Display Technology

What is PPI (Pixels Per Inch)? Calculate & Why It Matters

· 12 min read

What is PPI?

PPI (Pixels Per Inch) measures pixel density—how many pixels are packed into each inch of screen space. Higher PPI means sharper text, crisper images, and smoother edges.

Why it matters: Two monitors can be the same size but look completely different. A 27-inch 1080p monitor (82 PPI) shows visible pixels and grainy text, while a 27-inch 4K monitor (163 PPI) looks crystal clear.

The PPI Problem: Real-World Examples

Example 1: Why 27-Inch 1080p Looks Grainy

Setup: 27-inch monitor, 1920×1080 resolution

PPI Calculation:

  • Diagonal: 27 inches
  • Resolution: 1920×1080
  • PPI: 82

Result: At typical 24-inch viewing distance, you can see individual pixels. Text looks fuzzy, images lack sharpness.

Example 2: Why 27-Inch 4K Looks Sharp

Setup: 27-inch monitor, 3840×2160 resolution

PPI Calculation:

  • Diagonal: 27 inches
  • Resolution: 3840×2160
  • PPI: 163

Result: Pixels are invisible at normal viewing distance. Text is razor-sharp, images look printed.

The Difference

Same screen size, 2× the PPI = dramatically better clarity

MonitorResolutionPPIVisual Quality
27” 1080p1920×108082❌ Grainy, visible pixels
27” 1440p2560×1440109✅ Sharp, excellent
27” 4K3840×2160163✅ Crystal clear, retina-quality

How to Calculate PPI

The Formula

PPI = √(Horizontal Pixels² + Vertical Pixels²) ÷ Diagonal Inches

Step-by-Step Calculation

Example: 24-inch monitor, 1920×1080 resolution

Step 1: Square the horizontal pixels

  • 1920² = 3,686,400

Step 2: Square the vertical pixels

  • 1080² = 1,166,400

Step 3: Add them together

  • 3,686,400 + 1,166,400 = 4,852,800

Step 4: Take the square root

  • √4,852,800 = 2,203 diagonal pixels

Step 5: Divide by diagonal inches

  • 2,203 ÷ 24 = 91.8 PPI

Quick Reference Calculator

Use our PPI Calculator to instantly calculate PPI for any monitor configuration.

PPI Standards for Different Screen Sizes

24-Inch Monitors

ResolutionPPIQuality RatingBest For
1920×108092✅ GoodBudget office work, gaming
2560×1440122✅ ExcellentPremium productivity, gaming
3840×2160184⚠️ Too highRequires scaling, overkill

Recommendation: 1080p is acceptable, 1440p is ideal for 24-inch.

27-Inch Monitors

ResolutionPPIQuality RatingBest For
1920×108082❌ PoorAvoid - visible pixels
2560×1440109✅ ExcellentSweet spot for most users
3840×2160163✅ PremiumProfessional work, content creation

Recommendation: 1440p minimum, 4K for professional use.

32-Inch Monitors

ResolutionPPIQuality RatingBest For
1920×108069❌ Very poorNever recommended
2560×144092✅ GoodGaming, general use
3840×2160138✅ ExcellentProductivity, media

Recommendation: 1440p minimum, 4K strongly recommended.

34-Inch Ultrawide (21:9)

ResolutionPPIQuality RatingBest For
2560×108082❌ PoorAvoid - too low
3440×1440110✅ ExcellentProductivity, immersive gaming
5120×2160163✅ PremiumProfessional workflows

Recommendation: 3440×1440 is the standard for ultrawide.

The PPI Sweet Spot

Optimal PPI Range by Use Case

Office Work & Productivity:

  • Minimum: 90 PPI (acceptable)
  • Optimal: 100-120 PPI (comfortable)
  • Premium: 130-150 PPI (luxury)

Gaming:

  • Minimum: 90 PPI (playable)
  • Optimal: 100-110 PPI (balanced performance)
  • Premium: 120-140 PPI (visual quality priority)

Professional Work (photo/video editing, design):

  • Minimum: 110 PPI (acceptable)
  • Optimal: 140-160 PPI (excellent)
  • Premium: 160-220 PPI (retina-class)

Programming & Development:

  • Minimum: 100 PPI (readable)
  • Optimal: 110-140 PPI (comfortable for long sessions)
  • Premium: 150+ PPI (crisp code, multiple windows)

The 110 PPI Rule

110 PPI is the magic number for most users:

  • Text is sharp and readable
  • No visible pixels at 20-24 inch viewing distance
  • Doesn’t require UI scaling
  • Balanced GPU performance

Configurations that hit ~110 PPI:

  • 24” @ 1440p (122 PPI)
  • 27” @ 1440p (109 PPI)
  • 32” @ 4K (138 PPI)
  • 34” ultrawide @ 3440×1440 (110 PPI)

Why PPI Matters More Than Resolution

Resolution Alone Is Misleading

Scenario: Which monitor is sharper?

