Screen Size Calculator
Use this screen size calculator calculator to understand your numbers quickly and make clearer decisions with confidence.
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What Is a Screen Size Calculator?
A screen size calculator is a precise computing tool that converts a screen's diagonal measurement and aspect ratio into exact physical dimensions — width, height, and area — and calculates pixel density (PPI) from its native resolution. Whether you are buying a new TV, comparing monitors for a workstation, evaluating a laptop display, or designing a UI for a specific device, a screen calculator gives you the concrete measurements you need to make informed decisions.
The screen size calculator above provides 4 specialized modes: Screen Dimensions (diagonal + aspect ratio → exact width, height, area with proportional visual), PPI & Density (diagonal + resolution → pixels per inch with density classification and minimum viewing distance), Aspect Ratio Finder (resolution → simplified ratio and closest standard name with comparison table), and Compare Screens (two screens side-by-side with all metrics including size difference and PPI comparison).
Exact Physical Dimensions
Calculate the true width and height of any screen from its diagonal measurement and aspect ratio. Results shown in both inches and centimeters, with a scaled proportional visual so you can see the exact shape at a glance.
PPI Density Classification
Pixels Per Inch (PPI) determines sharpness. The calculator classifies your screen from Low DPI (older CRTs) through Standard, High, High DPI, Retina, and Super Retina — with example devices at each level and the minimum viewing distance for 20/20 vision.
Side-by-Side Screen Comparison
Enter two screens with their diagonals and resolutions to instantly compare diagonal, width, height, area difference (%), PPI difference (%), resolution, density class, and minimum viewing distance — all in one table with proportional visual renderings.

Screen size formulas, PPI density scale, aspect ratio comparison, and common device reference. See PPI classification →
The Core Formulas: Dimensions, PPI, and Aspect Ratio
All screen size calculations derive from the Pythagorean theorem applied to the diagonal measurement. Here are the three fundamental formulas used in the calculator above:
① Screen Dimensions from Diagonal + Aspect Ratio
Height = D × H ÷ √(W² + H²)
Example: 27" diagonal at 16:9 aspect ratio:
√(16²+9²) = √(256+81) = √337 = 18.358
Width = 27 × 16 ÷ 18.358 = 23.52 inches (59.75 cm)
Height = 27 × 9 ÷ 18.358 = 13.23 inches (33.61 cm)
② Pixels Per Inch (PPI)
Example: 27" monitor at 3840×2160 (4K UHD):
√(3840²+2160²) = √(14,745,600+4,665,600) = √19,411,200 = 4,405.8 diagonal pixels
PPI = 4,405.8 ÷ 27 = 163.2 PPI → High DPI class
③ Dot Pitch & Minimum Viewing Distance
Dot pitch is the physical size of each pixel in millimeters. The minimum viewing distance formula (3,438 ÷ PPI) derives from the 20/20 vision threshold — the distance at which 1 pixel subtends less than 1 arcminute of visual angle (the limit of human visual acuity). Beyond this distance, individual pixels are invisible to the naked eye. For a 163 PPI monitor: min distance = 3,438 ÷ 163 = 21.1 inches (53.6 cm), which is a typical desktop monitor distance.
