Review Televisions LG

LG 55UA73006LA Televisions - Review and opinions

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7.5 Overall

Score

Picture quality 7.3/10
Gaming readiness 5.9/10
Smart features and sound 7.8/10
Design and connectivity 7.7/10
Customer reviews 8.3/10

Price

£200-£400 Price
Top 10 price 46% below average

Is it worth it?

If you want a 55-inch living-room TV that keeps the price sensible while still giving you 4K, HDR, webOS 25 and LG’s AI-assisted interface, this model makes immediate sense. It suits buyers who want an easy everyday screen for streaming, family viewing and the odd gaming session, but it is less convincing if you are chasing deep-black cinema performance or a faster 120Hz gaming panel.

The appeal here is straightforward value rather than premium spectacle. You get a 55-inch 4K set with ALLM, Game Optimiser and a modern smart platform for a budget-friendly outlay, so it is a sensible route for casual households and bedroom or second-room use. The trade-off is that this is still a 60Hz TV, so anyone prioritising next-gen console smoothness or top-tier HDR impact should look higher up the range.

Screen size 55-Inch
Panel type LED
Resolution 4K Ultra HD
Refresh rate 60Hz
Smart OS webOS 25
Features HDR, FILMMAKER mode, Game Optimiser & ALLM

Picture that works for normal viewing

The 55-inch 4K panel, HDR10 Pro and 4K Super Upscaling are aimed at making everyday streaming and broadcast content look clean rather than fussy. The immediate benefit is that mixed-quality sources still hold together well, so you are not punished every time the source is not native 4K.

The caveat is that this is a value-led LED screen, so the picture is about clarity and consistency more than premium contrast drama. That matters most in darker rooms, where buyers chasing deep blacks will notice the ceiling sooner than they would on a higher-end OLED or mini-LED set.

Gaming features without the full next-gen price

Game Optimiser and ALLM are the useful part of the gaming story here because they reduce setup friction and make console use feel more direct. For casual players, that is enough to make the TV feel ready for the living room rather than merely compatible with it.

The 60Hz refresh rate keeps expectations grounded. It is a good fit for relaxed gaming, sports and general entertainment, but it is not the route for buyers who want a 120Hz panel for faster motion and a more future-proof console setup.

webOS 25 keeps daily use simple

webOS 25, AI Concierge, AI Search and the AI Magic Remote make the TV easier to live with when it is used every day by more than one person. That matters because a family TV gets judged on how quickly people can get from standby to something watchable without argument.

The upside is convenience and app access. The downside is that the smart layer is doing a lot of work, so the experience depends on whether you value quick access and voice helpers more than a stripped-back remote and a more traditional interface.

Sound that can stand on its own

The built-in speakers, AI Clear Sound and Dynamic Sound Booster are a practical strength for smaller rooms and casual viewing. They help the set feel less dependent on immediate soundbar ownership, which is useful if you want a simple install first and upgrades later.

That said, the sound story is still best read as competent rather than cinematic. For films, sport and gaming in a larger room, the TV is good enough to start with, but not the kind of set that removes the desire for external audio.

Use evaluation

In a typical lounge setup, the first thing that matters is whether a 55-inch 4K screen feels sharp enough from sofa distance, and this one does. The combination of 4K Ultra HD and LG’s 4K Super Upscaling gives it the right sort of everyday clarity for streaming, live TV and discs, while the 55-inch size keeps the image large enough for a main room without tipping into overkill. That balance makes it easy to place as an all-rounder, not a statement cinema screen. For movie nights, the stronger case is convenience and polish rather than outright premium contrast. FILMMAKER mode and HDR give it the right tools for films and box sets, and the Alpha 7 AI Processor Gen8 is there to keep the picture clean and responsive through upscaling and processing. The limitation is the same one that defines most value-led LED sets: if your priority is truly deep blacks in a dark room, this is a sensible TV, not a reference-level one. Gaming and daily navigation are where the trade-off becomes clearest. ALLM and Game Optimiser are useful because they cut out faff when a console wakes up and they keep the TV in a gaming-friendly mode without much effort. But the 60Hz ceiling keeps it in the casual-gaming lane rather than the fast-refresh lane, so it suits people who want smoother setup and decent responsiveness more than competitive-level motion handling.

