Projector Guide

100 vs 120 vs 150 Inch Projector Screen: Which Size Fits Your Room?

· 3 min read

Quick answer:

  • 100” is the safest first projector size for mixed-use living rooms
  • 120” is the sweet spot for many movie-first rooms
  • 150” only makes sense when the room is large, dark, and the projector is bright enough

If you need exact placement distances, use the Projector Screen Size Calculator and the full throw ratio guide.

100 vs 120 vs 150 at a Glance

Screen sizeApprox widthBest room depthStandard throw distance (1.5)Best for
100”87”10-12 ft10.9 ftMixed-use living rooms, first projector setup
120”105”12-15 ft13.1 ftDedicated movie rooms, stronger immersion
150”131”16+ ft16.4 ftLarge dark rooms, theater-first setups

Why the Jump Feels Bigger Than It Sounds

  • 120” has about 44% more screen area than 100”
  • 150” has about 56% more screen area than 120”
  • 150” has about 125% more screen area than 100”

That is why 150” feels spectacular in the right room and excessive in the wrong one.

Which Size Fits Which Room?

10-12 ft room

Choose 100”. It is the most forgiving size for wall width, brightness, and shared living-room use.

12-15 ft room

Choose 100” to 120”. If the room can get dark and movies matter most, 120” is usually worth it.

15-18 ft room

Choose 120”. This is where projector setups start to feel properly cinematic without going overboard.

18+ ft room

Choose 120” to 150”. Only move to 150” if your projector brightness and room control are both strong.

Compare Against Large TVs

If you are still deciding between projection and a giant TV, check these live comparisons:

You can browse more pairings in the Projector comparison hub.

A Simple Buying Rule

  • choose 100” if you want the safest first projector setup
  • choose 120” if the room is ready for a real movie upgrade
  • choose 150” only if the room already tells you it can handle it

If the room is multipurpose, also read TV vs Projector for Living Room.