27″ vs 27″ Ultrawide: Same Size, Less Screen?
Same 27″ diagonal, different shapes: the standard 16:9 27″ actually has about 18% more total area than a 27″ ultrawide (312 vs 264 sq in), because the ultrawide is shorter. The flat 27″ is also a touch sharper (~109 vs ~103 PPI).
| 27″ | 27″ ultrawide | |
|---|---|---|
| DIAGONAL | 27.0″ | 27.0″ |
| ASPECT | 16:9 | 21:9 |
| WIDTH | 59.8 cm / 23.5″ | 63.0 cm / 24.8″ |
| HEIGHT | 33.6 cm / 13.2″ | 27.0 cm / 10.6″ |
| SCREEN AREA | 312 sq in | 264 sq in |
| RESOLUTION | 2560x1440 | 2560x1080 |
| PIXEL DENSITY | 109 PPI | 103 PPI |
| VIEWING DISTANCE | 40–95 cm | 42–95 cm |
Which should you pick?
The 27″ gives you more usable space — about 18% more area — which helps with multitasking and side-by-side windows. The 27″ ultrawide fits smaller desks, sits at a closer comfortable distance (42–95 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
- Does a 27-inch ultrawide have less screen than a regular 27?
- Yes — at the same 27″ diagonal the 21:9 ultrawide is wider but much shorter, giving about 18% less total area than a 16:9 27″.
- Why pick a 27-inch ultrawide then?
- For the wider aspect ratio itself — timelines, side-by-side documents — even though total area is smaller than a standard 27″.
- Which is sharper?
- The standard 27″ is marginally sharper here (~109 vs ~103 PPI), though both look crisp at arm's length.
REFERENCES
- 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.