Brooklyn Moving Truck Rental Guide
Brooklyn, New York is becoming one of the most famous moving destinations in the USA because of its development and many job and career opportunities.
You’ve just finished carefully packing your entire apartment, and now you’re staring at your 55-inch flat-screen TV, wondering: “Can I just lay this flat in the truck to save space?”
It’s one of the most common questions we hear at U.Santini Moving & Storage, and for good reason. Modern TVs are expensive, fragile, and awkward to move.
The short answer? No, you should never lay a flat-screen TV flat during a move. But there’s more to it than that.
With over 95 years of moving experience serving New York City, we’ve seen the aftermath of improperly transported TVs, and we’re here to help you avoid that costly mistake.
In this guide, we’ll explain exactly why laying your TV flat is risky, what can go wrong, and the proper way to transport your television safely.
Modern flat-screen televisions are engineering marvels, slim, lightweight, and capable of stunning picture quality. However, that sleek design comes with inherent fragility. Here’s what happens inside your TV when you lay it flat:
Flat-screen TVs are designed and engineered to stand upright. The internal components, frame, and screen are weight-balanced for vertical positioning. When you lay a TV flat on its back or face, gravity shifts the weight distribution in ways the TV was never designed to handle.
The screen glass, one of the heaviest parts of a modern TV, presses down directly on internal components like the LED panel, circuitry, and fragile connections. Without proper support in the middle, this creates pressure points that can damage delicate electronics.
Inside your flat-screen TV are layers of sensitive materials: LED backlights, liquid crystal displays, polarizing filters, and millions of tiny pixels. These components are precisely aligned and calibrated. When a TV lies flat, especially during transport with bumps and vibrations, these layers can shift, compress, or crack.
This damage might not be immediately visible. You could move your TV, plug it in, and think everything is fine, only to notice dead pixels, screen discoloration, or image distortion weeks later as the damage manifests over time.
Even if laying a TV flat didn’t cause immediate problems while stationary, add in the bumps, vibrations, and movements of NYC traffic, and you’re significantly increasing the risk of damage. Every pothole, sudden stop, or turn puts stress on the unsupported middle of your screen.
Not all TVs respond the same way to being laid flat, but all are at risk:
The most common type today uses liquid crystal displays with LED backlighting. While somewhat more durable than other types, the LCD panel can still crack or develop pressure damage when laid flat. The backlight array can also shift or fail.
These premium screens are incredibly thin with self-illuminating pixels. OLED panels are particularly susceptible to pressure damage because they have no backlight structure for support. Lying an OLED TV flat dramatically increases the risk of permanent pixel damage or screen warping.
Samsung’s quantum dot technology creates brighter, more vibrant images, but these screens are still vulnerable to the same pressure issues as other LED TVs. The quantum dot layer adds another delicate component that can be damaged.
Though less common now, plasma screens are especially dangerous when lying flat. They have two layers of glass filled with millions of gas-filled cells. The double glass layer creates even more weight pressing down when horizontal, making screen damage almost inevitable.
The curved design makes these screens particularly risky to transport horizontally. The curve creates uneven pressure distribution when flat, with the center bearing disproportionate weight.
The damage from laying a TV flat can manifest in several ways:
The real problem? These issues might not show up immediately. You could lay your TV flat, transport it, plug it in, and see a perfect picture, then notice problems days or weeks later when it’s too late to file a claim with your moving company or insurance.
Now that you know why not to lay your TV flat, here’s how to do it right:
Your TV should remain upright during the entire moving process, from the moment you remove it from the wall mount or stand until it’s set up in your new home. This means upright while packing, carrying, loading into the truck, during transport, and unloading.
Original Box: If you still have the original packaging with fitted foam corners and screen protector, use it. These boxes were specifically designed for your TV model and provide the best protection.
TV Moving Kit: If you don’t have the original box, purchase a TV moving kit from U-Haul, Home Depot, or moving supply stores. These adjustable boxes fit screens up to 70 inches and include foam corners and protective sleeves, typically costing $15-30.
Bubble Wrap Method: Wrap your screen in multiple layers of bubble wrap, ensuring the bubbles face away from the screen. Cover corners with extra padding and secure with tape (never directly on the screen).
Moving Blankets: For an extra layer of protection, wrap the bubble-wrapped TV in moving blankets and secure with stretch wrap or moving straps.
Before packing, take these steps:
Position your packed TV upright between two flat, sturdy items like a mattress and a couch back. This creates a protective sandwich that prevents the TV from tipping or shifting during transport.
Pro tip: Never place the TV against the truck wall. Truck walls vibrate significantly during driving, which can transmit directly to your screen. Always buffer your TV with soft, stable items.
If possible, use tie-down straps to secure the TV box to the truck’s rails, ensuring the straps don’t put pressure directly on the screen area.
Moving a TV in New York City presents unique obstacles:
Many NYC apartments have tight, winding staircases. Measure your TV’s dimensions and the stairwell width before moving day. Sometimes tilting the TV at an angle (while keeping the screen facing out) is necessary, but never lay it flat.
Brownstone and older building elevators are notoriously small. Reserve elevator time in advance and measure the interior dimensions. You may need to navigate tight corners carefully.
Loading zones are precious in NYC. Limited time means you need to move efficiently. Having your TV properly packed and ready to go prevents rushing and potential damage.
Taking a TV on the subway? Keep it upright, face the screen toward you for protection, and travel during off-peak hours. Consider a taxi or rideshare for TVs over 40 inches.
In extremely rare situations where upright transport is absolutely impossible, and you must lay your TV flat, minimize risk with these steps:
However, we strongly advise against this. The risk is simply not worth it when alternatives exist, even if they’re less convenient.
If you’ve already transported your TV flat, don’t panic, but do take precautions:
Immediate Actions:
Before First Use:
Monitor Over Time: Even if everything looks fine initially, watch for developing issues over the next few weeks. Document any problems immediately for insurance or warranty claims.
Given the risks and challenges of moving a TV yourself, professional help often makes sense, especially for:
At U.Santini Moving & Storage, our experienced crews have moved thousands of TVs safely across all five boroughs. We use professional-grade TV boxes, proper packing techniques, and understand how to navigate NYC’s unique building challenges.
Our movers carry the right insurance and equipment, meaning if something does go wrong (rare with proper handling), you’re protected. We also handle the heavy lifting, eliminating your injury risk from trying to maneuver a large, awkward TV through tight NYC spaces.
To answer the original question definitively: No, you cannot safely lay a flat-screen TV flat when moving. The risks far outweigh any convenience of saving space. Modern TVs are expensive investments; a 55-inch OLED can cost $1,500 or more. Protecting that investment requires following proper transport methods.
Always keep your TV upright, use appropriate packing materials, secure it properly in the vehicle, and transport it carefully. If you’re unsure about handling your TV yourself, or if you have a particularly valuable or large screen, hiring professional movers is a smart investment.
With over a century of moving experience in New York City, U.Santini Moving & Storage knows how to handle your valuable electronics with care. We provide:
Don’t risk your expensive TV on an improper move. Contact U.Santini Moving & Storage today for a free quote. Let us handle the logistics while you focus on settling into your new NYC home, with your TV arriving in perfect working condition, ready for your first movie night.
Your screen will thank you.