Best TV mount
above a brick fireplace.
Three bracket types, three different outcomes. After 200+ above-fireplace installs in Tampa, we know which one actually works — and which ones cause neck pain or wall damage.
Mounting a TV above a fireplace is the most-requested install in Tampa, and also the one with the most internet myths attached. The biggest myth: "you'll ruin your neck staring up at the TV." This is true if you use the wrong mount. Use the right one, and the TV ergonomics are identical to a normal living-room install.
Here's the breakdown of the three bracket types and which one to actually buy.
Option 1: Fixed mount (don't do this).
A fixed mount holds the TV flat against the wall, with no movement. Cheapest option ($35-50). For an above-fireplace install, this is almost always the wrong choice.
Here's why: above a fireplace, the bottom of the TV is typically 60+ inches off the floor (vs 42-50 inches for a normal install). When you sit on the couch, your eyes are at 42-46 inches. So you're looking up at a 15-25 degree angle — uncomfortable for more than 10 minutes.
Some people compensate by leaning the couch back. Others get used to it. Most regret the install within a month.
Option 2: Tilt mount (acceptable).
A tilt mount lets the top of the TV pivot away from the wall, angling the screen down toward the viewer. Tilt range is typically 0-15 degrees. Cost: $55-100.
For above-fireplace installs in Tampa, this is the minimum acceptable option. With a 10-15° tilt, the screen aims at your seated eye level reasonably well. The TV stays close to the wall (1-3 inches off), which preserves the clean fireplace aesthetic.
Limitations: the TV is still high up. If the bottom of the screen is 60+ inches off the floor, even a 15° tilt may not bring the picture fully comfortable for everyone in the room.
Option 3: Full-motion tilt-down mount (correct answer).
A full-motion tilt-down mount lets the TV pull away from the wall (typically 6-20 inches), swivel left-right, AND tilt down. Cost: $95-300 depending on quality.
This is what we install on 90% of above-fireplace jobs in Tampa. Reasons:
- Pulls down 6-12 inches. When you actually want to watch, you pull the TV forward and down, lowering the screen toward eye level. When the TV is off, it tucks back against the wall — clean fireplace aesthetic preserved.
- Tilts down 15-20 degrees. Combined with the pull-down, this puts the screen at your seated eye level, not above it.
- Cable access. When the TV swings out, you can reach the back to plug/unplug things. Critical for above-fireplace installs because you can't easily remove the TV otherwise.
Recommended models we install most: Sanus VLT series (premium build, $200-300), Kanto PMX series (mid-range, $150-220), Echogear EGLF2 (budget option that still works, $95-120). All three handle 50-85" TVs and have heavy-duty steel construction.
The heat question.
You'll see warnings online: "don't mount a TV above a fireplace, the heat will damage it." This is partially true — it depends entirely on your specific fireplace and how you use it.
Modern gas fireplaces vent up the flue and rarely heat the mantel above 100°F. We've measured 50+ Tampa fireplaces with an infrared thermometer during a fire — the vast majority stay below 90°F at mantel surface. TVs are rated to operate up to 95-100°F ambient.
Wood-burning fireplaces are different — they can hit 150°F+ at the mantel. If you have a wood-burning fireplace and want a TV above it, you need a heat-shield mount (Sanus VHT) that includes a stainless deflector. We can verify with a temperature test before installing.
Mounting hardware on brick.
For brick fireplaces, always anchor into the mortar joints, never the brick face. Brick cracks under stress. Mortar holds. We use 5/16-inch lag-shield expansion anchors (250-400 lbs each), driven into mortar lines that align with the bracket bolt holes. 4-6 anchors per mount, depending on TV weight.
For stone fireplaces, the technique is similar but we may use chemical anchors (epoxy + threaded rod) on natural stone, which is unpredictable on expansion anchors.
Cable concealment options.
Three ways to hide cables on a brick fireplace:
- Paint-matched surface raceway. Wiremold or Legrand, painted to match the brick or surround color. Almost invisible from 4 feet away. Our default, fastest install.
- Drill through brick to wall cavity behind. Works if there's a wood-stud wall behind the brick veneer. Fully concealed, but requires structural assessment.
- Run along adjacent drywall section. If the fireplace has drywall walls on either side, route cables there with in-wall concealment. Fully invisible.
Bottom line.
For a brick fireplace above-mount in Tampa: get a full-motion tilt-down mount (Sanus, Kanto, or Echogear). Anchor into mortar joints with lag-shield anchors. Conceal cables with a paint-matched raceway or in-wall run.
Or, if you want it done right without the headache, text us a photo of your fireplace and TV — we'll quote a flat $249 for the install (everything included), measure mantel temps if needed, and have it mounted same-day.
Ready to mount it right?
Flat-rate $99 standard. Same-day across Tampa Bay.