TV Mounting FAQ
Common questions about TV mounting service in Johns Creek, Milton, Alpharetta, Roswell, Smyrna, Vinings, and Cumming/Forsyth. This page covers pricing, mounts, wall types, wire options, setup conditions, and what to expect before booking.
Send a clear photo of the wall, TV, mount or bracket, outlet location, and the full area where the TV should be installed. If the setup involves a fireplace, stone, tile, concrete, metal studs, Samsung Frame TV, or hidden wires, send a wider photo so the full wall and surrounding area are visible.
Yes, but only if the actual setup is different from what was selected or shown before booking. Common reasons include a different wall type, missing hardware, unsafe mount, unusual stud layout, fireplace complications, or a wire path that is not possible as expected.
Some jobs have too many variables for an instant price. Fireplaces, tile, stone, concrete, metal studs, large TVs, full-motion mounts, hidden cable paths, and Samsung Frame setups may need photo review before the appointment is confirmed.
The installation plan may need to change. Different wall types require different fasteners, tools, and mounting methods. If the wall is not suitable for the selected option, the job may need a revised quote or a safer installation approach.
The TV may still be mountable, but the final position depends on the mount style, stud spacing, wall type, and TV size. Some mounts allow side-to-side adjustment after installation; others have limited positioning flexibility.
Common hardware may be available, but specialty screws, proprietary brackets, manufacturer-specific parts, or unusual mount hardware should come with the TV or mount. If something looks incomplete, send a photo before the appointment.
Have the TV, mount, remote, power cord, brackets, screws, soundbar parts, and accessories ready. Clear the area around the wall and move furniture if possible. If the TV is new, keep the box nearby until installation is complete.
Yes, an adult should be present to approve the TV location, height, wire plan, and final placement. Small decisions during mounting can affect the final look.
A standard TV mounting appointment often takes about 1–2 hours. More complex jobs, such as fireplaces, wire concealment, large TVs, soundbars, or special wall surfaces, can take longer.
Missing hardware, the wrong mount, unclear wall structure, blocked access, hidden obstacles, concrete, metal studs, outlet problems, or last-minute placement changes can delay the job.
Renters should check the lease rules for drilling, wall repairs, and move-out requirements. Some landlords allow TV mounting, while others may require the wall to be patched before move-out.
Condo owners should check HOA or building rules, especially for shared walls, concrete walls, high-rise units, elevator access, parking, and approved work hours.
Yes. Send gate codes, concierge instructions, parking details, elevator rules, loading-zone information, or service-hour restrictions before the appointment.
If the wall cannot safely support the selected TV and mount, the installation should not proceed as planned. A safer mount, different location, or different installation method may be needed.
No. The desired location has to work with the wall structure, stud layout, mount type, TV size, outlet location, and safety requirements. A clean install still has to obey physics. Annoying, but reliable.
Not always. A flush look depends on the TV model, mount type, wall flatness, outlet position, cable thickness, and the rear shape of the TV. Low-profile installs require careful planning.
Patching and painting are not automatically included with TV mounting. If old holes, failed anchors, or previous mount damage need repair, that should be discussed before the appointment.
Check the TV height, level, stability, viewing angle, cable routing, soundbar position if added, and whether the TV powers on. This is the best time to request small adjustments.