Samsung U7000F Televisions - Review and opinions

Samsung U7000F
Price in usual range
See on Amazon
Review updated on
7.0 Overall

Score

Picture quality 6.6/10
Gaming readiness 5.4/10
Smart features and sound 7.8/10
Design and connectivity 7.4/10
Customer reviews 7.8/10

User rating

7.8/10 Rating
Above 50% of products +500 ratings

Smart features and sound

7.8/10 Score

Price

219 GBP Price
Top 3 price 54% below average

Design and connectivity

7.4/10 Score

Is it worth it?

If you want a 43-inch 4K living-room TV that keeps the price sensible while still giving you Samsung’s Tizen smart platform, this U7000F lands in a useful middle lane. The clear attraction is the mix of Crystal Processor 4K, 4K Upscaling and Samsung TV Plus in a compact set that suits everyday streaming and casual family viewing. The trade-off is just as clear: this is a 50 Hz LED TV, so it is built for broad everyday use rather than for anyone chasing high-end cinema contrast or serious next-gen gaming features.

I would point this towards buyers who want a straightforward bedroom or smaller lounge television with familiar Samsung software, tidy styling and easy access to streaming. It is a poor fit if your shortlist is driven by deep blacks, high refresh gaming or premium sound, because the confirmed spec set stays firmly in mainstream territory. For the money, the appeal is convenience and balance rather than headline-grabbing picture hardware.

Screen size 43 Inches
Panel type LED
Resolution 4K
Refresh rate 50 Hz
Smart OS Tizen
Connectivity HDMI

Picture for everyday rooms

The 4K LED panel, Crystal Processor 4K and 4K Upscaling are aimed at making standard streaming and broadcast material look cleaner on a 43-inch screen.

That matters because this is the part of the TV that will define most evenings, not the marketing language. It gives you a sensible upgrade path from older Full HD sets, but it does not turn the model into a premium cinema screen.

Smart TV convenience

Tizen and Samsung TV Plus make the set more useful as a daily hub than as a simple display.

That is important for households that want quick access to apps and free channels without adding another box. The trade-off is that the value comes from familiarity and simplicity, not from a high-end smart platform built for power users.

Sound and styling

Object Tracking Sound Lite and the MetalStream design give the TV a tidier, more polished feel than the most basic budget sets.

That helps in a living room where the set has to look presentable from the side and sound a little more animated than a flat, one-note panel. The caveat is that this remains an entry-to-mid-range sound setup, so a soundbar is still the sensible next step for fuller film or sport audio.

Use evaluation

In a smaller lounge or bedroom, the 43-inch size keeps this TV in the easy-to-place zone, and the 95.8 cm width with a 16:9 4K panel makes it a neat fit for everyday streaming at normal viewing distances. That combination matters because it gives you the expected sharpness for films and box sets without asking for a huge wall or a deep cabinet. The limit is motion ambition: at 50 Hz, this is not the set for buyers who want a fast-feeling gaming screen or a sports-first display.

For day-to-day TV use, Tizen is the part that does most of the heavy lifting. Samsung TV Plus and the usual streaming-app route make it a practical hub for someone who wants to switch on and get watching without a lot of faff. The upside is convenience, especially in a family room where different people want different apps. The downside is that this is still a mainstream smart TV, so the value sits in ease and access rather than in a premium, lightning-fast interface or a feature-rich gaming dashboard.

Sound and build both keep expectations grounded. Object Tracking Sound Lite gives the set a more active audio story than a barebones panel, but the real-world benefit here is mainly clearer on-screen action rather than room-filling depth. The MetalStream design and smooth back help it look tidy from the side and when wall-mounted, which suits a room where the TV is visible even when switched off. The practical rule is simple: if you want a neat, modern everyday TV with sensible styling, it fits well; if you want cinema-grade sound or a high-contrast dark-room picture, this is not the route to take.

Pros

  • 43-inch size suits smaller rooms and everyday viewing.
  • Tizen and Samsung TV Plus make streaming access straightforward.
  • MetalStream design gives the set a neat, modern look.

