TV Mounting in Colchester
Compare local tv wall mounting pros in Colchester and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: £35–£320
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TV Mounting prices in Colchester
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small TV under 43" on plasterboard Fixed or tilting bracket into studs, cables tidied | £35 | £65 | £110 |
| Standard TV 43-65" Stud or masonry wall, basic cable management | £55 | £90 | £150 |
| Large TV 65"+ or full-motion bracket Articulating arm, two-person lift | £85 | £140 | £230 |
| In-wall cable concealment add-on Cables dropped in stud cavity or chased and made good | £90 | £170 | £280 |
| Brick, chimney breast, or above-fireplace install Masonry fixings, heat check, often pull-down bracket | £110 | £180 | £320 |
How to hire a tv mounting pro in United Kingdom
- Confirm wall type first — UK homes mix plasterboard on stud, dot-and-dab plasterboard over masonry, and solid brick, and each needs different fixings
- Check reviews on Checkatrade, MyBuilder, or TrustATrader that mention your wall type and TV size
- Ask for proof of public liability insurance (£1m-£2m is standard for handyman trades)
- If you want a new socket behind the TV, use an electrician registered with a Part P scheme (NICEIC, NAPIT, or ELECSA)
- Agree the all-in price including the bracket (if supplied) and cable management before the visit
- For rented homes, get the landlord's written consent — drilling is an alteration under most tenancy agreements
TV mounting is unregulated handyman work in the UK, but installing a new socket or fused spur behind the TV is notifiable electrical work under Part P of the Building Regulations in England and Wales — it must be done by a registered electrician or certified via building control. Low-voltage cable concealment is unrestricted.
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See the full breakdown of what drives tv mounting prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need an electrician for TV mounting?
Not for the mounting itself. You need one only if you want a new power outlet behind the TV, since fixed wiring is electrician-only work in most countries. Many TV mounting companies partner with an electrician or offer the outlet as an add-on — ask when booking so it happens in one visit.
Do I need to buy the TV mount myself?
Either works. Buying your own mount is usually cheaper — check it matches your TV's VESA pattern (the four bolt holes on the back, e.g. 400x400) and its rated weight. Many installers also sell mounts on the day at a markup of roughly 20-50% over retail. If you buy your own, tell the installer the model so they bring the right fixings.
Can a soundbar or games console be installed at the same time?
Yes, and it is cheaper to bundle than to book twice. Soundbar brackets attach either to the wall below the TV or to the TV mount itself. Consoles and set-top boxes go on a small floating shelf or behind-TV bracket. Expect a modest add-on charge per extra device, plus cable management for each.
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.
Can a TV be mounted on a dot-and-dab plasterboard wall?
Yes — dot-and-dab (plasterboard glued over brick or block, common in post-1980s UK homes) needs special fixings such as corefix bolts that pass through the board into the masonry behind. Standard plasterboard anchors alone are not safe for TVs over about 40 inches on these walls, so tell the installer if your wall sounds hollow but feels solid behind.
Do I need a Part P electrician just to hide the TV cables?
No. Hiding aerial and HDMI cables in the wall or in trunking is not notifiable work. Part P applies only if you add a new socket, fused spur, or extend a circuit behind the TV — that part must be done by a registered electrician (NICEIC/NAPIT) or notified to building control.
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