Most 60-inch TVs weigh 38–75 lb, based on screen tech, frame build, and whether the stand is attached.
TV weight is easy to guess wrong. A mount can end up under-rated, or you can buy hardware that’s overkill. A 60-inch set sits in a range where pounds swing a lot by panel type and chassis design.
This article gives clear ranges, shows what shifts the number, and helps you pull the exact weight for your model fast. You’ll also get a practical moving and mounting plan that protects the screen and the wall.
What “TV Weight” Means On Spec Sheets
Manufacturers usually publish more than one weight. If you’re comparing models, match the same line item each time.
- Weight without stand: The TV panel plus built-in electronics. Use this for wall mounting.
- Weight with stand: The TV plus the feet or pedestal. Use this for a console or tabletop.
- Package or shipping weight: TV plus carton, foam, and accessories. Use this for carrying the box and shipment planning.
Stands add a few pounds. Packaging can add far more. If you only see shipping weight, treat it as a carry-planning number, then confirm the “without stand” weight before mounting.
How Much Does A 60 Inch TV Weigh?
If you need a planning range, most 60-inch TVs land between 38 and 75 lb without the stand. Slim LED sets tend to sit on the lower end. Heavier builds and thicker backplates push the number up.
With the stand attached, a 60-inch TV often lands a few pounds higher. Shipping weight can jump by 15–25 lb because the packaging is built to take hits in transit.
60-Inch TV Weight Range By Type
Screen tech changes the layers behind the panel and the frame design. That’s why two TVs with the same size can feel totally different in your hands.
- LED/LCD: Often the lightest group. Edge-lit designs often weigh less than full-array sets.
- QLED and similar quantum-dot LCD sets: Still LCD-based, yet some use sturdier frames and thicker rear housings.
- OLED: Panels can be thin, yet some models use heavier mounting plates or electronics sections that raise total weight.
Size class can shift things too. A “60-inch” TV may measure 60.0–60.1 inches, while some “60-inch class” sets are 59.5 inches. That small change can still alter chassis design and weight.
Why Two 60-Inch TVs Can Differ By Dozens Of Pounds
Weight swings come from parts you don’t see from the couch. These are the usual drivers.
- Backlight system: Full-array backlights add hardware behind the panel.
- Chassis and reinforcement: Thicker metal frames and stiffeners add stability and pounds.
- Speakers: Bigger drivers and enclosures add mass, especially in sets built for stronger audio.
- Power and heat parts: Larger power boards and heat sinks add weight.
- Stand design: Wide feet are often light; a heavy center pedestal can add more.
Even within one brand, two models can differ because one uses a lighter back shell while another uses a sturdier plate to support a different stand or mount pattern.
Weight Benchmarks From Real 60-Inch Spec Sheets
When you want a reality check, manufacturer spec pages are a clean source. Here are two published weights for 60-inch models, listed as “without stand.”
- Sony lists the KD-60X690E at 19.0 kg (41.9 lb) without the stand. Sony KD-60X690E specifications
- LG lists the 60UH6150 at 23.3 kg (51.4 lb) without the stand. LG 60UH6150 dimensions and weight
Those numbers sit in a common band for many LED/LCD 60-inch sets. They also show why you should confirm your own model before you buy a mount.
How To Find The Exact Weight Of Your TV In 3 Minutes
You don’t need guesswork. You need the spec line for your model code.
- Find the model number: Check the back label or the “About” screen in settings. Copy the full code, not just the series name.
- Search the maker’s support site: Use the model code plus “specifications.”
- Read the “Weight without stand” line: That’s the mount number. Note the unit (lb or kg).
- Check VESA hole pitch: Many spec pages list the mounting hole spacing too.
If the retail product page is gone, grab the user manual PDF from the support area. Manuals often keep the weight table even after listings disappear.
Planning A Move: People, Grip, And Box Weight
A 60-inch TV isn’t just heavy. It’s wide and awkward. That combo breaks screens during moves, not raw pounds.
If the TV is still boxed, use shipping weight to plan the carry. Boxes are tall and catch on door frames. A two-person lift keeps the carton from twisting.
If you’re moving the bare TV, remove the stand if it comes off cleanly. A slimmer profile fits through tight spots and cuts snag points.