The smart side looks well judged for a family set. webOS 25, AI Concierge and the built-in streaming access mean it is set up for quick switching between apps, channels and catch-up services without turning the TV into a chore. The AI button on the remote, voice search and chatbot features are there to reduce menu wandering, which matters more on a living-room TV than on a spec sheet. The practical win is speed of use; the practical limit is that the remote and interface still need to earn their keep over time, especially if you want something more premium-feeling than a basic smart-TV controller.

Sound is one of the more reassuring parts of the package. The built-in speakers get consistent praise in the customer feedback, and the product’s AI sound features, Clear Sound and Dynamic Sound Booster give it a fuller everyday profile than you often get from an entry-level set. That makes it a decent standalone option for bedrooms or smaller rooms, even if a proper soundbar still makes sense for bigger movie sessions. The result is a TV that covers the basics well enough to stand alone, but leaves room for upgrades if you care about a more enveloping home-cinema setup.

Pros

  • Strong 4K clarity for everyday streaming and discs.
  • webOS 25 with AI Concierge and AI Magic Remote makes daily use easy.
  • ALLM and Game Optimiser add useful gaming convenience.
  • Built-in speakers and AI sound tools make it usable without a soundbar at first.

Cons

  • 60Hz refresh rate keeps it out of the true high-refresh gaming class.
  • LED picture quality is practical rather than premium in dark rooms.
  • The remote and interface are a bit basic compared with more polished higher-end sets.

Community

User reviews

The pattern is clear enough for a sensible buy/no-buy call: people like the sharp picture, easy setup and better-than-expected sound, while the main complaints sit around the basic remote, occasional software friction and the fact that blacks are not in premium territory. In other words, it wins when the buyer wants a straightforward, good-value family TV and loses some appeal once picture purists or serious gamers start asking for more.

Keith G

Great tv. Fairly easy to work out. Awesome definition especially for gaming and blu-ray.

Comparison

Attribute LG 55UA73006LA Current LG 50UA73006LA TCL 50T6C-UK Hisense 50E78QTUK
Price £274.39 £239.04 £279.00 £284.00
Screen size 55-Inch 50 Inches 50 Inches 50 Inches
Resolution 4K Ultra HD 4K 4K 4K
Panel type LED - QLED QLED
Refresh rate 60Hz 60 Hz 60 Hz 60 Hz
Smart OS webOS 25 webOS 25 Platform Fire TV -
Editorial score 7.5/10 7.6/10 7.6/10 7.3/10

Against the LG 50UA73006LA, this 55-inch version is the better pick if you want a larger living-room image and do not mind staying in the same general value-led lane. The smaller model makes more sense for tighter spaces, but this one gives you more scale for films, sport and family viewing without changing the core proposition.

Compared with the TCL 50T6C-UK or Hisense 50E78QTUK, the LG leans more on its smart-TV experience and familiar webOS route than on any claim of being a gaming-first screen. Those rivals sit in the same general 4K, 60Hz value bracket, so the decision comes down to which interface and everyday feel you prefer rather than chasing a dramatic spec gap.

If you are shopping against a 120Hz gaming TV or a premium OLED/QLED set, this LG is the cheaper and calmer choice. Pick the higher-tier route if black level, HDR impact or fast-motion gaming are the priority; pick this one if you want a sensible all-rounder for streaming, casual console use and ordinary family viewing.

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Is the LG 55UA73006LA TV worth it?

If you want a good-value 55-inch TV that is easy to set up, simple to use and strong enough for streaming, casual gaming and everyday family viewing, this is a very sensible buy. The current offer looks especially attractive because the feature set is broad for the money, and the smart platform plus built-in sound make it usable straight away without extra kit. Skip it if your priority is deep-black movie performance or a 120Hz gaming panel, because that is where the limits show up most clearly. For buyers who care more about price, convenience and a balanced living-room experience than premium display ambition, this LG lands in the right place.

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FAQ

Is this a good TV for a bedroom or second room?

Yes, it fits that role well because the 55-inch 4K screen, built-in speakers and simple webOS setup make it easy to live with.

Is it the right choice for serious console gaming?

It works well for casual gaming thanks to Game Optimiser and ALLM, but the 60Hz panel keeps it below the level of a true high-refresh gaming TV.

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.