30 models analyzed

Best Televisions 2026

Reviews and comparisons for Televisions, focused on picture quality and gaming readiness so you can choose by use case and budget.

Best value

Top 5 best value televisions (July 2026)

Compare value televisions with updated prices, editorial scores, technical data, and buyer satisfaction before choosing.

XIAOMI TV F Pro 43

Current winner

XIAOMI TV F Pro 43 87.0/100 £199.00 Strong for Design and connectivity Strong for Picture quality QLED
Ranking podium
  1. Hisense 43A6QTUK 86.3/100
Full table, criteria, and recommended alternatives Open the full ranking

Recommendations by use case

These shortcuts come from the category's active use cases and stay in sync with each cohort analysis block.

Category data snapshot

Practical snapshot of Televisions: current prices, documented specs, and the axes where reviewed products differ most.

Typical current price

£577.50 reference price
range £199.00 - £1,899.00

Typical range in Premium OLED/QLED

£741.44 - £1,019.00 middle range
37% of catalog

Refresh rate with strongest coverage

120 Hz typical value
appears in 97%

Best products by category

What to check before choosing

  • Picture quality The core of any TV is its panel performance, where contrast ratios, black levels, peak brightness, and HDR rendering determine the overall viewing enjoyment.
  • Gaming readiness Modern console gaming requires low input lag, VRR, ALLM, and high refresh rates to deliver smooth, tear-free gameplay without delays.
  • Smart features and sound A TV serves as the entertainment hub, so the speed of its OS, app availability, and built-in speakers define how convenient it is to use daily.
  • Design and connectivity Mounting, viewing angles, bezel thickness, and port accessibility affect how the TV integrates into a room and connects to external devices.

Top-rated reviewed models

Ranking computed with the editorial score specific to this category.

Browse and filter Televisions

Search by text, sort products, and surface the key features that matter most to you.

30 reviews analysed 22 with price 8 out of stock
Price: Any
Brands: Any

None

22 products

LG C5
LG Premium OLED/QLED

LG C5

(1423)
£1,379.00
OLED Smart OS
Hisense 55E78QTUK PRO
Hisense Gaming TV

Hisense 55E78QTUK PRO

(224)
£422.00
QLED High refresh HDMI 2.1
Samsung S84F
Samsung Premium OLED/QLED

Samsung S84F

(16)
£749.99
OLED eARC & Dolby Atmos Smart OS
LG OLED48C45LA
LG Premium OLED/QLED

LG OLED48C45LA

(1431)
£819.00
OLED High refresh Smart OS
LG OLED48C55LA
LG Gaming TV

LG OLED48C55LA

(133)
£879.00
OLED High refresh Smart OS
TCL 65T8C-UK
TCL Gaming TV

TCL 65T8C-UK

(132)
£504.99
QLED High refresh Smart OS
LG OLED55B56LA
LG Premium OLED/QLED

LG OLED55B56LA

(205)
£899.00
OLED High refresh Smart OS
TCL T8C-UK
TCL Gaming TV

TCL T8C-UK

(139)
£649.00
QLED High refresh Smart OS
Sony K55XR80
Sony Gaming TV

Sony K55XR80

(116)
£1,294.00
OLED High refresh HDMI 2.1
Hisense 43E78QTUK PRO
Hisense Gaming TV

Hisense 43E78QTUK PRO

(226)
£297.00
QLED High refresh HDMI 2.1
Hisense 55U7QTUK
Hisense Gaming TV

Hisense 55U7QTUK

(100)
£506.00
High refresh QLED Local dimming
Hisense 55E78QTUK
Hisense Mid-range Lifestyle

Hisense 55E78QTUK

(122)
£329.00
QLED Local dimming

Best brands for televisions

We compare 30 published televisions models across catalogue depth, editorial score, user average on a 0-10 scale, average price and the axes where each maker stands out.