Table 1: Quick Weight Planning For A 60-Inch TV
| What you’re measuring | Typical range | When to use it |
|---|---|---|
| TV without stand | 38–75 lb | Wall mount rating and lift plan |
| TV with stand | 42–85 lb | Console load and tabletop stability |
| Shipping weight (boxed) | 55–105 lb | Shipment handling and carrying the carton |
| Stand add-on weight | 2–10 lb | When only “without stand” is listed |
| Mainstream LED/LCD band | 38–60 lb | Most current sets |
| Heavier chassis builds | 55–75 lb | Thicker frames and bigger audio parts |
| Carry crew | 2 adults | Stairs, doorways, tight turns |
| Grip rule | Hands on frame, not screen | Reduces panel stress and smudges |
Picking A Wall Mount That Matches Your TV Weight
For wall mounting, use the “without stand” weight and add a buffer. The mount box lists a max weight. Your TV should sit well under that max, not right on it.
Also check the VESA hole pattern on the TV. A mount can hold the weight and still be the wrong fit if the plate doesn’t match your hole spacing.
- Fixed mount: Sits close to the wall and tends to feel steady.
- Tilt mount: Helps with glare and gives a bit more access to ports.
- Full-motion mount: Swings and extends. These often need stronger anchoring.
If you’re mounting into studs, you can support a wide range of TV weights with the right hardware. For masonry or concrete, follow fastener guidance that matches that wall type.
How Stand Style Changes Weight And Stability
Weight isn’t the only factor on a console. A heavy base with a narrow footprint can wobble. Wide feet spread the load and can feel steadier, even if total weight is lower.
Measure your console depth and the distance between feet. Many 60-inch TVs have feet near the edges, so the furniture needs enough width to match.
Handling The TV Without Damaging The Panel
Modern panels don’t like twist. If one person lifts one corner higher than the other, you can stress the layers inside. That’s how a screen can crack without a drop.
- Lift from the bottom corners and the side frame.
- Keep the screen vertical. Flat carries can flex the panel.
- Clear the route first: doors, rugs, toys, and cables.
- Use a soft blanket as a rest surface, face-up only if the blanket is thick and smooth.
If you kept the foam end caps from the original box, use them. They’re shaped to protect the corners, which are the first points to hit a wall.
Table 2: Mounting And Moving Checklist
| Step | What to do | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Confirm weight line | Use “without stand” from the spec page or manual | Matches the load the wall mount must carry |
| Confirm VESA spacing | Match the TV’s hole pitch to the mount plate | A correct fit keeps the TV level and secure |
| Pick wall location | Plan height, viewing angle, and cable path | Cuts rework after drilling |
| Find studs or anchors | Mount into studs when possible; use wall-type fasteners when not | Stops sagging and pull-out |
| Stage tools | Drill, bit set, level, tape, and socket wrench | Keeps the TV off the floor while you hunt tools |
| Lift with two people | One person per side, hands on frame | Limits panel twist |
| Lock the mount | Set final angle, then tighten all lock screws | Prevents drift over time |
What To Do If You Only Know The Shipping Weight
Shipping weight is useful for shipment planning, yet it can mislead you for mounts. It includes cardboard, foam, bags, and accessories.
If that’s the only number you have, treat it as an upper bound for the TV plus packaging. The TV itself will be lighter. Track down the manual or spec sheet so you can read the “without stand” line before you buy hardware.
Weight Tips For Buying Used Or Open-Box TVs
Used TVs often come without the box, manual, or stand screws. Before you drive to pick one up, ask the seller for the exact model code from the back label. Then look up weight and VESA spacing.
Bring a blanket and straps, and transport the TV upright if you can. If it must lay flat, use thick padding and keep other items from pressing on the screen.
Extra Weight Details That Affect Setup
If a soundbar hangs from the same wall bracket, add its weight to your mount load plan. If the soundbar sits on the console or mounts to the wall on its own, it doesn’t change the TV’s mount weight.
Bigger screens often weigh more, yet build style still matters. A lighter 65-inch LED can weigh less than a heavier-built 60-inch set with a thicker chassis.
For wall mounting, don’t use the “with stand” number. The stand comes off, and the load path is through the mount bolts on the back of the TV.
Final Takeaway
A 60-inch TV can sit in the high 30s or climb into the 70s in pounds, depending on design. Use the model code, pull the spec sheet, and read the “without stand” line before you buy a mount or plan a carry.
References & Sources
- Sony.“KD-60X690E Specifications.”Lists weight without stand and VESA hole pitch for a 60-inch Sony TV model.
- LG.“60UH6150 Dimensions / Etc.”Provides TV weight without stand and with stand for an LG 60-inch TV model.
