Projector Size Calculator
Find the right screen size, throw type, and brightness for your room
How to choose the right projector for your room
A projector isn't sized like a TV — the same projector can throw a 100-inch or a 150-inch image depending on how far it sits from the wall. Picking the right one means answering three questions: how big should the image be, what throw type fits where the projector can physically go, and how bright does it need to be for your room's light.
A projector's throw ratio (throw distance ÷ screen width) decides what type it must be: ultra-short-throw projectors sit inches from the wall, short-throw a few feet back, and standard-throw further back still for the same size image.
Screen size: viewing angle, not guesswork
Just like a TV, the right screen size depends on how far back you sit, sized to the same SMPTE 30° mixed-use viewing angle used by our TV size calculator — a balanced angle for movies, sport, and gaming alike.
Throw type: standard, short, or ultra-short
Divide the throw distance by the screen width and you get the throw ratio — this is what actually determines which class of projector you need, not personal preference:
- Standard throw (ratio above 1.2): the common case, projector well back from the wall.
- Short throw (0.4–1.2): a few feet from the wall — good for smaller rooms.
- Ultra-short throw (under 0.4): inches from the wall, often on a low shelf or console.
Brightness: match lumens to your room's light
Brightness need scales with both the room's ambient light and the screen size — a bigger image spreads the same light over more area, so it needs more lumens to look equally bright. A bare wall also reflects less light back than a dedicated screen, and an ambient-light-rejecting (ALR) screen needs less than either.
Brightness need scales with ambient light, not personal taste — a room with windows or lamps on needs several times the lumens of a blacked-out home theater for the same screen to look right.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use a bare wall instead of a screen? Yes, in a dark room a smooth, bright-white matte wall gets you most of the way there. In a room with any ambient light, a proper screen — especially an ALR screen — makes a noticeably bigger difference than upgrading the projector.
What if my throw distance doesn't match any projector I like? Most projectors have some zoom range, so a small mismatch is fine — check the specific model's throw-ratio range against your throw distance before buying, not just its class.
Does 4K vs 1080p change any of this? No — this calculator sizes the image itself, which is about viewing angle and brightness, not resolution. A sharper picture lets you sit closer without seeing pixels, but the same viewing-angle guidance still applies.
These are planning estimates based on published throw-ratio and brightness guidance. See our electrical and lighting guides for mounting and glare tips once you've picked a setup.