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TV Wall Design Ideas | 12 Creative Solutions For Interior Transformations
Elena Marwick
A TV wall plays a much bigger aesthetic role than a simple wall. It reflects the overall beauty & mood of your living room. Now, you can design your living room TV wall without a massive budget. In this guide, Lush Loom highlights the 12 most trending TV wall design ideas. Whether you want sleek, minimalist, or dramatic wall decor, these TV wall decor ideas offer practical, up-to-date solutions. We also provide a step-by-step guide for the execution of each idea.
1- Wood Slat Panel Wall
Wood wall panels in Dubai are the most popular TV wall trends right now. You mount vertical or horizontal wooden slats (oak, walnut, or pine) directly on the wall behind your TV. The slats add texture, hide cables naturally within the gaps, and make the room feel taller and warmer at the same time.

How to Do it Right?
Go with vertical slats in natural oak for a Scandinavian feel, or choose deep walnut for a moodier, more dramatic look. Space the slats evenly for a clean finish, or vary the spacing for something more contemporary. Add an LED strip light behind the TV to make the whole wall glow softly in the evening. Apply a clear matte coat on the wood to protect it from dust and moisture over time.
This design works especially well in minimalist interiors. It also improves room acoustics by absorbing sound and reducing echoes, making your audio noticeably clearer.
2- Full Built-In Wall Unit With Integrated Storage
A full built-in wall unit frames your TV with floor-to-ceiling cabinetry and open shelving. You get a TV wall that looks completely intentional rather than like an afterthought. The TV sits in the center, with closed cabinets below for media devices and open shelves on either side for books, plants, and decor.

How to Execute This Design?
Use push-to-open cabinet doors to eliminate handles and keep the surface completely clean. Paint the unit with the same color as the wall paint for a seamless look, or go with a contrasting shade (like deep navy or forest green) to make a statement piece. Keep the open shelves curated and minimal. Group items in odd numbers (1 or 3 objects per shelf) and leave plenty of space between them.
This design works best in larger living rooms where you have the full wall to use. It also solves the clutter problem permanently because every remote, cable, and console gets its own hidden spot.
3- TV Wall With Built-In Electric Fireplace
Combining a fireplace and a TV on the same wall creates a warm, cozy focal point that replaces two separate features with one strong one. You mount the TV above or beside a recessed electric fireplace, and you get both entertainment and ambiance from a single wall.

How to Craft This Design?
Choose a recessed electric fireplace that sits flush with the wall to keep the layout clean. Place a floating media console directly below the fireplace to hold your devices. Surround the entire setup with shiplap panels, stone cladding, or wood slats for a cohesive look. Stick to a neutral palette of black, white, grey, or warm beige so the fireplace flame becomes the focal point rather than a busy background.
This design works well in family rooms and open-plan living spaces where you want warmth and comfort alongside entertainment.
4- Minimalist Floating Console Setup
Sometimes less really is more. A minimalist TV wall strips everything back to just the screen and a slim floating console below it. No shelves, no cabinetry, no frames. Just clean lines and intentional simplicity.

How to Do it Right?
Mount the TV directly on the wall at eye level, with the center of the screen sitting at 40 to 42 inches from the floor when seated. Install a floating console 6 to 12 inches below the TV, keeping it proportionate to the screen size. Choose a console with push-to-open doors or drawers so cables and devices stay out of sight. Add LED bias lighting directly behind the TV to create a soft halo effect that reduces eye strain during nighttime viewing.
Pro Tips: Use neutral tones like white, matte black, or light oak for the console and wall. Keep the surrounding wall completely bare to maintain the minimal look.
5- Fluted Panel TV Wall
Fluted panels, also called ribbed panels, feature a series of vertical concave grooves that create a subtle play of light and shadow across the wall surface. They look high-end, add serious texture, and work beautifully as a TV backdrop.
How To Craft This Design?
Install fluted MDF or stone-look panels across the entire TV wall. Mount the TV directly on the panels using wall anchors that go through the panel into the structural wall behind. Add a floating cabinet in a matching or tonal color below the TV. Install LED strip lights along the top and bottom edges of the TV area so the light catches each groove and makes the texture stand out dramatically in the evening.
Pro Tips: Fluted panels suit contemporary, transitional, and luxury-style interiors. Go with creamy white or warm beige tones for quiet elegance, or choose darker charcoal panels for something bold and moody.
6- Stone or Marble Feature Wall
A stone or marble TV wall design immediately turns the room into something that looks expensive and architectural. The natural texture and material add depth that paint or living room wallpaper simply cannot match.

How to Do it Right?
You do not need real marble. Stone-look porcelain tiles or marble-effect panels work just as well and cost far less. Apply them across the full wall or just the section directly behind the TV. Pair the stone backdrop with a slim floating console in warm oak or walnut to balance the cool tones of the marble. Use warm LED lighting at a color temperature of 2700K to 3000K to bring out the veining in the stone and prevent the wall from feeling cold.
Designer Tips: Keep the furniture simple because a stone wall is statement enough on its own. A sleek sofa, a neutral rug, and one or two plants complete the look without competing with the wall.
7- Dark Moody Accent Wall
A dark accent wall behind your TV makes the screen practically disappear into the background when it is on, and creates a cinematic atmosphere that enhances your viewing experience. Deep charcoal, navy blue, forest green, and matte black are the top color choices right now.

