Back to all blog posts
    How Big Is an 80 Inch TV? Exact Dimensions, Viewing Distance & Room Guide 2026

    How Big Is an 80 Inch TV? Exact Dimensions, Viewing Distance & Room Guide 2026

    Published on March 17, 2026 by Display Expert

    An 80-inch TV is a compelling but uncommon size. While the 75" and 85" dominate the large-screen market, an 80" occupies a sweet spot between them — delivering noticeably more screen than a 75" without the full footprint of an 85". Here's everything you need to know about the actual dimensions, viewing distances, and whether an 80" TV fits your room.

    80-Inch TV: Exact Dimensions

    All 16:9 TVs follow the same aspect ratio, so the width and height can be calculated precisely from the diagonal measurement.

    Measurement Inches Centimeters Feet
    Screen width 69.7" 177 cm 5.81 ft
    Screen height 39.2" 99.6 cm 3.27 ft
    Total width (with bezel) 71–73" 180–185 cm 5.9–6.1 ft
    Total height (with stand) 44–48" 112–122 cm 3.67–4.0 ft
    Depth (panel only) 2.5–4" 6–10 cm
    Depth (with stand) 12–15" 30–38 cm
    Weight (typical) 65–95 lbs 29–43 kg

    Practical note: At nearly 70 inches wide, an 80" TV requires a TV stand or media console at least 72 inches (6 feet) wide. For wall mounting, use a heavy-duty mount rated for 100+ lbs anchored into at least two wall studs. Always verify stud spacing before purchasing your mount.

    How Does an 80 Inch TV Compare to Other Sizes?

    TV Size Width Height Screen Area vs 80"
    65 inch 56.7" 31.9" 1,809 sq in −34%
    70 inch 61.0" 34.3" 2,092 sq in −23%
    75 inch 65.4" 36.8" 2,406 sq in −8%
    80 inch 69.7" 39.2" 2,732 sq in
    85 inch 74.1" 41.7" 3,090 sq in +13%
    98 inch 85.4" 48.1" 4,108 sq in +50%

    Going from 75" to 80" adds 8% more screen area — a modest but visible upgrade. Going from 80" to 85" adds another 13%. If you're debating between these three, the price gap between 75" and 85" is often smaller than you'd expect, making the 75" and 85" the more popular choices at retail.

    Viewing Distance: How Far Should You Sit?

    Viewing distance depends on resolution. With 4K, you can sit much closer without seeing pixels — giving you a more immersive experience in typical living rooms.

    Situation Viewing Distance Notes
    4K minimum 6.7 ft (2.0 m) Closest distance without visible pixels at 4K
    4K sweet spot 8–11 ft (2.4–3.4 m) Immersive without eye strain — ideal for most living rooms
    1080p minimum 10 ft (3.0 m) Closer than this and pixels become visible on 1080p content
    Maximum comfortable 13.3 ft (4.1 m) Beyond this, a larger TV would improve immersion

    What Room Size Do You Need for an 80 Inch TV?

    Use this guide to quickly assess whether an 80" TV works in your specific room:

    Room Size Approx. Viewing Distance 80" TV Verdict
    10×12 ft (small living room) 6–8 ft ⚠️ Tight — may feel overwhelming; 65–70" is safer
    12×16 ft (medium living room) 8–10 ft ✅ Good — sweet spot for 4K immersion
    14×20 ft (large living room) 10–14 ft ✅ Great — 80" or 85" both work well
    Open-plan 20×25 ft 14+ ft ⚠️ Consider 85"–98" for proper immersion

    Should You Buy 75", 80", or 85"?

    This is the key decision most buyers at this size tier face. Here's a practical breakdown:

    • Choose 75" if you want the widest selection of models, competitive pricing, and your room comfortably fits 8–10 ft of viewing distance. The 75" is the sweet spot of the large-TV market with the most options across all budgets.
    • Choose 80" if you find a compelling deal on a specific model and your room can accommodate the extra 4 inches of width. The 80" is niche but not uncommon — Samsung, Sony, and TCL all offer 80" models at various price points.
    • Choose 85" if you have the room (14+ ft ideal), want maximum screen presence, and your budget allows. At this size, the jump from 75" to 85" is clearly visible and delivers a genuine cinematic upgrade.

    Want to see exactly how an 80" compares to 75" or 85"? Compare 75 vs 80 inch TVs at real scale on Easy Compare to visualize the actual size difference side by side.

    80-Inch TV: Wall Space Requirements

    Before buying, measure your wall carefully. An 80" TV needs:

    • Wall width: At least 72–75 inches (6.0–6.25 ft) of clear horizontal space
    • Wall height: Position the center of the screen at eye level when seated — typically 42–48 inches from the floor. With a 39.2" screen, the bottom edge would sit at about 22–29 inches from the floor.
    • Mounting depth: Most wall mounts add only 2–4 inches from the wall. Tilting or full-motion mounts may add 4–8 inches.
    • Clearance: Leave at least 4–6 inches on each side of the TV for ventilation and a visually balanced look.

    Best 80-Inch TVs to Consider

    Tier Panel Best For Price Range
    Budget LED/VA TCL 80" — Large screen on a budget, good for bright rooms $700–$1,000
    Mid-range QLED/Mini-LED Samsung 80" QLED — Bright, vivid, strong HDR performance $1,100–$1,600
    Premium Mini-LED/QLED Sony 80" Bravia — Superior processing, Netflix Calibrated Mode $1,500–$2,200

    Note: 80-inch OLED TVs are not widely available — OLED panels at this size are rare and very expensive. If OLED picture quality is a priority, the 77" is the mainstream OLED size (LG, Sony, Samsung all offer 77" OLED models), with 83" being the next step up for premium OLED buyers.

    Still deciding? Compare sizes visually

    See exactly how tv sizes differ — side by side.

    Helpful Resources

    Easy Compare is a free tool to help you visually compare the dimensions of different displays. This tool is for reference purposes only. Actual appearance may vary based on resolution, bezel size, and other factors.