How High Should Curtain Tiebacks And Holdbacks Be?
Mount curtain tiebacks and holdbacks about one-third of the way up from the bottom of the window, which lands at roughly 30 to 36 inches off the floor for standard floor-length panels. That height pulls the fabric into a clean, slightly bell-shaped sweep and lets the most light in. If you want a more dramatic, formal drape, drop them lower, to roughly the halfway point of the window or about 24 to 28 inches off the floor. The only hard rule: never center them at the exact middle of the panel, which bunches the fabric and looks bulky.
That's the short answer. Below is the height chart by curtain length, the real difference between a tieback and a holdback, the step-by-step install, including drywall anchoring, and the placement mistakes that make even nice curtains look off.
How high should you hang curtain tiebacks and holdbacks?
The reliable starting point is the one-third rule: measure from the bottom hem up, and place the hardware at the one-third mark. On a standard 84-inch floor-length panel, that's about 28 inches up from the floor; on a 96-inch panel it's around 32 inches. Rounding to the 30 to 36 inch range works for most living rooms and bedrooms because it sits near hip-to-mid-thigh height, which reads as balanced from across the room.
Three things push you higher or lower within that range:
- Window and ceiling height. Taller windows and high ceilings can carry a higher tieback, closer to the halfway point, without looking top-heavy. Standard 8-foot rooms look best on the lower end.
- Curtain weight. Heavy velvet or blackout panels sag and need the support point a touch higher so the bottom doesn't pool awkwardly.
- Backlight. If there's a lamp or bright window behind the panel that makes it glow, a higher tieback keeps the gathered fabric from looking like a dark lump.
A quick gut check: if you can clearly see the bottom edge of the tieback from across the room without looking down, it's probably too low.
Tieback height chart by curtain length
Use this as a starting point, then adjust to your eye. "Standard look" is the everyday one-third placement; "dramatic look" is the lower, more formal swag.
| Curtain length | Standard look, off floor | Dramatic / formal look, off floor | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 63 in, sill-to-below-sill | 20–24 in | 16–20 in | Short panels; keep the tieback proportionally lower so the gather isn't crammed at the top |
| 84 in, most common floor-length | 28–32 in | 24–28 in | The default for 8-ft ceilings |
| 96 in, tall windows / high mount | 32–36 in | 28–32 in | Higher ceilings can carry the higher number |
| 108 in, floor-to-ceiling | 36–40 in | 30–36 in | Heavy panels: lean toward the higher end for support |
If you have two tiebacks stacked on one tall window, set the upper one about 6 inches above the lower one rather than guessing each separately. That keeps them visually paired instead of random.
What's the difference between a tieback and a holdback?
People use the words interchangeably, but they're two different pieces of hardware, and the difference changes how you install them.
| Tieback | Holdback | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | A loop of fabric, rope, or cord that wraps around the panel and hooks to the wall | A rigid metal or wood arm, often with a decorative knob or U-shape, mounted to the wall |
| How it holds the curtain | Cinches the fabric and ties it to a small wall hook | The panel drapes over and behind the arm; nothing wraps around it |
| Look | Softer, more decorative, easy to restyle or swap seasonally | Crisper, more architectural, stays put |
| Best for | Lighter panels, traditional or romantic rooms, renters who want a small single hook | Heavier drapes, modern or formal rooms, anyone who wants a fixed clean sweep |
| Install effort | Lowest: one small hook per side | A bit more: an arm with two screws, usually anchored |
Short version: a tieback is the soft, wraparound option, and a holdback is the rigid wall-mounted arm. Both sit at the same height, the one-third / 30 to 36 inch zone. Choose the tieback if you like to change the look often; choose the holdback if you have heavy panels or want a permanent, tailored result.
If you want to skip hardware entirely and knot or braid the panels for a no-drill look, that's a different technique. See our guide to different ways to tie back curtains for hardware-free styling ideas.
How to install curtain tiebacks and holdbacks, step by step
This works for both, with one fork in the middle for the holdback arm.
Tools and materials:
- Tape measure and pencil
- Level
- Drill with a bit slightly smaller than your screws, for pilot holes
- Wall anchors rated for your panel weight
- Screwdriver
- The tieback hooks or holdback arms and their screws
Step 1: Mark the height first
With the curtains hanging, decide your height from the chart above, one-third up or about 30 to 36 inches for an 84-inch panel. Mark that height on the wall on one side with a pencil.
Step 2: Find the horizontal position, not centered
Don't place the hook directly behind the middle of the panel. Gather the curtain loosely by hand and let it settle into the wall, then mark where the fabric naturally wants to be held, usually 2 to 4 inches outside the window frame. The fabric should sweep out and back, not get crushed flat against the glass.
