Will it fit? TV × mount checker
Quick answer
Select one of 75 verified TVs and one of 17 mounts. The checker compares three things: the TV's VESA pattern against the mount's supported range, the TV's stand-free weight against 80% of the mount's rating, and the screen size against the mount's span. You get a verdict with the exact numbers behind it. Works without JavaScript.
How the verdict is decided
- Pattern: the TV's VESA hole spacing must be inside the mount's supported range. Outside the range but otherwise fine → FITS WITH ADAPTER.
- Weight: the TV (without stand) must be at or below 80% of the mount's rating. Heavier → NOT RECOMMENDED, with the numbers shown.
- Screen size: the diagonal must be inside the mount's listed span, since arm geometry and plate width assume it.
Frequently asked questions
What does “FITS WITH ADAPTER” mean?
The mount's weight rating and screen-size range are fine, but its plate doesn't cover your TV's hole pattern. A VESA adapter plate — a flat steel bracket that converts one pattern to another — closes the gap. The verdict names the exact conversion, e.g. 200×200→400×400.
Why do you require a 20% weight margin?
Ratings assume a static, perfectly anchored load. Real installs see tugging on cables, tilting adjustments and drilling tolerances. Keeping the TV at or below 80% of the mount's rating absorbs those unknowns. A 50 lb TV therefore needs a mount rated at least 63 lb.
My mount isn't in the list — can I still check?
Yes, manually: your TV's pattern must be within the mount's supported VESA range (printed on the box), the mount's rating must exceed the TV's stand-free weight by 20%, and the screen size must be inside the listed span. All three numbers for your TV are on its model page.
Sources
TV rows cite manufacturer documentation on their model pages; mount specs come from the manufacturers' published ranges.