PPI Density Classification Guide
Pixel density determines how sharp and detailed a screen appears at normal viewing distances. Here is the complete PPI classification used by the calculator, with example devices at each level:
| PPI Range | Classification | Appearance | Typical Devices | Min View Dist |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 72 PPI | Low DPI | Pixelation visible up close; individual pixels can be seen from 2–3 feet | Older CRTs, early LCD monitors, projectors | > 3.9 ft / 1.2 m |
| 72–110 PPI | Standard | Acceptable at typical desktop distance; some pixelation visible up close | Budget office monitors, older laptops, standard TVs | 2.6–3.9 ft / 80cm–1.2m |
| 110–160 PPI | High | Sharp at typical desktop distance; good for gaming and productivity | Gaming monitors, 4K TVs, QHD 27" monitors | 1.8–2.6 ft / 55–80 cm |
| 160–220 PPI | High DPI | Very sharp; typical monitor distance shows no visible pixels | MacBook laptops, 4K 27" monitors, Surface Pro | 1.3–1.8 ft / 40–55 cm |
| 220–300 PPI | Retina | Apple "Retina" threshold — pixels invisible at typical use distance | iPhone 14, iPad Pro, modern Android phones | 0.9–1.3 ft / 28–40 cm |
| > 300 PPI | Super Retina | Extremely sharp; used in premium flagship phones and professional displays | iPhone 15 Pro (460 PPI), Samsung S24 (416 PPI) | < 0.9 ft / < 28 cm |
* Minimum viewing distance calculated at 3,438 ÷ PPI (inches). Apple defines "Retina" as a display where individual pixels cannot be distinguished at typical use distance — approximately 10 inches for phones, 18 inches for tablets, 28 inches for MacBooks.
Aspect Ratio Reference: 4:3 to 32:9
The aspect ratio defines the proportional relationship between a screen's width and height. Different use cases favor different ratios. The 16:9 ratio has dominated since the HD television transition in the 2000s, but many specialized form factors use other ratios:
| Ratio | Decimal | Common Name | Typical Use Cases | Example Devices |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4:3 | 1.333 | Standard | Legacy content, retro gaming, tablets | iPad (older), classic monitors, Chromebooks |
| 5:4 | 1.250 | Old Square | Legacy professional monitors | Dell 1905FP, old workstation monitors |
| 1:1 | 1.000 | Square | Social media preview, some kiosks | Instagram posts, smart home screens |
| 3:2 | 1.500 | Classic | DSLR photography format, Surface devices | Microsoft Surface Pro/Laptop, Pixel Slate |
| 16:10 | 1.600 | Wide Standard | Laptops, professional monitors (taller) | MacBook Air/Pro, Dell XPS, Google Pixelbook |
| 16:9 | 1.778 | Widescreen HD | TVs, monitors, smartphones, most content | Most TVs, Dell monitors, Samsung Galaxy |
| 9:16 | 0.563 | Portrait Phone | Smartphones in portrait, vertical displays | iPhone/Android in portrait, digital signage |
| 18:9 | 2.000 | Tall Phone | Earlier tall-screen phones | Samsung Galaxy S8–S9, LG G6 |
| 20:9 | 2.222 | Extra Tall Phone | Modern Android smartphones | Samsung Galaxy S21+, Pixel 7 |
| 19.5:9 | 2.167 | iPhone Long | Recent iPhones, notch era | iPhone 12–15 series |
| 21:9 | 2.333 | Ultrawide | Productivity, cinematic gaming, creative | LG 34UC99, Dell U3421WE, AW3423DW |
| 32:9 | 3.556 | Super Ultrawide | Multi-monitor replacement, trading | Samsung 49" Odyssey G9, LG 49WL95C |
How to Compare Screen Sizes
Screen diagonal measurements can be misleading when comparing screens of different aspect ratios. A 32" ultrawide (21:9) has a smaller screen height than a 27" standard monitor (16:9), even though its diagonal is 5 inches larger. Here's a practical comparison of popular monitor sizes:
| Screen | Diagonal | Resolution | Width (in) | Height (in) | Area (in²) | PPI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPhone 15 Pro | 6.1" | 2556×1179 | 2.65 | 5.80 | 15.37 | 460 |
| iPad Pro 12.9" | 12.9" | 2732×2048 | 10.06 | 7.54 | 75.85 | 264 |
| MacBook Air 13.6" | 13.6" | 2560×1664 | 11.59 | 7.53 | 87.27 | 224 |
| MacBook Pro 14.2" | 14.2" | 3024×1964 | 12.06 | 7.84 | 94.55 | 254 |
| 24" FHD Monitor | 24" | 1920×1080 | 20.92 | 11.77 | 246.2 | 92 |
| 27" 4K Monitor | 27" | 3840×2160 | 23.53 | 13.24 | 311.6 | 163 |
| 32" 4K Monitor | 32" | 3840×2160 | 27.89 | 15.69 | 437.6 | 137 |
| 34" Ultrawide | 34" | 3440×1440 | 31.46 | 12.06 | 379.4 | 109 |
| 49" Super Ultrawide | 49" | 5120×1440 | 45.31 | 12.87 | 583.0 | 109 |
| 55" 4K TV | 55" | 3840×2160 | 47.95 | 26.97 | 1293 | 80 |
| 65" 4K TV | 65" | 3840×2160 | 56.67 | 31.88 | 1806 | 68 |
| 85" 8K TV | 85" | 7680×4320 | 74.08 | 41.67 | 3087 | 104 |
Viewing Distance Guide
The ideal viewing distance depends on both screen size and pixel density. Getting the balance right prevents eye strain and ensures you can see the detail your display can deliver:
Frequently Asked Questions
🖥️Why does my 32" ultrawide feel smaller than a 27" standard monitor?
