If you are asking what size TV should I buy in 2026, the honest short answer is: probably bigger than you think, but only after you measure where you actually sit. Screen size is the one spec people consistently get wrong, and the mistake almost always runs small. This guide walks you from your couch to a sensible number.
What changed in 2026
Two shifts matter this year. First, big panels got cheap. Sizes like 75, 85, and even 98 inches that used to carry a luxury tax have dropped into range for normal budgets, so the gap between a 55 and a 75 is smaller than it once was. Second, 4K is now the floor, not the ceiling. Because 4K packs so many pixels, you can sit much closer than the old standard-definition advice assumed without seeing a soft image.
That combination flips the old rule. For decades people bought small and sat far back. In 2026 the smarter move is to fill more of your field of view, because the resolution supports it and the price finally allows it. Meanwhile 8K remains a solution in search of content that does not exist.
Start with your seating distance
The single most useful number is how far your eyes sit from the screen. Sit where you normally watch and measure to the wall or stand. That distance, not the size of the room, should drive the decision.
Home theater groups publish two loose targets: a relaxed field of view around 30 degrees and a more immersive one around 40 degrees. You do not need the math. The point is that every distance has a comfortable minimum and an immersive sweet spot, and most people are happiest near the immersive end for movies and gaming.
A size-by-distance table
Use this as a starting point, then verify against your own room and current prices. Numbers are directional, not gospel.
| Seating distance |
Comfortable minimum |
4K sweet spot |
| 4 ft (1.2 m) |
40 inch |
50 inch |
| 5 ft (1.5 m) |
50 inch |
55 inch |
| 6 ft (1.8 m) |
55 inch |
65 inch |
| 7 ft (2.1 m) |
55 inch |
75 inch |
| 8 ft (2.4 m) |
65 inch |
85 inch |
| 10 ft (3 m) |
75 inch |
98 inch |
If you land between two rows, size up. The extra inches cost less than they used to, and the payoff is real.
Room, mounting, and the stuff people forget
Size is not just the diagonal. A 75-inch TV is roughly 65 inches wide, so measure your media unit and the wall before you fall in love with a number. Check the door and stairwell it has to travel through, too; large panels are heavy and awkward, and a solo lift is a bad idea.
If you wall-mount, aim for eye level with the middle of the screen when seated, which for most couches puts the center around 40 to 45 inches off the floor. Mounting a big TV high over a fireplace looks dramatic in photos and strains your neck in practice. Budget for a mount rated above the set weight and, for the largest sizes, studs that can hold it.
Bigger is usually the right regret
Ask people who upgraded and the pattern is clear: very few wish they had gone smaller, and plenty wish they had gone bigger. Once your eyes adjust over a week or two, a screen that felt huge on day one becomes normal.
That said, bigger is not automatically better. Match the size to the panel quality you can afford. A great 65-inch OLED or mini-LED usually beats a bargain 85-inch with weak contrast, poor upscaling, and mushy motion. Buy the largest screen that still leaves budget for a good picture.
What to skip
- Skip 8K. There is no native 8K content, and the premium buys pixels you cannot see at normal distances. Put that money toward a larger, better 4K set.
- Skip the "too big for the room" myth. With 4K you can sit close without artifacts. The real limits are your wall, your budget, and your neck.
- Skip paying for size at the cost of the panel. Contrast, brightness, and processing shape the picture more than raw inches once you clear the sweet spot.
FAQ
Is a 65 or 75 inch TV better for a living room?
For a typical 6 to 8 foot couch distance in 2026, 65 to 75 inches is the sweet spot. If your budget and wall allow the 75, most people prefer it after a short adjustment.
How far should I sit from a 4K TV?
Roughly one to one and a half times the screen diagonal works well. A 65-inch set is comfortable from about 5.5 to 8 feet; verify with your own tape measure.
Can a TV be too big for a room?
Rarely, thanks to 4K resolution. The practical limits are wall width, mounting height, and comfort, not image quality at close range.
Should I buy 8K to future-proof?
No. Native 8K content is scarce and the premium is steep. A larger, higher-quality 4K TV is the better use of the same money in 2026.
Where to go next
With the screen sorted, dial in the setup around it: get the network right with how to choose a router in 2026, speed up a media box or console with what is an SSD in 2026, and plan for heavy 4K streaming using the Wi-Fi 7 router buying guide for 2026.