TV technology in 2026 spans four main panel types — OLED, QD-OLED, Mini-LED/QLED, and standard LED — each with different strengths for different viewing environments. OLED leads on contrast and dark-room quality; Mini-LED leads on brightness and HDR peak. Our rankings weight picture quality, gaming features (refresh rate, VRR, HDMI 2.1), smart OS quality, and value.
Uzmanlarımız tarafından sıralanmış 5 model (99 toplam)
Not sure which Televisions to pick?
Answer 2 quick questions and we'll find your match.

Hisense
Özellikleri, puanları ve değeri yan yana incelemek için karşılaştırma aracımızı kullan.
Karşılaştır Televisions →OLED (LG, Sony): per-pixel dimming, true black, widest viewing angle — best for dark rooms and movie watching. QD-OLED (Samsung S95 series, Sony A95): adds quantum dots to OLED for brighter colors while keeping perfect blacks — best overall panel. Mini-LED/Neo QLED (Samsung, TCL, Hisense): high peak brightness (1,000-4,000 nits), good local dimming — best for bright rooms. Standard LED: budget option, less contrast, fine for casual viewing.
The rule of thumb: viewing distance ÷ 1.5 = ideal screen size in inches. At 8 feet, that's 64". At 10 feet, 80". Under-sizing is the most common mistake — most rooms can comfortably accommodate a 65" or 75" TV. Modern 4K content looks excellent at larger sizes.
For PS5 and Xbox Series X gaming: require HDMI 2.1 (4K@120Hz), VRR (Variable Refresh Rate for smooth frames), and ALLM (Auto Low Latency Mode). Input lag below 15ms in Game Mode is the threshold for comfortable play. Sony X90L and LG C4 have all four HDMI ports as HDMI 2.1 — rare and valuable.
Google TV (Sony, Hisense) and LG webOS are the most capable and reliably updated platforms. Samsung Tizen is decent but has a history of app removal over time. Roku TV is simple and reliable. Avoid TVs with unknown proprietary OS — apps and features can become unusable as platforms go unmaintained.
Dolby Vision is the most widely supported premium HDR format (Netflix, Disney+, Apple TV+). HDR10+ is Samsung's equivalent (Amazon Prime, some streaming). All 4K TVs support basic HDR10. Dolby Vision support is worth checking since most streaming content uses it.
We have ranked 99 Televisions models using our AI scoring engine. Each product is evaluated across 5 key dimensions: Screen Size (25%), Picture (25%), Price (20%), Refresh Rate (15%), Smart TV (15%). Our top-rated pick leads in overall weighted score — click any product to see the full spec breakdown and head-to-head comparisons.
Screen size should match your viewing distance. Panel technology matters — OLED offers the best contrast, while QLED excels in brightness. Check resolution (4K is standard), refresh rate (120Hz for gaming), HDR support, smart TV platform, and HDMI 2.1 ports for next-gen consoles.
Each televisions product is scored across 5 weighted dimensions: Screen Size (25%), Picture (25%), Price (20%), Refresh Rate (15%), Smart TV (15%). We extract technical specifications from manufacturer data and normalize scores relative to every product in the category. Picture carries the highest weight at 25%. All scores are recalculated when new products are added to ensure fair, up-to-date rankings.
Start by setting your budget using the price segment filters (Budget, Mid-Range, Premium). Then sort by the dimension that matters most to you — whether that is screen size, picture, price, or overall score. Click any product for the full specification table and use the "Compare" feature to see two products side by side.
Use the brand filter on this page to browse top Televisions brands. Rankings depend on which dimensions you value most. Each brand subpage shows all models sorted by our expert score, so you can compare within a single brand or across multiple brands.
Budget Televisions can offer excellent value. Our scoring engine includes a price-to-performance ratio dimension, so affordable products that punch above their weight will rank well. Use the "Budget" segment filter to see the top-scoring options at lower price points, then compare them against premium models to see exactly what trade-offs you would be making.
OLED is better for: dark room movie watching, accurate colors, wide viewing angle, gaming response time. QLED (Mini-LED) is better for: bright rooms with ambient light (2,000-4,000 nits vs OLED's 500-800 nits for full-screen content), no burn-in risk, and larger screens at the same price point. If you watch primarily in a dark or dim room and care about cinematic quality, OLED wins. If your living room has significant ambient light, QLED's brightness advantage is real.
Modern LED/QLED TVs last 60,000-100,000 hours before reaching half brightness — over 20 years of 8 hours/day use. OLED panels last 30,000-60,000 hours before reaching the same point — still 10-20 years for typical use. The practical limitation is smart TV software support, not panel hardware: streaming apps, OS updates, and codec support typically stop after 5-8 years.