Your TV anchored to solid framing, sitting perfectly level, with the wires hidden so the screen is the only thing you see.
Mounting a flat-screen looks simple until you're standing on a ladder holding a 65-inch TV, wondering whether the two screws you found are actually in a stud. Get it wrong and the mount pulls loose, the picture tilts, or a tangle of cords hangs down the wall. We locate the framing, pick the right mount for your TV's size and weight, drive the lag bolts into solid wood - or the correct masonry anchors on brick and block - and get the screen dead level with the cables tucked away.
We check your wall type, find the studs (or confirm masonry), and agree on height and viewing angle before a single hole is drilled. Most living-room TVs look best with the center closer to seated eye level than people expect.
Fixed for a low profile, tilt to cut glare from a high position, or full-motion to pull the screen out and swivel. We confirm the mount's VESA pattern and weight rating fit your TV - or supply the right one if yours won't work.
Lag bolts into studs on drywall, or sleeve/wedge anchors rated for masonry on brick and block. We use a level throughout so the bracket is true, then hang and lock the TV to it.
Power and HDMI routed inside the wall with recessed outlet kits where the framing allows, or run through a low-profile paintable raceway. We tidy the cords and confirm the picture is level before we pack up.
Photos of real Santa Clarita TV installs - level screens, hidden wires - will appear here.
Most single-TV installs are a one-visit job. What moves the price is the wall - a straightforward stud mount on drywall is quick, while masonry, an over-fireplace install, or fully in-wall wire concealment takes more work and hardware. Supplying a mount rated for your TV, or adding a soundbar and cable hiding, factors in too. We look at your wall, tell you exactly what it needs, and give a firm, free quote up front. If you're weighing where the TV should go, our guide on how high to mount a TV is a good place to start.
We mount TVs throughout the SCV:
Quick answers before you book
Yes. Brick, block, and stone are actually very strong mounting surfaces - the trick is the right hardware. We drill with a masonry bit and set sleeve or wedge anchors rated to hold the load, driving into the solid brick rather than the softer mortar joints wherever possible. It's a different job than drilling into drywall, but a properly anchored masonry mount is rock solid.
That's part of the job. Where the wall framing allows, we run the power and HDMI cables inside the wall using recessed outlet and pass-through kits, so nothing is visible. Where in-wall routing isn't possible - over masonry, or where a firebreak blocks the run - we use a slim paintable raceway so the cords still disappear against the wall.
We do, and we'll be honest about the trade-offs. Over a fireplace usually puts the screen higher than ideal for comfortable viewing, so a tilt or full-motion mount that angles the picture down helps a lot. Heat is the other factor: with a wood-burning firebox the mantel and rising heat can be hard on electronics, so we look at your setup and let you know if it's a good spot before committing.
Common problem, and there are a couple of good ways around it. If a stud is close, a full-motion mount lets the arm reach your viewing spot while the bracket stays on solid framing. If not, the safe options are heavy-duty toggle anchors rated for the TV's weight, or blocking added behind the drywall. What we won't do is trust a big TV to plastic anchors that aren't rated for it - that's how mounts end up on the floor.
Get a free quote today - most single-TV installs are done in one visit, level and wire-free.