top of page
Search

Brick Wall TV Installation Done Properly

A TV on a brick wall can look spot on when it is fitted properly. It can also go badly wrong if the bracket, fixings or position are guessed. Brick wall tv installation is one of those jobs that seems simple until you are drilling into hard masonry, trying to line up a heavy screen, and hoping the cables will sit neatly instead of trailing down the wall.

For most households, the real goal is not just getting the TV off the stand. It is making sure the screen is secure, level, comfortable to watch and finished neatly enough to suit the room. That takes more than a drill and a bracket from a box.

Why brick wall TV installation needs a proper approach

Brick is strong, but that does not mean every fitting job is straightforward. Older properties can have uneven surfaces, tired mortar joints or hidden surprises behind the plaster. Newer homes may look solid from the front but still need careful checking before anything is fixed in place.

The main advantage of a brick wall is strength. When the wall is sound and the correct fixings are used, it can support a TV bracket very well. That makes brick a good choice for larger screens, cantilever brackets and rooms where you want the television mounted securely without relying on furniture.

The trade-off is that brick is less forgiving than plasterboard. If the holes are drilled in the wrong place, they cannot simply be patched and forgotten. A poor install can leave damaged brick faces, loose fixings or a bracket that is fractionally off level and impossible to ignore once the TV is up.

Choosing the right bracket for a brick wall

The wall matters, but the bracket matters just as much. A fixed bracket keeps the television close to the wall and gives a clean, low-profile finish. This suits many living rooms and bedrooms where the viewing position is fairly straight on.

A tilt bracket helps when the TV is mounted a little higher, such as above a fireplace or in a bedroom. It lets you angle the screen slightly for a more comfortable view. A full motion or cantilever bracket gives the most flexibility, especially in open-plan rooms or awkward layouts, but it also puts more force on the fixing points. On brick, that can work very well, but only if the wall is in good condition and the bracket is fitted correctly.

Bigger is not always better here. Some customers assume a heavy-duty bracket is automatically the safest option. In reality, the safest bracket is the one that matches the TV size, weight, VESA pattern and how the room will actually be used.

The key part of brick wall TV installation - fixings

This is where many DIY jobs come unstuck. The bracket itself is only half the job. The fixing method is what keeps the whole setup secure over time.

On a solid brick wall, the installer will usually use suitable masonry fixings and anchor points designed for the load involved. Drilling into the brick itself is often preferred over drilling into mortar, because mortar can be weaker and more prone to failure, particularly in older walls. It depends on the condition of the wall, though. Sometimes the brick face is brittle, and the wall needs a more careful approach.

Hole depth, drill size and screw length all need to match. If the hole is too loose, the fixing will not grip properly. If it is too tight or poorly drilled, you risk cracking the brick or stressing the fixing. This is one reason professional fitting tends to be faster in the long run. The job is assessed properly before the first hole is made.

Getting the position right first time

A well-mounted TV should feel natural to watch. Too high, and you will notice the neck strain during a film night. Too low, and the room can feel awkward around it. The best position depends on the seating height, the screen size and whether the television is in a lounge, bedroom or kitchen diner.

There is also the practical side. Radiators, fireplaces, wall units, sockets and chimney breasts all affect where a TV can sensibly go. On brick walls, you also need to think about cable routes before the bracket is fixed. Once the screen is mounted, moving everything by even a few inches can mean starting again.

This is where experience counts. A good installer does not just ask where you want the centre of the TV. They look at the room layout, how the bracket opens if it is full motion, whether a soundbar is being added and how the cables will sit once everything is connected.

Cable management makes the finish

A secure mount is essential, but the finished look is what most people notice every day. A neatly mounted TV with visible hanging leads can still make the room feel unfinished.

For brick wall TV installation, cable management options usually depend on the wall, the property and the finish you want. In some homes, surface trunking gives a tidy and practical result. In others, cables may be chased into the wall and made good, though that is a more involved job and not always the right choice for every property or budget.

It also depends on what is being connected. A simple setup with one power lead and one HDMI cable is easier to keep neat than a full entertainment system with Sky, games consoles, soundbars and streaming devices. Planning this before installation makes a big difference.

What can go wrong with DIY fitting

There is no shortage of online videos showing TV mounting as a quick afternoon job. Sometimes it is. Often it is not.

Common issues include drilling into weak mortar instead of solid brick, using fixings supplied with the bracket without checking whether they suit the wall, mounting the bracket off centre, or failing to account for cable clearance behind the screen. Another regular problem is not checking for pipes and cables before drilling.

Then there is the lifting itself. Larger TVs are awkward to handle, even when they are not especially heavy. Getting a screen onto the wall plate safely, without twisting the bracket or damaging the panel, usually needs the right method and often a second pair of hands.

If the wall is uneven or the room has limited space, the difficulty goes up again. What looks straightforward in the box often becomes fiddly once real walls, real sockets and real furniture are involved.

When brick walls need extra care

Not every brick wall is the same. Painted brick, plastered brick and old brickwork can all behave differently when drilled. Some walls are rock solid. Others have surface finishes that chip easily or internal areas that are less reliable than expected.

Fireplace chimney breasts are another common request for TV mounting, but they need sensible judgement. Heat, flue position and viewing height all need considering. A chimney breast may be brick, but that does not automatically make it the best place for every television.

In rental properties, there is also the issue of permissions and making good later on. Landlords may allow wall mounting, but many want a tidy professional finish and minimal damage. That is another reason the job benefits from being done carefully from the start.

Why many customers call a local specialist

Most people booking this sort of work are not looking for theory. They want the TV mounted safely, quickly and neatly, without guessing which fixings to use or worrying whether the wall will hold. That is especially true for busy households in London, Essex and Kent, where time is short and people want the job done right first time.

A local service-led installer understands the kinds of properties in the area, from newer builds to older terraces and flats. They also know that customers often need more than one job sorted while someone is there. A TV might be going up on a brick wall, but the same visit may also involve fitting a soundbar, mounting shelves or tackling another straightforward household job.

That practical approach is a big part of why homeowners use trusted local fitters. It saves time, avoids trial and error and gives you a result that looks finished, not improvised. Businesses like We Fit All have built their reputation on that kind of dependable work - turning up, doing the job properly and leaving the room cleaner and more usable than it was before.

What to expect from a professional installation

A proper service should start with checking the wall type, the TV size and the bracket required. From there, the focus is on safe fixing points, accurate positioning, clean drilling and a level finish. If cable management or extra devices are part of the setup, those should be discussed before the mount goes on the wall.

Good installers will also be honest about limitations. Sometimes the exact wall position a customer has in mind is not ideal because of socket placement, chimney breast height or wall condition. A reliable fitter will explain the issue and offer the best workable option instead of forcing a poor install.

That kind of honesty matters. A TV mount is not just about getting the screen onto the wall today. It is about making sure it still feels secure and looks right months and years later.

If you are planning a brick wall TV installation, the safest approach is to treat it like a finish job, not just a fixing job. When the bracket, wall, viewing height and cables are all handled properly, the result is simple - a secure TV, a tidy room and one less thing to worry about.

 
 
 

Comments


Contact  Us  Now

Tel:  07425 390 869

Mon-Fri:   07.00 - 23.00

Sat-Sun:    07.00  - 21.00

WeFitAll9@gmail.com

 

400 Bonham Road

Dagenham 

RM8 3BB

 

We respond quicker to Text messages and calls as we see them instantly but do check emails daily.It is best to call or send use 

Thanks for submitting!

© WeFitAll

bottom of page