Models compared 30 models (6 brands)
Best user score LG (8.1)
Best editorial score Sony (8.2)
Lowest average price XIAOMI (£199)

LG

11 models Best user rating
Picture quality 8.5/10
Smart features and sound 7.7/10
Design and connectivity 7.5/10
7.9/10 Average score
8.1/10 Average users
Average price £930

6,852 reviews

View LG catalogue

Hisense

7 models
Picture quality 8.8/10
Design and connectivity 7.5/10
Gaming readiness 7.1/10
7.6/10 Average score
7.7/10 Average users
Average price £329

4,619 reviews

View Hisense catalogue
6 models
Picture quality 8.5/10
Design and connectivity 7.4/10
Smart features and sound 7.4/10
7.5/10 Average score
7.3/10 Average users
Average price £956

1,471 reviews

View Samsung catalogue

TCL

4 models Best for Smart features
Picture quality 9.0/10
Smart features and sound 7.9/10
Design and connectivity 7.6/10
8.1/10 Average score
7.7/10 Average users
Average price £478

699 reviews

View TCL catalogue

Sony

1 model Best score Best for Gaming readiness Best for Picture quality
Picture quality 9.3/10
Gaming readiness 8.6/10
Smart features and sound 7.8/10
8.2/10 Average score
7.3/10 Average users
Average price £1,294

116 reviews

View Sony catalogue
1 model Lowest price Best for Design
Design and connectivity 8.4/10
Picture quality 8.2/10
Smart features and sound 7.8/10
7.6/10 Average score
7.4/10 Average users
Average price £199

282 reviews

View XIAOMI catalogue

Quick read

Sony leads editorial average (8.2); LG stands out with users (8.1); XIAOMI has the lowest average price (£199).

Compare the best Televisions

Quick comparisons

Select 2 products to see the comparison in this section.

Best Premium OLED/QLED

This section separates Premium OLED/QLED within Televisions using the current category data, visible reviews and price context so the recommendation fits a concrete use case instead of mixing every model together.

  • Real fit Prioritize models classified for this use case, then compare price, availability and editorial score.
  • Dynamic selection The block is hydrated from the current decision pack so the recommendations are not static.

Best Gaming TV

This section separates Gaming TV within Televisions using the current category data, visible reviews and price context so the recommendation fits a concrete use case instead of mixing every model together.

  • Real fit Prioritize models classified for this use case, then compare price, availability and editorial score.
  • Dynamic selection The block is hydrated from the current decision pack so the recommendations are not static.

Televisions below their usual price

We monitor the market continuously and found these Televisions models below their usual price.

Updated: 2026-07-08 01:00 UTC

Best deals right now

What to look for when choosing a television

The right TV depends more on where and how you watch than on headline specs. For most buyers, the real split is between dark-room film watching, fast console gaming, bright-room family viewing and simple budget use.

Use case Prioritise Avoid paying more for
Film First OLED or strong local dimming, Deep Blacks, Convincing HDR Voice Features And AI Claims
Console Gaming 120Hz Panel, HDMI 2.1, VRR And Low Input Lag Cinema-Led Extras You Won’t Use
Sports And Daytime TV High Brightness, Good Motion Handling, Wide Viewing Angles Perfect Black Levels
Family Living Room Fast Smart Platform, Wide Seating Performance, Enough HDMI Ports Ultra-Premium Picture Specs
Budget Secondary Room Screen Size, Reliable Apps, Simple Everyday Use HDR Marketing On Basic 60Hz Sets

Film First

Prioritise OLED or strong local dimming, Deep Blacks, Convincing HDR
Avoid paying more for Voice Features And AI Claims

Console Gaming

Prioritise 120Hz Panel, HDMI 2.1, VRR And Low Input Lag
Avoid paying more for Cinema-Led Extras You Won’t Use

Sports And Daytime TV

Prioritise High Brightness, Good Motion Handling, Wide Viewing Angles
Avoid paying more for Perfect Black Levels

Family Living Room

Prioritise Fast Smart Platform, Wide Seating Performance, Enough HDMI Ports
Avoid paying more for Ultra-Premium Picture Specs

Budget Secondary Room

Prioritise Screen Size, Reliable Apps, Simple Everyday Use
Avoid paying more for HDR Marketing On Basic 60Hz Sets
Decision Matrix

What actually matters most

Panel Type

High

It matters most if you care about black levels, contrast and whether the TV suits a dark cinema-style room or a bright living room.

Brightness

High

It matters in sunlit rooms, daytime sport and HDR viewing, where a dim screen quickly looks flat and washed out.

Refresh Rate

High · Gaming Only

It really matters for consoles and fast games, but for casual streaming and broadcast TV a 60Hz set is often enough.

