Television marketing has never been noisier, and most of the numbers on the box do not predict whether a panel will actually look good in your room. The honest truth in 2026 is that picture quality comes down to a few things: panel type, peak brightness, processing, and whether the set has the gaming features you need. This guide ranks the categories that matter and tells you exactly where the spec sheet stops mattering.
What changed in 2026
- Mini-LED got much better at dimming zones. Local-dimming zone counts climbed, narrowing OLED contrast advantage in bright rooms while keeping a brightness lead.
- OLED brightness improved again. Newer panel tech pushed peak highlights higher, reducing the classic OLED weakness in sunny rooms.
- HDMI 2.1 with 4K at 120Hz is standard mid-range. Full-bandwidth gaming features are no longer premium-only.
- 8K stalled. Almost no 8K content exists, panels cost far more, and the visible benefit at normal seating distance is negligible.
- Smart-OS bloat got worse. Most platforms now push ads on the home screen; this is a reason to consider an external streaming stick.
Panel types compared
| Panel type |
Strength |
Weakness |
Best for |
| OLED |
Perfect blacks, infinite contrast |
Lower peak brightness, burn-in risk |
Dim rooms, films |
| Mini-LED (QLED) |
Very high brightness, no burn-in |
Some blooming around bright objects |
Bright rooms, sports |
| Standard LED |
Cheapest, gets bright |
Weak contrast, poor local dimming |
Spare rooms, budgets |
Ranked picks by use case
| Category |
What to look for |
Approx. price tier |
| Best overall |
High-end OLED, 65 inch, strong processing |
Premium |
| Best for bright rooms |
Mini-LED with many dimming zones |
Mid to premium |
| Best for gaming |
120Hz, HDMI 2.1, low input lag, VRR |
Mid-range |
| Best budget |
Decent mid-tier mini-LED, 55 to 65 inch |
Budget to mid |
| Best for movies |
OLED with accurate filmmaker mode |
Premium |
How to choose
- Pick the panel for your room first. Dark room and film focus, go OLED. Sunny room and sports, go mini-LED.
- Get the size right. For most living rooms, 65 inches is the sensible default; oversize rather than undersize.
- Check gaming specs if you game. You want 4K at 120Hz, HDMI 2.1, variable refresh rate, and low input lag.
- Ignore inflated contrast numbers. Dynamic contrast ratios are marketing; real-world local dimming behaviour matters more.
- Plan for sound. Built-in speakers are universally mediocre; budget for a soundbar.
What to skip
- 8K TVs — there is almost no content and the benefit is invisible at normal distances.
- The cheapest no-name 4K sets — weak processing, dim HDR, and laggy smart platforms ruin the experience.
- Extended in-store warranties on top of the manufacturer warranty; they rarely pay off.
- Curved panels — a gimmick for TVs that hurts off-axis viewing.
FAQ
Is OLED or mini-LED better in 2026?
Neither universally. OLED wins on contrast in dim rooms; mini-LED wins on brightness for sunny rooms and daytime sports.
Do I need HDMI 2.1?
Only if you game on a current console or PC at high frame rates. For streaming and films, HDMI 2.0 bandwidth is fine.
Is 8K worth it yet?
No. Content is almost nonexistent and the resolution gain is not visible at typical seating distances.
Will an OLED suffer burn-in?
Modern OLEDs have strong mitigation and varied content is low risk, but avoid static logos at max brightness for hours daily.
Where to go next
Round out the home theatre with Best Soundbars in 2026, consider a big-screen alternative in Best Projectors in 2026, and improve streaming reliability with Best Mesh WiFi Systems in 2026.