The way you place your television shapes the rest of the living room. It influences seating, lighting, storage and even the way conversation moves around the space. The decision between a wall mounted screen and a freestanding TV unit is rarely just about looks. It involves how the room is used day to day, who lives there, and what already exists on the walls and floor. Here we walk through the practical considerations so you can settle on the option that suits your home.
Before measuring anything, stand in the doorway and take in the room. Notice where natural light falls, where the seating points, and how far the main viewing position sits from the wall. A wall mounted television sits flat against the surface, which works well in compact rooms because it frees up valuable floor area. A freestanding unit takes up more depth but offers built in storage, which helps where cupboard space is limited.
If you are still planning your layout, our living room furniture collection offers pieces that pair with either approach.
Wall mounting creates a clean, uncluttered look. The screen appears to float, the cables tuck behind plasterboard if planned carefully, and the floor reads as more open. For renters or homeowners in flats, this style suits minimalist schemes well.
The technique does require a sound wall. Stud walls need brackets fixed into the studs themselves, while solid brick or block walls take heavy duty fixings. Check the wall type before committing, especially in newer build properties where partition walls may not bear the weight of a large television without reinforcement.
For brackets, browse our wall TV brackets range, which includes fixed, tilting and full motion designs.
A freestanding television unit gives a sense of permanence and offers storage that a bare wall mount cannot match. Drawers, cupboards and open shelving hide the everyday paraphernalia of family life, from games controllers to remote handsets. The screen sits on top, supported by the stand itself or a tabletop bracket.
This approach suits households who move frequently because nothing is fixed to the wall. It also works in period homes where chasing cables into plaster might disturb cornicing or older finishes.
Our TV units include low console styles, taller cabinet versions and corner pieces.
Wall mounted screens look cleanest when cables run inside the wall, which involves cutting a channel and installing a face plate. This is best handled by a qualified electrician in most cases. Freestanding units usually have cut outs at the back so wires can drop down behind the furniture and out of sight, which is a quicker route to a tidy finish.
A soundbar fixed below a wall mounted screen needs its own bracket and can feel like an extra job. With a freestanding unit, the soundbar simply sits on the top surface, which is easier to set up and adjust later. Households who plan to upgrade audio in stages may find the freestanding option more flexible.
Eye level viewing is generally comfortable when the centre of the screen sits roughly in line with the eyes of someone seated on the sofa. With wall mounting, you can choose the height precisely. A unit fixes the height to roughly the unit top, so check the seat height of your sofa first.
A wall mounted screen ties your layout to that wall. Moving the television later means filling holes and repainting. A unit can be repositioned, sold or swapped without leaving traces. If you redecorate often or rent your home, a unit gives more flexibility.
We sell modern furniture across the UK at Furniture in Fashion with free UK delivery on every order.
Wall mounted suits open, minimalist schemes, smaller rooms and households who want a clean look. Freestanding suits homes that need storage, families with shifting layouts, and properties where the walls are not suitable for heavy fixings.
Yes, as long as the brackets are fixed into the wooden studs themselves. Use a stud finder and choose fixings rated for the weight of your television.
Yes. Many households combine both, using the wall for the screen and a low unit beneath for storage and soundbar placement.
A unit between 140cm and 180cm wide gives the screen room to settle visually without crowding the space.
They take up floor depth, usually around 35cm to 45cm, but they replace the need for separate storage which can balance out the footprint.
A freestanding unit is generally easier because it requires no drilling or cable chasing. Wall mounting needs more preparation and often professional help.
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