HDMI 2.1

High · Gaming Only

It matters if you want 4K at high refresh rates, VRR and the best experience from newer consoles.

Viewing Angles

Medium/High

It matters in wide family seating layouts, where some panels lose colour and contrast badly from the side.

Smart OS

Medium/High

It matters if you use built-in apps every day, because a slow or cluttered interface becomes annoying very quickly.

Sound Quality

Medium

It matters if you are not adding a soundbar, as many slim TVs sound thin even when the picture is strong.

HDMI Count

Medium

It matters when you plan to connect a console, soundbar and set-top box at the same time without constant cable swapping.

Common Mistakes

What buyers often get wrong

Buying For HDR Without Checking Brightness

A TV can support HDR formats on paper and still look underwhelming if highlights are too dim and contrast is weak.

Assuming Every HDMI 2.1 Claim Means Gaming Ready

Some TVs still use 60Hz panels, so you do not get the smooth high-refresh console experience the marketing suggests.

Ignoring Viewing Angles In Family Rooms

A set that looks good head-on can lose colour and contrast badly when people watch from the sides.

Overpaying For Premium Panels In Bright Rooms

If the room is always bright, stronger brightness and reflection handling may matter more than the deepest possible blacks.

Relying On Built-In Speakers Blindly

Many TVs are thin first and loud second, so dialogue and impact can disappoint unless the audio is genuinely decent.

Treating Smart Features As A Bonus

If the interface is slow or missing key apps, everyday use becomes frustrating even when the picture quality is fine.

How we review this category

A television should be judged by how it fits movie watching, console gaming, sports and live events, and daily smart TV usability. The review must separate premium OLED and QLED panels, gaming-focused screens with high refresh rates, and budget-friendly smart displays without pretending every TV needs high-end specifications to offer great value.

In Televisions, the verdict shifts most around Picture quality, Gaming readiness, Smart features and sound and Design and connectivity.

What we review in this category

For TVs we review documented evidence around panel quality, HDR and motion, gaming features, smart platform, sound, connectivity, price, and user feedback when useful.

Picture quality

Weight 38%. The core of any TV is its panel performance, where contrast ratios, black levels, peak brightness, and HDR rendering determine the overall viewing enjoyment.

See technical evidence we review

Technical measures

  • Panel type, resolution, native refresh rate, brightness/HDR claims, local dimming, Mini LED, OLED/QLED, and image-processing platform.
  • HDR formats, contrast technology, viewing angle, and room-brightness fit when documented.

Reading context

  • Picture quality is read by use: cinema, bright living room, sports, streaming, or premium OLED/QLED route.
  • Panel technology and local dimming matter more than generic 4K wording.

Common cautions

  • 4K alone is basic evidence, not premium picture quality.
  • HDR claims without brightness, panel, or dimming context are treated carefully.

Gaming readiness

Weight 22%. Modern console gaming requires low input lag, VRR, ALLM, and high refresh rates to deliver smooth, tear-free gameplay without delays.

See technical evidence we review

Technical measures

  • Native 120/144 Hz, HDMI 2.1 bandwidth, VRR, ALLM, input-lag evidence, Game Mode, and console/PC compatibility.
  • Number of usable high-bandwidth HDMI ports when documented.

Reading context

  • Gaming readiness is read as a package, not just refresh rate.
  • A strong gaming TV should pair high refresh with HDMI 2.1 and VRR/ALLM-style evidence.

Common cautions

  • High refresh alone does not justify a top gaming reading.
  • 60 Hz panels or unclear HDMI details limit gaming claims.

Smart features and sound

Weight 20%. A TV serves as the entertainment hub, so the speed of its OS, app availability, and built-in speakers define how convenient it is to use daily.

See technical evidence we review

Technical measures

  • Smart OS, app ecosystem, processor/interface clues, audio power, speaker layout, eARC, Dolby Atmos/DTS, and voice control.
  • Streaming platform maturity and soundbar integration when stated.

Reading context

  • Smart features are read for daily use: apps, updates, responsiveness, voice, casting, and audio setup.
  • Built-in sound is interpreted against screen size and likely room use.

Common cautions

  • Generic smart TV wording is weak without platform evidence.
  • Atmos/eARC labels need port or audio-format context to carry weight.

