Getting the gap right between your sofa and your screen changes how a living room feels every single evening. In many UK homes the room is narrower than we would like, so the distance between seating and screen needs a little thought rather than guesswork. The good news is that a few simple measurements make the whole space more comfortable and far easier to relax in.
A reliable starting point is to sit between one and a half and two and a half times the diagonal screen size away from the television. A 50 inch screen, for example, sits comfortably when the sofa is roughly two metres back. Smaller terraced lounges often cannot stretch that far, and that is fine. If the wall behind the sofa limits you, lean towards a slightly smaller screen rather than forcing a large one into a tight room.
Mounting height matters just as much as distance. The centre of the screen should sit close to eye level when you are seated, which usually means the television rests low on the unit rather than perched high above it. This is why a long, low TV unit tends to work better in real rooms than a tall cabinet.
Many people push the sofa flat against the back wall out of habit. In longer rooms, floating the seating slightly forward can improve the viewing angle and leave a walkway behind it. In compact rooms, a two seater or a neat corner sofa can free up floor space while still facing the screen squarely. The aim is to sit directly in front of the television, not at a sharp angle, since side viewing tires the eyes over a long evening.
If you browse the wider sofa range, measure your room first and mark the sofa footprint on the floor with tape. Seeing the shape in the space stops you buying something that blocks a doorway or crowds the screen.
The space between the sofa and the unit needs to stay clear enough to walk through and to rest a cup of tea. Around forty to forty five centimetres between the sofa and a coffee table keeps legs comfortable without making the table feel out of reach. A well chosen coffee table anchors the seating area and stops the room feeling like two pieces of furniture staring at each other across an empty gap.
A rug under the front legs of the sofa also helps. It draws the seating and the screen into one zone, which is useful in open plan rooms where the lounge needs to feel separate from the rest of the space.
Even the best layout struggles if daylight bounces off the screen. Try to set the television at a right angle to windows rather than opposite them. Where that is not possible, soft window coverings let you cut the glare during the day. Lamps placed behind the seating, rather than beside the screen, give a gentle wash of light that is kinder on the eyes in the evening.
A television rarely sits alone. Storage for remotes, consoles and the usual living room clutter keeps the area calm. Thinking about the full living room setup early on means the unit, sofa and side tables all relate to one another rather than competing. We stock a wide selection of modern furniture across the UK at Furniture in Fashion, with free delivery, so you can pull a coordinated room together in one go.
Measure the wall where the unit will sit. Measure the distance from that wall to the front of your seating. Compare it with the screen size guide above. Then adjust the sofa, not the wall, until the numbers feel close. Most rooms only need small shifts to move from awkward to comfortable.
Aim for roughly two to three metres. If your room cannot reach that, a slightly smaller screen will feel more comfortable and natural.
The centre of the screen should sit close to eye level when seated. A low unit usually achieves this better than a tall one.
Yes. Place the screen on the wall that the longer side of the corner sofa faces, so most seats look straight ahead rather than across the room.
Around forty to forty five centimetres keeps the table within easy reach while still leaving room to stretch your legs and move past.
The hallway is the first room anyone sees, yet it is often the last to…
British light is famously changeable, and a finish that looks warm in afternoon daylight can…
Family life rarely stands still, and a living room that suited a couple soon adapts…
The living room is still the heart of most UK homes, and in 2026 the…
In a small UK home, every piece of furniture has to justify the space it…
Finishing a proper clear out leaves a home feeling lighter, but without the right storage…
This website uses cookies.