How to Execute This Idea?
Paint the TV wall two to three shades darker than the rest of the room. For a bolder approach, use a color like dark teal or ink blue that contrasts completely with your furniture. A dark wall makes the TV blend in far more effectively than a white wall does because the screen’s black bezel disappears against the dark surface. Style the wall with backlit floating shelves in a contrasting wood tone, and add a statement floor lamp in the corner to balance the moodiness with warmth.
Pro Tip: This design works especially well in rooms with limited natural light.
8- Gallery Wall Around the TV
A gallery wall treats the TV as one element within a larger arrangement of art, mirrors, and frames. Instead of the TV dominating the wall, it becomes part of a curated collection that reflects your personality.

Steps To Get This Design
Start by placing the TV slightly off-center on the wall, then build the gallery arrangement around it. Use frames of varying sizes and keep 2 to 3 inches of space between each piece. Mix art prints, black-and-white photography, small mirrors, and wall sconces within the arrangement. Stick to a consistent frame color, whether all black, all natural wood, or all white, to keep the gallery from looking chaotic. Manage cables carefully because they stand out more on a styled wall. Run a paintable cable raceway along the wall and paint it to match the background so it disappears completely.
This design suits eclectic, maximalist, and Boho-inspired interiors. It works particularly well if you want the room to feel personal and layered rather than showroom-clean.
9- Wallpapered Niche or Recessed TV Panel
A recessed TV niche is a shallow indent built into the wall, lined with bold wallpaper, textured grasscloth, or beadboard. The TV mounts inside the niche, and the wallpapered backdrop frames it like a piece of art.

How to Do it Right?
Build the niche 3 to 4 inches deep, just enough to recess the TV slightly into the wall. Use architectural moulding around all four edges to finish it cleanly and give it a built-in, polished look. Inside the recess, apply patterned wallpaper, fabric-backed grasscloth, or a bold contrasting paint color. The framed recess draws immediate attention to the screen and gives the whole setup a gallery-like quality. Keep the surrounding wall plain so the niche stands out as the clear focal point.
This option works in both traditional and contemporary rooms, depending on the wallpaper or texture you choose inside the recess.
10- Japandi-Style TV Wall
Japandi design blends Japanese minimalism with Scandinavian warmth. A Japandi TV wall uses natural materials, muted earth tones, and deliberate simplicity to create a space that feels calm, grounded, and carefully considered.

How to Execute This idea?
Use a light-toned plaster wall or a thin natural stone veneer as the main backdrop. Mount the TV at center height with no visible cables by routing them through the wall or using a recessed cable management kit. Place a low floating console in blonde wood or bamboo below the TV. Style the console with one or two objects only, such as a ceramic vase and a small bonsai or trailing plant. Set LED strips behind the TV to a warm 2700K tone and keep the surrounding walls bare or finished in soft, warm white.
The key to this design is restraint. Every single element needs a clear purpose. If something does not add warmth or function, remove it.
11- Modular Wall Unit System
A modular TV wall uses interchangeable panels, shelves, and cabinet modules that you can rearrange or swap out over time. It gives you the flexibility of a fully built-in wall unit without any permanent construction.

How to Do it Right?
Choose a modular system where the TV panel, shelving units, and cabinets all connect or align visually. IKEA’s BESTÅ system is one of the most popular budget-friendly options and offers a wide range of finishes. For a more premium result, brands like String, BoConcept, or Vitsœ offer modular wall systems in higher-quality materials. Mount the modules at different heights for a dynamic, asymmetrical layout. Use a mix of closed cabinets for devices and cables, and open shelves for books and decor.
This design suits renters or anyone who redecorates frequently. You get the visual impact of a built-in wall without committing to a fixed structure.
12- Smart Tech-Integrated TV Wall With Hidden Panels
A smart TV wall hides the technology entirely. When the TV is not in use, a motorized panel, sliding artwork, or decorative wood screen covers the screen completely, and the room looks like a living space rather than an entertainment hub.

How to Craft This Design?
Install a motorized lift panel that slides or folds in front of the TV when you press a button on your remote or phone. For a simpler approach, use two decorative panels on a sliding track that you pull across manually. Popular cover options include printed canvas art, slatted wood screens, chalkboard panels, or full-length mirrors. Pair this setup with a hidden soundbar built into the console below, and conceal all streaming devices inside closed cabinetry. Add smart LED lighting that adjusts automatically based on the time of day to complete the seamless, tech-forward look.
This design works best in rooms where you want the TV to disappear when not in use, such as open-plan living and dining spaces, reading rooms, or bedrooms where the screen competes with the relaxed atmosphere.
Final Thoughts
The best TV wall design not only improves aesthetics but also keeps cables and clutter out of sight. Start designing your TV wall by choosing the right material that fits your style, whether that is wood, stone, or paint. Then layer in storage, lighting, and proportional scale from there. Even a small change like adding LED bias lighting or mounting a floating console can transform the entire feel of your room without a full renovation.

Elena Marwick
Interior Designer
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