Today’s Question: Why would you buy a 4K monitor if you’re not going to set it to a 4K resolution? Wouldn’t be better to buy a less expensive monitor with a lower resolution?
Tim’s Quick Answer: Put simply: Improved display quality. With more pixels for a given display size compared to a lower-resolution display, a 4K monitor provides enhanced detail. That holds true even if you set the display to a lower resolution than the maximum setting.
More Detail: A monitor display can be set to a variety of different resolutions, but changing the display resolution through the operating system doesn’t change the actual resolution of the display. In other words, a monitor has a fixed number of pixels, you can just scale the display to leverage those pixels in different ways.
A monitor with a 4K resolution has approximately 4,000 pixels horizontally. In most cases that number is closer to 3,800, but the display still gets identified as “4K”.
While a 4K monitor enables you to set the display to its native resolution, with around 4,000 pixels across, you may not want to make use of that setting. At that high resolution, especially for a display that isn’t particularly large, the text and other interface elements on the screen may be too small to see effectively.
For example, I typically prefer displays of around 27 inches in part because I like to have the display relatively close to me. I feel that a 32-inch display is a bit too large for my preferences, for example. With a display of this size, I personally find that using 4K resolution is just not comfortable, with many display elements being too small.
As a result, I tend to favor a display resolution that is closer to 3,000 pixels across, give or take, in terms of how interface elements are displayed. However, I still find there is a considerable advantage to opting for a 4K display, even though I’ll generally set the display to a resolution lower than 4K.
If you compare a 4K display versus a monitor with a resolution of around 3,000 pixels across, with both set to the same resolution of around 3,000 pixels across, you’ll find that the 4K display provides a noticeably sharper and cleaner looking display. To me the difference is significant enough that once I’ve seen a 4K display running at around 3,000 pixels across, I don’t want to return to a display with a lower resolution.
Therefore, I consider it an excellent idea to choose a display that has a 4K (or even 5K) resolution, even if like me you prefer to run that display at a lower resolution setting. The elements on the screen will be scaled to the resolution setting you’ve established, but the higher resolution of the 4K display will result in smoother lines with a sharper overall appearance.

