The 45-inch super ultrawide is 43.32" (110 cm) wide and 12.18" (30.9 cm) tall, while the 49-inch super ultrawide is 47.17" (119.8 cm) wide and 13.27" (33.7 cm) tall. That makes the 49-inch super ultrawide the larger screen by 18.6% of usable area.
The 45-inch super ultrawide measures 43.32" (110 cm) wide by 12.18" (30.9 cm) tall, with a total screen area of 527.8 square inches. The 49-inch super ultrawide measures 47.17" (119.8 cm) wide by 13.27" (33.7 cm) tall, covering 625.8 square inches.
The practical difference: the 49-inch super ultrawide is 8.9% wider, the 49-inch super ultrawide is 8.9% taller, and 49-inch super ultrawide offers 18.6% more screen area. Width affects how much desk space you need, while the height delta shows how much vertical space changes for documents, timelines, and video.
The practical choice depends on what feels limiting in your current setup. For coding, timelines, spreadsheets, and games, the wider option gives more room for side-by-side windows, while the taller option keeps more vertical content visible without pushing the edges of the screen as far away. If your desk is shallow, width and viewing distance matter as much as raw diagonal size.
45-inch 32:9 vs 49-inch 32:9 is mostly about side-by-side workspace. A 21:9 display behaves like one wide main workspace, while a 32:9 super ultrawide is closer to two monitors fused into one panel. The physical width number matters more than the diagonal when you are checking speakers, arms, laptop stands, or portrait side screens.
At 5120x1440, the 45-inch super ultrawide achieves 118 PPI. The 49-inch super ultrawide at 5120x1440 reaches 109 PPI. The 45-inch super ultrawide has 8.2% higher pixel density, resulting in sharper text and images.
For text-heavy work, PPI is the number that decides whether you are buying more room or just making everything bigger. A lower-PPI large screen can feel spacious for windows but softer for code and documents. A higher-PPI screen may need OS scaling, but it usually gives cleaner text and more flexible sizing.
For 16:9 content (most videos and games), the 45-inch super ultrawide provides an effective diagonal of 24.9", while the 49-inch super ultrawide provides 27.1". Check this if you watch 16:9 video or play games that do not support ultrawide resolutions.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What are the exact dimensions of a 45-inch super ultrawide?
- A 45-inch super ultrawide measures 43.32" (110 cm) wide by 12.18" (30.9 cm) tall, with a screen area of 527.8 square inches.
- What are the exact dimensions of a 49-inch super ultrawide?
- A 49-inch super ultrawide measures 47.17" (119.8 cm) wide by 13.27" (33.7 cm) tall, with a screen area of 625.8 square inches.
- Which is bigger: 45-inch super ultrawide or 49-inch super ultrawide?
- The 49-inch super ultrawide is 18.6% larger in total screen area, though the 45-inch super ultrawide may be taller depending on aspect ratio.
- How much desk space do I need for a 49-inch super ultrawide?
- A 49-inch super ultrawide requires at least 47.17" of desk width. We recommend 53.17" to allow comfortable margins on each side.
- How wide is 45-inch super ultrawide compared with 49-inch super ultrawide?
- The 45-inch super ultrawide is 43.32" wide. The 49-inch super ultrawide is 47.17" wide, so the width change is 3.85" before bezels, arms, or speaker space.
- Which has better pixel density: 45-inch super ultrawide or 49-inch super ultrawide?
- The 45-inch super ultrawide at 5120x1440 has 118 PPI, which is 8.2% higher than the 49-inch super ultrawide's 109 PPI.
- How does 16:9 content look on these displays?
- On the 45-inch super ultrawide, 16:9 content appears at an effective 24.9" diagonal. On the 49-inch super ultrawide, it appears at 27.1". Ultrawides display 16:9 content with black bars on the sides.