Cons

  • 50 Hz refresh rate limits appeal for fast gaming and motion-heavy sport.
  • Built-in sound is useful but not a substitute for a soundbar.
  • Some owners report setup friction or panel issues, which makes this a weaker pick for buyers who want a completely smooth first-hour experience.

Community

User reviews

The pattern here is easy to read: buyers who hit setup friction, awkward source switching or panel damage are much less forgiving than those who mainly want a simple Samsung TV at a fair price. The practical lesson is that this model suits people who value familiar smart-TV convenience and a tidy everyday picture, but it is less convincing for anyone who needs a trouble-free premium experience straight out of the box.

Bluesboy

Total faff to set up, with QR codes and several failed attempts needed.

Mr

I was disappointed to see a blue line on the screen.

Anthony

I chose Samsung again after years of good experience, but this one did not settle into the easy replacement I expected.

Sonia

I could not get the Wi‑Fi password entered properly and the TV kept dropping back to the home screen.

Comparison

Attribute Samsung U7000F Current Samsung Q7FA Hisense 43E78QTUK TCL 50T6C-UK
Price £219.00 £227.05 £259.00 £279.00
Screen size 43 Inches 43 Inches 43 Inches 50 Inches
Resolution 4K 4K 4K 4K
Panel type LED QLED QLED QLED
Refresh rate 50 Hz 120 60 Hz 60 Hz
Connectivity HDMI - - Bluetooth
Smart OS Tizen Tizen - Fire TV
Editorial score 7.0/10 7.9/10 7.2/10 7.4/10

Against the LG Alpha 7 Processor 4K Gen8 route, this Samsung makes more sense if you prefer the Tizen ecosystem and Samsung’s own TV Plus approach, while the LG route is the more natural pick if you are comparing everyday 43-inch 4K sets on general panel comfort and want a different brand’s smart-TV feel. Both sit in the same broad living-room lane, but the Samsung’s case is convenience and brand familiarity rather than a leap in display ambition.

Compared with the Samsung Q7FA, this U7000F is the more restrained choice. The Q7FA brings QLED and a 120 Hz panel, so it is the better fit for buyers who care about gaming smoothness and richer picture hardware. This U7000F is the simpler, cheaper-feeling route for people who mainly want a standard 43-inch TV for streaming, news and family use without paying for gaming-first extras.

The Hisense 43A6QTUK is the closest value-style alternative if you are shopping by size and basic 4K credentials. That makes the decision one of software and brand preference as much as panel class: choose the Samsung if Tizen, Samsung TV Plus and the cleaner design matter more, and choose the Hisense route if you are simply chasing a no-frills 43-inch 4K set at the sharpest value point.

Compare with Compare this model This product stays fixed; add a recommended alternative or search another model in the category.

Compare with

Add a second model to activate the direct comparison.

Is the Samsung U7000F TV worth it?

This is a sensible 43-inch Samsung for buyers who want an easy everyday TV rather than a statement display. The best case is a smaller living room, bedroom or family space where Tizen, 4K upscaling and the tidy MetalStream design matter more than premium contrast or gaming speed. If you are checking the current offer, the value question is whether you want a familiar smart-TV experience at a mainstream level or whether you would rather pay for a more ambitious panel elsewhere.

Skip it if your shortlist is built around dark-room cinema, fast console gaming or stronger built-in sound. The 50 Hz LED panel, modest audio setup and the reports of setup or screen issues make it a weaker fit for buyers who want the most polished first impression. For everyone else, it is a practical, recognisable Samsung route that does the everyday jobs well enough without pretending to be high-end.

See the best price on Amazon Check for today's deals. Free delivery with Prime.

FAQ

Is this a good TV for gaming?

It is fine for casual play, but the 50 Hz refresh rate keeps it out of the gaming-first bracket.

Does it need extra kit for everyday streaming?

No, Tizen and Samsung TV Plus give it a ready-made smart-TV route for apps and free content.

Alexandre Lefèvre

About the author

Alexandre Lefèvre

Tech enthusiast focused on testing and reviewing the latest devices. I share honest insights to help you choose the right products with confidence.