Keep in mind that default scaling on a 24” 4K may also not be to your liking: I have two Dell 24” 4Ks and the default “looks like 1920x1080” (aka “retina”) makes the UI a little bit too big. Not horrendous but not ideal for me.
But that’s the beauty of a display with a high PPI - you can have it render to look like a different resolution with minimal quality loss (I read/write text all day).
+1. A couple things I'd highlight:
In terms of the right scaling / "looks like" resolutions, I think most ppl would agree for 24", it's "Looks like 1080p" and for 27", it's "Looks like 1440p", where text and icon sizes look ideal given distance most ppl will use their monitors at.
This is why the 24" and 27" iMacs (and the LG Ultrafines) are 4K and 5K respectively, to pixel-double to get retina:
- 24" is 4K 3840x2160, and run at "Looks like 1920 x 1080"
- 27" is 5K 5120 x 2880, and run at "Looks like 2560 x 1440"
Having seen both, I agree with
@Stephen.R that I prefer the 27" and Looks like 1440p resolution from a text/icon/workspace standpoint.
I have a 27" 4K LG monitor (the UD68) very reasonably priced, was ~$400 5 years ago when I bought it (and cheaper today) which I've been running at "Looks like 2560 x 1440" since Day 1. It looks fantastic, even though it's not a true native 5K resolution (so not true pixel-doubling HiDPI).
MacOS scaling makes my setup look better than a 27" native 1440p monitor would be. Mostly because MacOS basically pixel-doubles my 2560 x 1440 screen resolution to 5120 x 2880, then downscales the image to fit the 3840 x 2160 4K screen I have. A true 27" 5K screen would look better I'm sure, but for my purposes, this is more than good enough given the cost-benefit.
Just some food for thought, and another alternative to consider getting a 27" 4K monitor and running at 2560 x 1440, instead of a smaller 24" 4K and running at 1080p.