Step 3: Match the second side
Measure the first mark's height and distance from the frame, then transfer the exact same numbers to the other side. Use a level or a long ruler across both marks. Uneven tiebacks are the number-one thing people notice, so spend the extra minute here.
Step 4: Mount the hook or arm
- Tieback hook: drill a pilot hole at the mark, set your anchor if you're in drywall, and drive the single hook screw. One hook per side.
- Holdback arm: hold the arm against the mark, level it, and mark both screw holes. Drill both pilots, set anchors, and screw the arm flush to the wall. The arm should stick straight out, not tilt up or down.
Step 5: Dress the curtain
For a tieback, wrap the loop around the gathered panel and catch it on the hook. For a holdback, sweep the panel behind the arm and let it drape over the front. Step back, even out the folds, and adjust the gather height by an inch or two until it looks right. Trust your eye over the tape measure at this last step.
How do you anchor tiebacks and holdbacks into the wall?
This is where heavy drapes fail. A small tieback hook holds light fabric fine with a basic plastic anchor, but a holdback carrying velvet or blackout panels needs real holding power.
- Into a stud: the strongest option. A wood screw straight into a stud needs no anchor. Studs near a window are usually at the corners of the frame, so you may or may not get lucky at your mark.
- Into drywall, no stud: use a proper anchor. A self-drilling plastic anchor is enough for light tieback hooks; for holdbacks holding heavy panels, step up to a threaded toggle or molly bolt rated above your panel weight. See Home Depot's wall anchor types to match the anchor to the load.
- Renters: a single small adhesive-backed hook can hold a lightweight tieback on a smooth wall, but it won't hold a holdback or heavy fabric. When in doubt, use the smallest hook and the lightest panel.
For more on drilling cleanly into drywall without cracking it, see our drywall curtain rod tips.
Where should you place curtain tiebacks, side to side?
Height gets the attention, but horizontal placement is what makes the sweep look intentional:
- Set the hook 2 to 4 inches outside the window frame, not behind the center of the panel. This pulls the fabric into a soft diagonal and clears the glass for light.
- Never center the tieback on the panel. Centering crushes the fabric into a bulky knot in the middle and blocks the window.
- On very wide panels or long curtains, use two tiebacks instead of one fighting to hold all the fabric. Two smaller gathers look more balanced than one strained one.
- Use a plumb line or level to keep both sides identical. Eyeballing it across a room almost always drifts off by an inch.
How long should a curtain tieback be?
For a fabric tieback that wraps the panel, length scales with the panel width. A common starting formula: panel width at the gather point x 2, plus 4 inches for the loop and overlap. So a panel that gathers to about 20 inches wide wants a tieback around 44 inches long. Cut a little long and trim, since you can't add length back. Holdbacks don't use this math, because nothing wraps around the panel; you just pick an arm projection, usually 4 to 6 inches, deep enough for the fabric to drape behind.
Frequently asked questions
How high off the floor should curtain tiebacks be?
About 30 to 36 inches off the floor for standard 84-inch floor-length panels, which is roughly one-third of the way up from the bottom hem. Go lower, 24 to 28 inches, for a more formal, dramatic swag.
Should tiebacks be in the middle of the curtain?
No. Place the hook 2 to 4 inches outside the window frame so the fabric sweeps out and back. Centering it bunches the panel and looks bulky.
What's the difference between a holdback and a tieback?
A tieback is a soft fabric or rope loop that wraps the panel and catches on a small wall hook. A holdback is a rigid metal or wood arm mounted to the wall that the panel drapes over. Both hang at the same height.
How high do you hang holdbacks for floor-length curtains?
Same one-third rule: about 30 to 36 inches off the floor for 84-inch panels, a bit higher, 32 to 40 inches, for 96 to 108-inch floor-to-ceiling drapes.
Do I need to drill into a stud?
For light tieback hooks, no, a drywall anchor is fine. For holdbacks carrying heavy velvet or blackout panels, hit a stud or use a threaded toggle/molly bolt rated above the panel weight.
Can renters install tiebacks without drilling?
Yes, with a small adhesive-backed hook on a smooth wall for a lightweight panel only. It won't hold a heavy holdback. For hardware-free options, knot or braid the panels instead.
Get the height right, one-third up or 30 to 36 inches for standard panels, keep the hook just outside the frame rather than centered, match both sides exactly, and anchor for the panel weight. Do that and the tiebacks read as a deliberate finishing touch instead of an afterthought. For the rest of the hardware picture, see our curtain rod hanging tips, the guide to finials for curtain rods, and how high to hang curtains.