Monitor A: 24-inch, 1920×1080 (92 PPI) Monitor B: 32-inch, 2560×1440 (92 PPI)

Answer: They look equally sharp because they have the same PPI, even though Monitor B has higher resolution.

The Size-Resolution Relationship

Key insight: Larger screen + same resolution = lower PPI = less sharp

Screen Size1080p PPI1440p PPI4K PPI
24”92122184
27”82109163
32”6992138

Notice: 32” 1440p (92 PPI) = 24” 1080p (92 PPI) in sharpness

Common PPI Mistakes

❌ Mistake 1: Buying Too Large at Low Resolution

Example: 32-inch 1080p monitor

  • PPI: 69 (very low)
  • Problem: Visible pixels, blurry text, poor image quality
  • Fix: Get 32” 1440p or 4K instead

❌ Mistake 2: Ignoring Viewing Distance

Example: 27” 4K monitor (163 PPI) at 36 inches away

  • Problem: Sitting too far to see the benefit
  • Fix: Either sit closer or save money with 1440p

❌ Mistake 3: Too High PPI Without Scaling

Example: 24” 4K monitor (184 PPI)

  • Problem: Text and UI elements too small
  • Fix: Use 150% scaling or choose 1440p

❌ Mistake 4: Mismatched Dual Monitors

Example: 24” 1080p (92 PPI) + 27” 1440p (109 PPI)

  • Problem: Text size differs between screens
  • Fix: Match PPI across monitors for consistency

PPI and Viewing Distance

The Visual Acuity Formula

Human eye with 20/20 vision can resolve:

  • 1 arc minute (1/60th of a degree)

Minimum distance for invisible pixels:

Distance = (Screen Height × 3438) ÷ Vertical Resolution

PPI Distance Chart

PPIMinimum DistanceComfortable Distance
8034 inches (86 cm)40+ inches (100+ cm)
9030 inches (76 cm)36+ inches (90+ cm)
10027 inches (69 cm)32+ inches (80+ cm)
11025 inches (64 cm)30+ inches (75+ cm)
12023 inches (58 cm)28+ inches (70+ cm)
14019 inches (48 cm)24+ inches (60+ cm)
16017 inches (43 cm)22+ inches (55+ cm)

How to use this:

  1. Measure your viewing distance
  2. Find the PPI that makes pixels invisible at that distance
  3. Choose monitor size + resolution to achieve that PPI

Real-World Example

Your setup: Desk with 24-inch viewing distance

Option 1: 27” 1080p (82 PPI)

  • Minimum distance: 33 inches
  • You’re at 24 inches (too close)
  • Result: Visible pixels ❌

Option 2: 27” 1440p (109 PPI)

  • Minimum distance: 25 inches
  • You’re at 24 inches (just right)
  • Result: Sharp image ✅

Option 3: 27” 4K (163 PPI)

  • Minimum distance: 17 inches
  • You’re at 24 inches (plenty of margin)
  • Result: Crystal clear ✅

PPI for Different Use Cases

Office Work & Productivity

Requirements:

  • Sharp text for long reading sessions
  • Clear spreadsheets and documents
  • Comfortable for 8+ hours daily

Recommended PPI: 100-120 Best configurations:

  • 24” 1440p (122 PPI)
  • 27” 1440p (109 PPI)
  • 32” 4K (138 PPI)

Gaming

Requirements:

  • Balance between clarity and performance
  • High refresh rates (144Hz+)
  • GPU can drive the resolution

Recommended PPI: 90-110 Best configurations:

  • 24” 1080p (92 PPI) - competitive gaming
  • 27” 1440p (109 PPI) - balanced
  • 32” 1440p (92 PPI) - immersive

Why not higher: 4K gaming requires expensive GPU, lower framerates

Photo & Video Editing

Requirements:

  • Accurate detail representation
  • True-to-life sharpness
  • Wide color gamut

Recommended PPI: 140-180 Best configurations:

  • 27” 4K (163 PPI)
  • 32” 4K (138 PPI)
  • 24” 4K (184 PPI) with scaling

Programming & Development

Requirements:

  • Crisp code readability
  • Multiple windows/panels
  • Reduced eye strain

Recommended PPI: 110-140 Best configurations:

  • 27” 1440p (109 PPI)
  • 34” ultrawide 3440×1440 (110 PPI)
  • 32” 4K (138 PPI)

