Review Televisions Hisense

Hisense 55A7QTUK Televisions - Review and opinions

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7.6 Overall

Score

Picture quality 8.7/10
Gaming readiness 6.0/10
Smart features and sound 6.8/10
Design and connectivity 7.9/10
Customer reviews 7.6/10

Screen size

55 in Screen size
Top 10 for screen size

Is it worth it?

If you want a 55-inch living-room TV that leans on QLED colour, built-in Freely support and straightforward everyday streaming rather than premium gaming tricks, the Hisense 55A7QTUK lands in a sensible price lane. Its appeal is clear for film, sport and general family viewing, but the trade-off is just as clear too: this is a 60 Hz set, so it is not the route for buyers chasing high-refresh console play or the most cinematic black-level performance.

I would place it with buyers who want a well-equipped, easy-to-live-with 4K TV for mixed household use and are happy to accept a more mainstream panel and sound setup. If your priority is fast gaming, deeper HDR impact or a more obviously premium home-cinema screen, there are sharper alternatives; if you mainly want a balanced 55-inch set with strong colour and simple day-to-day usability, this one makes a convincing case.

Screen size 55 Inches
Panel type QLED
Resolution 4K
Refresh rate 60 Hz
Connectivity Wi‑Fi
Product dimensions 28.8D x 122.6W x 77.3H centimetres

QLED colour and 4K detail

The 55-inch panel combines QLED technology with 4K resolution, which is the combination that gives this TV its clearest day-to-day strength. In practical use that matters most with streaming, sport and bright content, where colour richness and image clarity carry the viewing experience.

It is a sensible route for a family room because the picture aims for vivid, easy appeal rather than ultra-critical reference performance. The trade-off is that buyers chasing the darkest blacks and the most dramatic HDR punch will find more expensive premium panels more persuasive.

Direct-lit panel layout

The direct-lit full-array design is the part of the set that supports more even-looking backlighting across the screen. That is useful when you are watching in a normal living room and want a picture that feels stable rather than patchy.

It also helps explain why this model fits the middle of the market so neatly. You get a more substantial panel approach than a bare entry-level screen, but not the complexity or premium ambition of the top-tier mini-LED and OLED routes.

Built-in subwoofer and Dolby Atmos

The audio package is better judged as a convenience win than a home-cinema replacement. A built-in subwoofer gives the sound more body, while Dolby Atmos support adds a more expansive feel to films and shows.

For a buyer setting up a TV in a spare room or family lounge, that means the set is more usable on day one without immediately needing extra speakers. The limitation is straightforward: if you want genuinely immersive, large-room sound, this is still a TV that benefits from a soundbar.

Use evaluation

Put this in a typical lounge and the first thing that matters is how much screen you are getting for the money. At 55 inches and 4K, the picture has enough density for normal sofa distance viewing without looking coarse, and the QLED layer is the part that gives the set its most obvious appeal in bright, colourful content. That makes it a comfortable fit for mixed evening TV, streaming and family viewing, but it does not pretend to be a high-end cinema panel with the deepest blacks in the room.

For sport, live TV and general channel surfing, the 60 Hz refresh rate keeps expectations in the right place. It is fine for everyday motion, but it does not carry the premium motion headroom that serious console players look for, and there is no sign of the HDMI 2.1 and high-refresh route that would push it into gaming-first territory. The practical result is simple: this is a good main TV for watching, not the screen you buy to chase the smoothest next-gen gaming experience.

The sound side is more encouraging than many budget-leaning sets, because the built-in subwoofer and Dolby Atmos support give the TV more weight than a barebones speaker package. In a normal lounge setup that means voices and effects should feel fuller straight out of the box, which helps if you do not want to add a soundbar immediately. The limit is that this still sits in the everyday TV bracket, so buyers who care about room-filling cinema sound will still want external audio sooner rather than later.

Pros

  • Strong 55-inch 4K QLED picture for everyday viewing.
  • Built-in subwoofer gives the sound more weight than a basic TV speaker setup.
  • Freely and mainstream streaming support make it convenient for mixed household use.
  • Easy setup and a slim frame suit a simple living-room install.

Cons

  • It is only a 60 Hz panel, so it is not the right choice for high-refresh gaming.
  • Freely behaviour can be awkward for some households, which matters if you want live TV to feel completely seamless.
  • The built-in sound is better than basic, but still not a substitute for a proper soundbar in a larger room.

Community

User reviews

The pattern is consistent: people are won over by the picture, the value and the easy setup, while the main frustration sits around Freely behaviour and the fact that the sound, though decent, is not the final word for a serious cinema room. The practical lesson is that this is strongest as a well-priced everyday TV with broad app and streaming appeal, not as a perfectionist’s display.

Linda Cullen

After my old 55" LG packed up, I needed a replacement quickly and this was easy to assemble and set up.

Comparison

Attribute Hisense 55A7QTUK Current Hisense 55E78QTUK TCL 50T6C-UK Hisense 50E78QTUK
Price £349.00 £329.00 £329.00 £299.00
Screen size 55 Inches 55 Inches 50 Inches 50 Inches
Resolution 4K 4K 4K 4K
Panel type QLED QLED QLED QLED
Refresh rate 60 Hz 60 Hz 60 Hz 60 Hz
Connectivity Wi‑Fi Wi-Fi Bluetooth Wi-Fi
Product dimensions 28.8D x 122.6W x 77.3H centimetres 29.8D x 123.4W x 75.1H centimetres - -
Editorial score 7.6/10 7.7/10 7.6/10 7.3/10

Against the Hisense 55E78QTUK, this model sits in a very similar 55-inch, 4K, QLED, 60 Hz lane, so the choice is less about chasing a different class of panel and more about which exact package and price make sense on the day. If you want a straightforward all-rounder with the same broad living-room brief, the 55A7QTUK is the cleaner read; if you are comparing closely within Hisense’s own range, the main question is value rather than a dramatic shift in performance.

Compared with the TCL 50T6C-UK, the Hisense gives you a larger 55-inch canvas and the same general QLED 4K, 60 Hz territory, which makes it the more natural pick if screen size matters most in a family room. Against the Samsung U7000F, the Hisense has the more colourful QLED route rather than a basic LED panel, so it is the better match for buyers who want richer image presentation without stepping into a much pricier premium tier.

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Is the Hisense 55A7QTUK TV worth it?

The Hisense 55A7QTUK makes most sense as a value-led 55-inch living-room TV for buyers who want strong colour, simple setup and decent built-in sound without paying for premium gaming or cinema hardware. If you are choosing for streaming, general TV and mixed household use, it is an easy model to like, and the current offer is worth checking because the package lands in a very competitive part of the market. If your priority is high-refresh gaming, top-tier HDR drama or the most immersive sound straight from the panel, this is the point where the compromises matter. The 60 Hz refresh rate and everyday speaker approach keep it out of the enthusiast lane, so buyers with those priorities should move to a more specialised alternative.

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FAQ

Is this a good TV for gaming?

It is fine for casual console use, but the 60 Hz panel means it is not the right pick for buyers who want a gaming-first screen.

Does it work well as a main family TV?

Yes, the 55-inch size, QLED picture, Freely support and built-in subwoofer make it a practical everyday lounge set.

Editorial team

DigitalCritic editorial team

The DigitalCritic editorial team reviews product specs, prices, availability, visible customer feedback, and buying signals to keep reviews useful and up to date.