If you are standing in a store parking lot staring at a boxed 75 inch TV and then staring at your Ford Fusion, the honest answer is this: probably not in the way you want, and not in the box. A 75 inch TV is where the question stops being about “maybe” and starts turning into a real space problem. With a 50 inch TV, a Fusion still has a fighting chance. With a 75 inch TV, the odds drop fast.
The main problem is not the number 75 by itself. TV size is measured on the diagonal, not straight across. That means the actual television is much wider than many people picture in their heads. Then the box adds even more bulk. A typical 75 inch TV panel is around the mid-60-inch range in width without the stand. Once it is in the box, the package is often around 71 to 72 inches wide, about 42 to 43 inches tall, and several inches deep. That is a very large flat rectangle to try to move inside a sedan.
The Ford Fusion is roomy for a midsize car, but it is still a sedan. That shape matters. The trunk may offer about 16 cubic feet on many gas models, and the rear seats often fold, but cargo volume alone does not tell the full story. A sedan can have a deep trunk and still be bad at swallowing a giant TV box because the trunk opening and cabin shape get in the way. It is a little like having a big closet with a small door. The space may be there in theory, but the object still has to get through the opening and sit in a safe position once it is inside.
That is why the clean answer for most people is no, a boxed 75 inch TV will usually not fit in a Ford Fusion in a safe and sensible way. The box is simply too long and too tall for what a sedan does well. Even if you manage to angle it through a seat opening or force part of it into the cabin, you still run into the next problem: how the TV should ride.
Flat-screen TVs are safest when they stay upright or close to upright in the original packaging. Stores and makers repeat that advice for a reason. A large TV laid flat can put stress on the screen and frame, especially during bumps, braking, and sharp turns. A smaller set gives you a little room to work around that. A 75 inch TV does not leave much room for luck. It is wide, tall, fragile, and awkward all at once.
That is where the Fusion becomes the wrong tool for the job. A 75 inch TV might be physically possible in some wild, bare-TV, seats-down, front-seat-slid-forward setup if you are talking about no box and a very careful angle, but that is not the same as saying it fits well. A bare television is thinner than the box, yet it is also far more exposed. The screen can twist, flex, or take pressure in a way that turns your drive home into a very expensive mistake. When the item is this large, “technically maybe” is not the same thing as “yes.”
There is also the driver’s side of the problem. Even if you somehow get the TV into the car, can you still drive safely? Can you see out the mirrors? Is the box pressing into the front seats? Will it move if you brake hard? Does it block the view out the rear window so badly that every lane change feels like a guess? A fit does not count for much if it turns the cabin into a cardboard wall and leaves the driver squeezed into one corner.
A lot of people think folding the rear seats solves everything. It helps, but only up to a point. Folded seats make room for longer items, not magic. A 75 inch TV box is not just long. It is tall and wide too. That wide, flat shape is the enemy in a sedan. It can clash with the trunk opening, the roofline, the rear door opening, and the angle from trunk to cabin. The car may have enough total space on paper, but the path the TV has to travel is still narrow and curved.
Hybrid and Energi versions of the Fusion make the answer even less friendly. Those cars usually give up trunk space because of the battery. So if your Fusion is not a standard gas sedan, the chances get worse, not better. A gas Fusion is the best-case version here, and even then a 75 inch TV is pushing past what makes sense.
There is a reason many retailers nudge buyers toward delivery for large TVs. That is not just upselling. It is because once you get into the 65 inch and 75 inch range, normal cars stop being practical. Retail guidance often treats 65 inches and above as the point where delivery or a larger vehicle makes more sense. That lines up with common sense too. A big TV is not like a microwave or a lamp. It is more like carrying a thin door made of glass and electronics.
If you already own the TV and the box is gone, you might be tempted to think the problem is solved. Not really. The bare panel may be easier to angle into the cabin, but that also means there is less protection if something presses against it. One small shift, one bad strap, or one sharp edge from the seat frame can do real damage. Without the original box and foam, the ride gets riskier, not safer.
So what is the real-world answer? If you mean a boxed 75 inch TV from the store, a Ford Fusion is usually not the right vehicle. You may be able to make it fit in some unusual setup with the box partly into the trunk and partly into the cabin, but it would be awkward at best and risky at worst. If you mean the TV without the box, maybe it could be angled into the car in some cases, but it still would not be a smart or safe plan for most people.
The better move is to use store delivery, borrow an SUV, rent a small cargo van, or ask a friend with a hatchback, crossover, or pickup. That kind of vehicle gives the TV a chance to ride upright and stable, which is exactly what you want. A Ford Fusion is a good commuter, a good road-trip sedan, and a good grocery runner. It is just not a natural home for a 75 inch television.
If you want the shortest honest answer, here it is. Can a 75 inch TV fit in a Ford Fusion? In the box, usually no, or at least not in a way that makes good sense. Out of the box, maybe in some cases, but still not a move most people should trust. When the TV gets this large, the question stops being about squeezing it in and starts being about getting it home without cracking the screen.
So if you are in the parking lot doing mental geometry with your trunk open, save yourself the stress. A 75 inch TV and a Ford Fusion are usually a bad match. You might win the puzzle and still lose the screen. At that size, the smarter answer is not better angles. It is a better vehicle.