Aktualisiert 2026
The $300 monitor tier in 2026 includes 27-32 inch 1440p displays with USB-C 65W power delivery, OLED options (rare at this price but emerging), and ultrawide entry tiers. We tested every monitor under $300 in our 92-monitor index.
Mid-tier monitor scoring weighs sRGB and DCI-P3 colour coverage (for content creators), USB-C with PD (eliminates separate charger for laptops), height-adjustable stand quality, refresh rate at native resolution, and brand warranty terms.
Our top pick with a score of 78/100. The MSI MAG 275QPF X30 27" WQHD Flat leads the pack with well-rounded performance at $149.99.
A strong runner-up scoring 76/100 at $203.99. Nearly matches our top pick and may suit different budgets or preferences.
Best value on this list. The Acer Nitro KG1 27" IPS delivers 72/100 at $111.59 — solid performance without the premium price tag.
Gigabyte M28U ($278) leads with 4K 144Hz IPS and KVM functionality. For 1440p, the MSI options remain strong, while LG and ASUS offer ultrawide alternatives in the $250-300 range.
Depends on use: 4K 144Hz monitors require RTX 4070+ GPUs for gaming. For office productivity and content consumption, 4K wins. For gaming on RTX 4060 or below, 1440p delivers better real-world performance.
Yes for laptop users. A USB-C monitor with 65W+ PD eliminates the laptop charger from the desk and reduces cable count to one. Common at $250+ in 2026.
Yes for 29-30 inch ultrawide IPS at 100-144Hz (Gigabyte, LG). The 34-inch 1440p ultrawide tier still sits at $400+. Productivity-focused buyers benefit most from this format.
Reviewed by VersusMatrix Editorial Team
Last updated: May 13, 2026
Methodology: AI-powered analysis of technical specifications from manufacturer data. Scores are calculated by comparing products across multiple dimensions and normalized relative to the full category database. Our editorial process is independent and not influenced by affiliate partnerships.