34″ vs 38″ Ultrawide: Area, Width & PPI Compared
A 38″ ultrawide adds roughly 25% more screen area over a 34″ ultrawide (523 vs 419 sq in) and about 9 cm of width, at essentially the same ~110 PPI — a pure size upgrade with no sharpness penalty.
| 34″ ultrawide | 38″ ultrawide | |
|---|---|---|
| DIAGONAL | 34.0″ | 38.0″ |
| ASPECT | 21:9 | 21:9 |
| WIDTH | 79.4 cm / 31.3″ | 88.7 cm / 34.9″ |
| HEIGHT | 34.0 cm / 13.4″ | 38.0 cm / 15.0″ |
| SCREEN AREA | 419 sq in | 523 sq in |
| RESOLUTION | 3440x1440 | 3840x1600 |
| PIXEL DENSITY | 110 PPI | 109 PPI |
| VIEWING DISTANCE | 40–95 cm | 40–95 cm |
Which should you pick?
The 38″ ultrawide gives you more usable space — about 25% more area — which helps with multitasking and side-by-side windows. The 34″ ultrawide fits smaller desks, sits at a closer comfortable distance (40–95 cm vs 40–95 cm), and is easier to take in without turning your head.
Whatever the size, the ergonomics rule is the same: the top of the screen at or just below eye level, and the screen roughly an arm's length away. A bigger panel usually needs to sit a little further back.
A bigger monitor is easy to slouch toward. unhunch keeps your posture honest at any screen size — real-time webcam coaching, 100% on-device. $14.99 lifetime access, 7-day money-back guarantee.
GET UNHUNCH — $14.99FAQ
- Is a 38-inch ultrawide worth it over a 34-inch?
- You get about 25% more area and more width at the same sharpness (~110 PPI). Great for heavy multitasking if your desk is deep enough.
- How far back should an ultrawide sit?
- About 40–95 cm; with wide panels, sitting a little further lets you take in the edges without turning your head.
- Do I need a bigger desk for a 38-inch?
- It's nearly 89 cm wide, so a deep, wide desk helps — both to fit the panel and to allow a comfortable viewing distance.
QUELLEN
- Rosenfield M (2011). Computer vision syndrome: a review of ocular causes and potential treatments. Ophthalmic & Physiological Optics, 31(5):502–515.
- Hansraj KK (2014). Assessment of stresses in the cervical spine caused by posture and position of the head. Surgical Technology International, 25:277–279.