Media Consumption

Requirements:

  • Immersive viewing experience
  • Sharp video playback
  • Comfortable from couch/bed

Recommended PPI: 80-110 Best configurations:

  • 32” 1440p (92 PPI)
  • 32” 4K (138 PPI)
  • 43” 4K (103 PPI)

PPI and UI Scaling

When You Need Scaling

PPI above 140: UI elements become too small Solution: Use display scaling

PPI RangeRecommended ScalingExample
80-110100% (no scaling)27” 1440p
110-140100-125%32” 4K
140-180125-150%27” 4K
180-220150-200%24” 4K

Scaling Trade-offs

Pros:

  • Sharper text and images
  • More screen real estate
  • Better for high-DPI content

Cons:

  • Some apps don’t scale well
  • Blurry text in non-optimized apps
  • Inconsistent UI sizes

Best practice: Stick to 100-120 PPI to avoid scaling issues

How to Check Your Monitor’s PPI

Method 1: Manual Calculation

  1. Find your resolution (Settings → Display)
  2. Find your screen size (measure diagonal or check specs)
  3. Use the formula: √(width² + height²) ÷ diagonal

Method 2: Online Calculator

Use our PPI Calculator:

  1. Enter screen diagonal size
  2. Enter resolution (width × height)
  3. Get instant PPI calculation with quality rating

Method 3: System Information

Windows:

  • Right-click desktop → Display settings
  • Check resolution and scale
  • Calculate PPI manually

macOS:

  • System Settings → Displays
  • Check resolution
  • Calculate PPI manually

Linux:

  • Run: xdpyinfo | grep resolution
  • Shows DPI (same as PPI for screens)

Choosing the Right PPI for Your Setup

Decision Framework

Step 1: Measure viewing distance

  • Typical desk: 20-28 inches
  • Arm’s length: 24-30 inches
  • Reclined: 30-40 inches

Step 2: Determine use case

  • Office work: 100-120 PPI
  • Gaming: 90-110 PPI
  • Professional: 140-160 PPI

Step 3: Match screen size to resolution

Step 4: Verify GPU can handle it

  • 1080p: Any modern GPU
  • 1440p: Mid-range GPU (RTX 3060, RX 6600)
  • 4K: High-end GPU (RTX 4070+, RX 7800 XT+)

Quick Recommendation Chart

Your PriorityScreen SizeResolutionPPIGPU Needed
Budget24”1080p92Any
Balanced27”1440p109Mid-range
Premium27”4K163High-end
Large screen32”1440p92Mid-range
Professional32”4K138High-end
Ultrawide34”3440×1440110Mid-range

Budget Monitors

ModelSizeResolutionPPIRating
Generic 24”24”1920×108092✅ Good
Generic 27”27”1920×108082❌ Poor
Generic 32”32”1920×108069❌ Very poor

Mid-Range Monitors

ModelSizeResolutionPPIRating
24” 1440p24”2560×1440122✅ Excellent
27” 1440p27”2560×1440109✅ Excellent
32” 1440p32”2560×144092✅ Good

Premium Monitors

ModelSizeResolutionPPIRating
27” 4K27”3840×2160163✅ Excellent
32” 4K32”3840×2160138✅ Excellent
34” UW34”3440×1440110✅ Excellent

Apple Displays (Reference)

ModelSizeResolutionPPINotes
MacBook Pro 14”14.2”3024×1964254Retina (220 PPI effective with scaling)
MacBook Pro 16”16.2”3456×2234254Retina (220 PPI effective)
Studio Display27”5120×28802185K (retina-class)
Pro Display XDR32”6016×33842186K (professional)

Note: Apple uses 2× scaling, so effective PPI is ~110 for comfortable use

Conclusion

PPI is the most important spec for determining monitor sharpness and clarity. Resolution and screen size mean nothing without considering pixel density.

Key Takeaways:

  • 110 PPI is the sweet spot for most users
  • 27” 1080p (82 PPI) looks grainy - avoid it
  • 27” 1440p (109 PPI) is the most popular choice for good reason
  • 27” 4K (163 PPI) is excellent for professional work
  • Match PPI to your viewing distance and use case

Quick Decision Guide:

  • Budget: 24” 1080p (92 PPI)
  • Best value: 27” 1440p (109 PPI)
  • Premium: 27” 4K (163 PPI) or 32” 4K (138 PPI)
  • Gaming: 27” 1440p (109 PPI) with high refresh
  • Professional: 27-32” 4K (138-163 PPI)

Calculate your ideal PPI: Use our free PPI Calculator to find the perfect monitor configuration for your setup.