screens, any comfortable distance does not present danger. Old cathode ray tube TVs used high voltage, which created strong electromagnetic fields, so sitting too close was considered dangerous. A big advantage of new high-resolution TVs is that you can have a bigger screen without moving the sofa.
For instance, switching a 32-inch 1080p TV (at 2.5 metres) to a 65-inch UHD works well without pushing the sofa further back. If you always lean forward or squint your eyes, the distance is probably wrong, even if the numbers say otherwise.

