Choosing a TV is mostly two decisions: the right size for your room and the right panel for your lighting. Measure your viewing distance and pick the largest size that fits comfortably, then choose OLED for a dark room where you want the best picture, or a bright LCD for a sunny room. A good 4K set is the sweet spot in 2026; 8K content is still scarce, so the money is better spent on a soundbar. Most of the spec war, peak refresh rates, niche HDR formats, and 8K resolution, will not change your day-to-day experience.
Size and lighting decide most of it
Two factors do the heavy lifting. Size: a TV that is too small for the room disappoints no matter how good the panel is, and most people end up wishing they had gone larger. Lighting: a glossy OLED looks stunning in a dim room but can wash out in a bright one, while a high-brightness LCD fights glare better.
Get those two right and almost any reputable set will satisfy you. Get them wrong and the best specs in the world will not save the experience. If you game on it, our look at 60Hz vs 144Hz in 2026 explains when a higher refresh rate is worth paying for.
Panel types compared
| Panel |
Best for |
Strength |
Trade-off |
| OLED |
Dark rooms, movie nights |
Perfect blacks, contrast |
Pricier, dimmer in sun |
| Premium LCD (mini-LED) |
Bright rooms, mixed use |
Very bright, strong value |
Blacks less perfect |
| Standard LCD |
Budgets, secondary TVs |
Lowest cost |
Weaker contrast |
Treat brand sub-names as variations on these three. The lighting in your room points to the row; your budget points to the tier within it.
How to choose, step by step
- Measure your viewing distance. Sit where you normally watch and measure to the wall. Use that to choose the largest size that still feels comfortable, not cramped.
- Judge your room lighting. Lots of windows and daytime watching favors a bright LCD. A dim media room favors OLED.
- Stick with 4K. It is the standard, content is everywhere, and it looks great at normal sizes and distances. Skip 8K for now.
- Check HDR and brightness, not just resolution. Good contrast and brightness affect picture quality more than chasing the highest pixel count.
- Plan for sound. TV speakers are thin. Budget a little for even a modest soundbar; it is the upgrade people notice most.
- Mind the smart platform and ports. Make sure it runs the apps you use and has enough HDMI ports for your devices.
What to skip
- 8K sets. Native 8K content is still rare, and at normal sizes and distances most people cannot tell it from 4K.
- Extreme refresh rates for non-gamers. They help fast gaming but do little for movies and shows. Buy them only if you game seriously.
- Premium HDR-format marketing. Brands push competing badges; a TV with good brightness and contrast looks great regardless.
- Relying on built-in speakers. They are the weakest part of nearly every TV. Plan a soundbar instead of paying up for a marginally better panel.
FAQ
What size TV should I get?
Measure your viewing distance and pick the largest size that fits the wall and feels comfortable. Most people are happier going one size up than down.
Is OLED or LCD better in 2026?
OLED has the best contrast for dark rooms; a bright mini-LED LCD is better for sunny rooms and often a stronger value. Your lighting decides.
Is an 8K TV worth it?
For almost everyone, no. Native 8K content is scarce, and the visible benefit at normal sizes is minimal. A great 4K set plus a soundbar is the smarter spend.
Do I need a high refresh rate?
Only if you game seriously. For movies and streaming, a high refresh rate adds little, so do not pay a premium for it otherwise.
Where to go next
OLED vs LCD explained for 2026, 1440p vs 4K and what your eyes can see in 2026, and how to mirror your phone to a TV in 2026.