Design and connectivity

Weight 20%. Mounting, viewing angles, bezel thickness, and port accessibility affect how the TV integrates into a room and connects to external devices.

See technical evidence we review

Technical measures

  • Screen size, stand/wall-mount format, HDMI/USB count, tuner/connectivity, Wi-Fi/Bluetooth, depth, weight, and cable-management clues.
  • Room fit, viewing distance, and installation constraints.

Reading context

  • Design and connectivity decide whether the TV fits the furniture, wall, console, soundbar, and room size.
  • A large TV can be strong value while still needing setup caution.

Common cautions

  • Port counts without HDMI version are incomplete evidence.
  • Very large sizes require stand, weight, and room-fit context.

Editorial judgement still leaves room for incomplete documentation, weak claims, or practical friction that a spec table does not fully capture.

Which buyer routes change the verdict

We do not score every option through one fixed lens: Premium OLED and QLED TVs, Gaming-focused displays, Mid-range lifestyle TVs and Budget entry screens change the priorities, so a strong recommendation for one route can be the wrong fit for another.

Signals that separate strong picks from weak ones

We pay close attention to the visible signals that usually decide the shortlist: Screen size, Panel type, Resolution and Refresh rate.

  • Picture quality: The core of any TV is its panel performance, where contrast ratios, black levels, peak brightness, and HDR rendering determine the overall viewing enjoyment.. panel type, contrast and black levels, peak brightness and hdr format support
  • Gaming readiness: Modern console gaming requires low input lag, VRR, ALLM, and high refresh rates to deliver smooth, tear-free gameplay without delays.. refresh rate, input lag, hdmi 2.1 support and vrr and allm
  • Smart features and sound: A TV serves as the entertainment hub, so the speed of its OS, app availability, and built-in speakers define how convenient it is to use daily.. smart platform, app ecosystem, processor speed and speaker quality
  • Design and connectivity: Mounting, viewing angles, bezel thickness, and port accessibility affect how the TV integrates into a room and connects to external devices.. hdmi ports count, viewing angles, stand and thickness and buyer fit
  • Poor peak brightness or low contrast in TVs marketed as premium HDR displays.

The usage scenes we keep in view

We read this category through practical usage scenes such as Dark room home cinema and HDR movie watching, Fast-paced console gaming and high refresh gameplay and Bright room daytime watching and wide angle family use. That context shift stops unlike products from being treated as if they solved the same problem.

How to use this page

Use the category listing to narrow the field, then open the reviews that match your route, budget, and setup constraints. A good shortlist here is not the one with the most headline specs, but the one whose trade-offs fit the way the product will actually be used.

Televisions FAQs

What type of television is best for a dark room?

For a dark room, OLED is usually the strongest choice because it delivers the deepest blacks and the best contrast. High-end QLED or Mini-LED sets can also work well if they have effective local dimming and strong HDR brightness, but basic LED models usually look less convincing in cinema-style viewing.

Do I need a 120Hz TV for console gaming?

You only need 120Hz if you want smoother motion and lower-latency gaming on a console or PC that supports it. For casual play, a good 60Hz TV can still be fine, but it will not deliver the same responsiveness, VRR benefits, or motion clarity as a true gaming-focused display.

Is HDMI 2.1 necessary on a new TV?

HDMI 2.1 matters most if you plan to use next-gen consoles, 4K gaming at higher frame rates, VRR, or ALLM. If the TV is mainly for streaming, live TV, and casual viewing, HDMI 2.0 ports are often sufficient, provided the rest of the picture quality is strong enough for your room.

Which panel type is best for a bright living room?

QLED and Mini-LED TVs are often better in bright rooms because they usually offer higher peak brightness and hold up more effectively against daylight. OLED can still look excellent, but it is generally more suited to controlled lighting where its contrast advantage is easier to appreciate.

What should I check before buying a smart TV?

Check whether the smart platform is fast, easy to navigate, and supports the streaming apps you actually use. A slow or cluttered operating system can make a good TV frustrating in daily use, even if the panel quality is strong.

When should I avoid a budget TV?

Avoid a budget TV if you expect premium HDR impact, wide viewing angles, or serious gaming features. Many entry-level models are best for simple everyday viewing in a secondary room, but they may have weaker brightness, basic sound, and limited motion performance.