Screen diagonals measure corner-to-corner, not width or height. A 34" 21:9 ultrawide has a height of only 14.0 inches, which is actually shorter than a 27" 16:9 monitor (13.2 inches — nearly the same height). The ultrawide is much wider (31.5" vs 23.5") but not taller. For vertical content like documents and web pages, a standard 16:9 monitor may feel more spacious despite the smaller diagonal. Use the Compare mode in the calculator above to see the exact height difference before buying.
🖥️What is the difference between 1440p and 4K on a 27" monitor?
27" at 1440p (2560×1440): PPI = √(2560²+1440²) ÷ 27 = √(6,553,600+2,073,600) ÷ 27 = 2938.6 ÷ 27 = 108.8 PPI (High class). 27" at 4K (3840×2160): PPI = 4405.8 ÷ 27 = 163.2 PPI (High DPI class). The 4K has 50% more PPI, meaning text, icons, and fine details are noticeably sharper at normal viewing distances (~60–80 cm). The practical difference is most visible in fine text rendering, high-resolution photography, and 4K video playback. At 4K, the Windows/macOS 150% scaling is commonly used to maintain comfortable UI size.
🖥️Is a 65" TV at 100 PPI sharp enough for normal viewing?
A 65" 4K TV has approximately 67.8 PPI. The minimum viewing distance formula gives 3,438 ÷ 67.8 = 50.7 inches (4.2 feet). At a typical TV viewing distance of 8–10 feet, individual pixels are completely invisible. For 4K content, the SMPTE recommendation for full impact is to sit close enough that the screen fills 30° of your field of view — which for a 65" TV is about 7.7 feet. For 1080p content, sitting further than 13–14 feet makes 4K resolution indistinguishable from 1080p.
🖥️What does "Retina Display" actually mean?
Apple coined "Retina Display" in 2010 with the iPhone 4 (326 PPI) to describe a screen where individual pixels cannot be distinguished at typical use distance. The threshold varies by device: ~300 PPI for phones held 10–12" away, ~220 PPI for tablets held 15" away, and ~200–220 PPI for MacBooks at ~18" viewing distance. All modern MacBooks and iPhones qualify as Retina displays. The term is primarily a marketing classification — the actual quality threshold is the point where the human eye can no longer resolve individual pixels at the intended use distance.
🖥️How do I find the actual screen size in cm from a 27" monitor specification?
27" refers to the diagonal measurement in inches. To convert to cm: 27 × 2.54 = 68.6 cm diagonal. To find width and height, use the aspect ratio formula. For 16:9: Width = 27 × 16 ÷ √(16²+9²) = 27 × 16 ÷ 18.36 = 23.52 inches = 59.75 cm. Height = 27 × 9 ÷ 18.36 = 13.23 inches = 33.61 cm. Area = 23.52 × 13.23 = 311.1 in² = 2,006 cm². Use the Screen Dimensions mode in the calculator above to get all measurements with one click from any diagonal and aspect ratio input.
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- Percentage Calculator →
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