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TV Mount Compatibility

Find the Right Mount for Your TV

Every TV has a VESA mounting pattern and a weight that decide which mounts will fit it. Look up your TV below to get its verified VESA pattern and weight, sourced from manufacturer spec sheets, along with the Mount-It! mounts that fit, across fixed, tilting, full-motion, and ceiling styles.

Find your TV

Do not see your exact model yet? We are adding TVs continuously. In the meantime, measure your VESA pattern using the steps below and shop by VESA size and weight.

How to find your TV's VESA pattern

VESA is the spacing between the four threaded mounting holes on the back of your TV, written as width by height in millimeters (for example, 400x300). To measure it yourself:

  1. Locate the four mounting holes on the back of the TV, arranged in a rectangle.
  2. Measure the horizontal distance between the centers of two side-by-side holes, in millimeters. That is the first number.
  3. Measure the vertical distance between the centers of two stacked holes, in millimeters. That is the second number.
  4. The result (for example 400x300) is your VESA pattern. Any mount that lists this size in its supported range will fit.

Also note your TV's weight without the stand, since that is the load the mount carries.

Which type of TV mount do you need?

The right mount depends on where the TV goes and how you want to view it:

  • Low-profile and fixed mounts: Hold the TV flat and close to the wall with no adjustment. Best at seated eye level and the lowest cost.
  • Tilting mounts: Angle the screen down to cut glare, ideal when the TV sits above eye level, for example over a fireplace.
  • Full-motion mounts: Extend, swivel, and tilt so you can pull the TV out and turn it. Best for corners and rooms viewed from several spots.
  • Ceiling mounts: Hang the TV from above where wall mounting is not practical, such as open-plan spaces, gyms, and commercial settings.

How we verify compatibility

For each TV we record the VESA pattern and the weight without the stand, verified against the manufacturer's spec sheet and an independent source. We then match those figures to each Mount-It! mount's published VESA range and weight rating, with a roughly 15% weight safety margin, and flag any TV that needs a proprietary mount. Specs we are less certain about are labeled, so you always know how solid the data is.

Compiled and verified by Mount-It!, a TV and monitor mounting specialist. Mount specifications come from Mount-It!'s own product data; TV specifications are sourced from manufacturer spec sheets and independent references. All Mount-It! mounts are tested to UL and ANSI load standards and backed by a lifetime warranty. Shop all TV mounts or contact support.

Frequently asked questions about TV mounts

What types of TV mounts are available?

  • Fixed mounts: keep the TV close to the wall without movement.
  • Tilting mounts: allow vertical angle adjustments to reduce glare.
  • Full-motion mounts: extend, swivel, and tilt for optimal viewing.
  • Ceiling mounts: mount the TV from the ceiling for unique placement, common in commercial or open-plan settings.

How do I find my TV’s VESA pattern?

Measure the horizontal and vertical distance in millimeters between the four mounting holes on the back of the TV. See the steps above.

My TV is not listed. Can I still find a mount?

Yes. Measure your VESA pattern and note the weight without the stand, then choose any mount whose VESA range and weight capacity cover those figures.

Should I use the weight with the stand or without it?

Use the weight without the stand. That is the load the mount carries once the TV is on the wall or ceiling.

Can I install a TV mount on any wall type?

  • Drywall with studs: suitable for most mounts; anchor into the studs.
  • Concrete or brick: requires anchors rated for masonry.
  • Unsupported drywall: not recommended without additional support.

How high should I mount my TV?

As a general rule, the center of the screen should sit at eye level when you are seated, which usually puts the center 42 to 60 inches off the floor depending on TV size, seating distance, and ceiling height.