TV Mounting in Mohammed Bin Zayed City
Compare local tv mounting pros in Mohammed Bin Zayed City and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: AED 90–AED 740
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TV Mounting prices in Mohammed Bin Zayed City
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small TV under 43" Fixed bracket, gypsum or block wall | AED 90 | AED 170 | AED 280 |
| Standard TV 43-65" Fixed or tilting bracket, cable tidy-up | AED 110 | AED 230 | AED 370 |
| Large TV 65"+ or full-motion bracket Articulating arm, reinforcement check on gypsum | AED 180 | AED 320 | AED 550 |
| Cable concealment / trunking add-on Cavity drop in gypsum or trunking on concrete | AED 90 | AED 180 | AED 370 |
| Concrete or feature wall install Hammer drilling, backing board where needed | AED 230 | AED 410 | AED 740 |
How to hire a tv mounting pro in United Arab Emirates
- Say whether the wall is blockwork/concrete or gypsum partition — UAE apartments and villas mix both, and gypsum needs reinforcement for large TVs
- In apartment towers, check whether building management requires a work permit or restricts drilling hours (common in Dubai high-rises)
- Use an established maintenance company with a DED trade licence rather than an unlicensed freelancer
- For new sockets, the work should be done by qualified electricians working to DEWA/ADDC standards
- Confirm the quote includes the bracket or specify your own model with VESA size
- Agree cable finish: trunking on concrete walls, cavity concealment possible in gypsum partitions
Handyman companies in the UAE operate under a trade licence from the emirate's economic department (e.g., Dubai's DED), and electrical modifications should follow DEWA/ADDC wiring regulations using qualified electricians. Many residential towers require a booked work permit and restrict noisy works to set hours.
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Frequently asked questions
Can the cables be hidden inside the wall?
In hollow drywall or plasterboard walls, yes — installers cut two small openings and drop low-voltage cables (HDMI, antenna) inside the cavity. Power cables usually cannot legally go in-wall as ordinary extension leads; the compliant options are an in-wall rated power relocation kit or a new outlet behind the TV installed by an electrician. On solid brick or concrete walls, cables run in paintable surface trunking instead.
What is the difference between fixed, tilting, and full-motion mounts?
Fixed mounts sit flattest against the wall and are cheapest. Tilting mounts angle down 5-15 degrees — useful when the TV sits above eye level. Full-motion (articulating) mounts extend and swivel, which suits corner installs or rooms with multiple viewing positions; they cost the most and need the most secure fixing because the load hangs away from the wall.
Can a TV be mounted on a brick or concrete wall?
Yes — brick and concrete are actually stronger than drywall for mounting. The installer uses a hammer drill and masonry anchors (sleeve or wedge anchors). It costs more than a stud wall because drilling is slower and cable concealment usually has to run in surface trunking rather than inside the wall.
Is it safe to mount a TV above a fireplace?
Yes if done properly, but check two things: heat (run the fireplace for 30 minutes and confirm the wall above stays below about 40C / 100F, or fit a mantel to deflect heat) and viewing angle (a pull-down or tilting mount stops neck strain). Above-fireplace installs cost more because the wall is usually brick or stone and cable routing is harder.
Can a TV be mounted on drywall or plasterboard without studs?
Small TVs (under about 40 inches) can go on hollow drywall with heavy-duty toggle anchors rated for the load, but most professionals prefer to hit at least one stud or install a plywood backing board. For TVs over 50 inches, mounting into studs or masonry is strongly recommended — anchor-only installs on hollow walls are the most common cause of fallen TVs.
Do I need building approval to mount a TV in a Dubai apartment?
Not government approval, but many towers require a simple work permit from building management before any contractor drills — book it a day or two ahead and check drilling-hour windows. Villas need no permission unless the community rules say otherwise for external walls.
Can large TVs go on gypsum partition walls common in UAE apartments?
Only with the right fixings: installers either locate the metal studs, use heavy-duty toggle anchors rated for the load, or fit a plywood backing. For 65-inch-plus TVs on gypsum, a spreader plate or stud fixing is essential — plastic wall plugs alone are the main cause of fallen TVs in UAE flats.
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