Comparisons

Popular Screen Size Comparisons

Jump straight into the TV and monitor pairs people actually compare, then use the live tool if you want to try your own sizes.

If you already have two sizes in mind, these are the quickest starting points.

Ouvrez d'abord l'outil de comparaison

Ce hub combine désormais des pages de comparaison organisées avec l'outil en direct. Vous pouvez accéder à une paire populaire ou saisir vos propres tailles et conserver l'URL pré-remplie pour le partage.

Comparer des TV et moniteurs côte à côte

Entrez deux diagonales, changez d’unité si besoin et choisissez le bon format pour chaque écran.

Écran 1

?Aspect ratio help

Common devices by aspect ratio

Examples only; actual devices may vary.

  • 16:9TVs, most monitors
  • 16:10Laptops, phones, some tablets/monitors
  • 4:3Legacy TVs/CRTs; iPad and some tablets
  • 21:9Ultrawide monitors; some phones (e.g., Xperia)
  • 32:9Super-ultrawide monitors (dual-16:9 alternative)

Écran 2

?Aspect ratio help

Common devices by aspect ratio

Examples only; actual devices may vary.

  • 16:9TVs, most monitors
  • 16:10Laptops, phones, some tablets/monitors
  • 4:3Legacy TVs/CRTs; iPad and some tablets
  • 21:9Ultrawide monitors; some phones (e.g., Xperia)
  • 32:9Super-ultrawide monitors (dual-16:9 alternative)

La configuration actuelle reste dans l’URL pour la partager ou la revoir plus tard.

Démarrage rapide

Ouvrez une paire populaire ou saisissez vos mesures.

Comment ça marche

  • Pick the two sizes you want to test.
  • Adjust the ratio and unit to match the product you are considering.
  • Switch to overlay view when you want to judge the gap at a glance.

Screen size comparisons, organized for quick decisions

This page gathers the pairs people search for most, so you can open a visual comparison without building one from scratch every time.

Use the TV section for living-room decisions, the monitor section for desk setups, and the live tool when the pair you want is not in the list yet.

The real question is rarely 'which one is bigger?' It is usually 'will the larger one still fit my room, desk, and viewing distance without becoming annoying?'

How to use this comparisons hub

  • Open the pair that is closest to what you are considering.
  • Switch aspect ratios if one of the screens is ultrawide or otherwise non-standard.
  • Check width and height first, then use overlay view to judge whether the jump feels meaningful.
  • Keep the link once you decide so you can come back to the same setup later.

Decision cues that matter most

  • Width is usually what breaks a TV stand or desk plan first.
  • Height matters because it changes eye level and how dominant the screen feels in the room.
  • Area percentage is often a better gut check than diagonal alone.
  • Aspect ratio changes the whole shape of the screen, not just the math on paper.

Tip: these links open a prefilled comparison page.

Quick answers

Why is diagonal size not enough?

Diagonal hides the actual width and height. Two 34-inch screens can have very different widths if one is 21:9 and the other is 16:9.

How big of a jump is worth it?

For TVs, a jump of around 10-15 inches usually feels obvious. For monitors, even 3-5 inches can change the desk experience a lot. The area percentage on each page helps keep that in perspective.

Should I compare inches or centimeters?

Use whatever you measure in. The tool switches units so you can match your tape measure or product specs.