The best cheap QLED TVs for replacing your old dull TV on a budget
Overview
Table of Contents
43" Onn 100012584 4K LED Smart Roku TV — $178.00 (List Price $248.00)
75" TCL QM6K 4K QD-Mini LED Google TV (2025 Model) — $697.99 (List Price $999.99)
75" Onn 100044717 4K LED Smart Roku TV — $428.00 (List Price $448.00)
65" LG C4 Series 4K 120Hz OLED Evo Smart TV (2024 Model) — $1,296.99 (List Price $2699.99)
55" Hisense CanvasTV Series 4K QLED Smart TV (2024 Model) — $649.99 (List Price $999.99)
77" LG C5 Series OLED Evo AI 4K Smart TV (2025 Model) — $1,826.99 (List Price $3696.99)
85" Samsung Neo QLED QN90F 4K Mini LED Smart TV (2025 Model) — $2,297.99 (List Price $3797.99)
Streaming services have become a strong enough cultural staple that we've built the monthly fees into our bills alongside rent and electricity. But if you haven't bought a new TV in a while, your screen probably isn't doing that precious content justice.
QLED TVs offer an improvement in the brightness and color department that you'll quickly notice the first time you re-watch Encanto or The Grand Budapest Hotel. Their skyrocketing prevalence in the TV market has brought the cost of the technology down significantly, making a QLED TV an actually-affordable purchase if you want to cushion your streaming service spending.
You have several options in several sizes ranging from $500 to $1,000. Before we get into what makes them a bang for your buck, it's kind of helpful to understand QLED actually even means in the first place.
Which is better: QLED and OLED?
QLED can be thought of as an LED glow up while OLED is a completely separate method of lighting. The tech you'll like the best depends on the type of content and lighting of the room in which you'll be using the TV the most.
Another frequently-asked question, whether 4K or QLED is better, isn't a question at all. The two aren't mutually exclusive — in fact, nearly every QLED TV is 4K (with some 8K options sprinkled in, but that's beside the point). While any rendition of -LED refers to the light source behind the TV, 4K refers to the screen's resolution, or how many pixels are squeezed across the screen horizontally (4,000-ish).
Still iffy about -LED terminology? Let's break it down.
LED is the standard in most TVs. Despite their general affordability across the board, one LED TV can beat another out by incorporating full-array local dimming: a collection of lighting zones that adjust independently across the entire screen. Without those crucial in-between zones, the middle of the screen of many cheaper LED TVs can get a little hazy, falling victim to edge-lit dimming that just can't extend light across with the same oomph.
QLED is a luminous spin on traditional LED (light-emitting diode), which has been the baseline backlight system in most budget TVs for years now. The "Q" refers to the an extra layer of quantum dots sandwiched between the standard LED panel and the screen to make a wider range of colors pop off the screen with enhanced brightness. The juicier picture is ideal for viewing or gaming in bright rooms and for honing in on content with small details, like sports.
Not every brand refers to their quantum dot TVs as QLED. While Samsung and TCL refer to QLED as QLED, brands like LG, Sony and Hisense use similar technology marketed under different names (QNED, Triluminos Pro, and ULED, respectively).
Mini LEDs have also entered the chat in recent years. These are about half the size of regular LEDs, allow manufacturers to pack more LEDs into the same size panel, allowing for more local dimming zones and more precise tweaking of brightness in each area.
OLED uses a whole different score sheet despite that negligible difference in the title letters itself. Unlike LED and QLED, OLED doesn't require an external backlight. That's because the pixels — the organic light-emitting diodes that represent the "O" in OLED — emit their own light instead. This comes in handy during dark scenes, when the TV screen needs to get as dark as possible to differentiate shadowy shades from each other. While backlit QLED pixels' forced dimming can cause a kind of halo effect around bright objects, OLED pixels can turn off completely. This makes OLED the gold standard for the stark contrast and black uniformity needed for viewing or gaming in dark rooms.
Because OLED technology is in a league of its own, OLED is also in a price range of its own, and is the least likely type of TV to have a budget-friendly counterpart.
If you've decided that QLED is the way you want to go, here are your best options for upgrading to QLED on a budget:
TCL 6-Series
Best for gaming
The Good & The Bad
- Affordable mini LED panel and local dimming
- 120Hz refresh rate
- FreeSync Premium Pro
- Supports multiple HDR formats
- 55-inch often on sale for under $600
- No options smaller than 55 inches
- Disappointing side viewing angles
Why We Like It
Gamers who heavily prioritize tear-free graphics can probably justify spending a little more on TCL's 6-Series than on the company's own 5-Series QLED or other competitors in this list. It's one of the only budget QLEDs (with two sizes under $1,000) to offer a 120Hz refresh rate over the typical 60Hz and two HDMI 2.1 ports. It also supports both VRR and FreeSync Premium Pro.
This quantum dot layer and mini LED combo make 360 local dimming zones possible, which tweak brightness enough to take advantage of the TV's support for Dolby Vision and HDR10+. The screen's handle on glare is also better than most cheaper QLEDs.
Details
Amazon Omni QLED
Best Fire TV
The Good & The Bad
- Decent brightness and reflection handling
- Stellar black uniformity
- Like a giant Alexa device
- Always-on Ambient Experience displays art or photos
- Dedicated gaming picture mode and VRR support
- Crappy viewing angles
- Gaming still limited to 60Hz
- Only two sizes
Why We Like It
When Amazon finally moved into the TV space with a self-branded line, it went extra hard on the QLED version of its flagship Omni series. Several local dimming zones help it get bright enough for daytime use and nail black levels stark enough for nighttime use. A dedicated gaming mode and VRR support amplify the appeal for gamers, while support for both Dolby Vision and HDR10+ up its value for cinephiles.
Possibly the most unique thing Amazon thought of is Ambient Experience: an always-on display feature transforms the screen into a canvas to display artwork, photos, or oversized Alexa widgets when the TV's not being watched. It's reminiscent of the aesthetic tech that made Samsung's The Frame popular — but you could buy two 65-inch Omni QLEDs for less than the price of one 43-inch The Frame.
Details
Hisense U6H
Best for bright rooms
The Good & The Bad
- Full-array local dimming is bright enough for HDR
- Punchy, accurate colors
- Supports VRR
- Premium-looking bezel-less design
- Still just a 60 Hz refresh rate
- Occasional blooming
Why We Like It
It's not hard to find an affordable TV that supports HDR nowadays. The tricky part is finding an affordable TV that actually gets bright enough make that HDR support worthwhile. Hisense's entry-level quantum dot model does the trick with a full-array local dimming panel, with every model but the 75-inch retailing below $699.99. The 50- and 55-inch models are the only choices in this entire list that sit below the $400 mark when on sale.
Though the impressively-bright U6H does its best work for shows or sports in bright rooms, its dark room performance is certainly good enough for the average user. VRR support is a welcomed extra defense against lag in gaming.
Details
Samsung Q60B
Best if a small TV is your main TV
The Good & The Bad
- Rich color palette
- Great black uniformity
- Huge range of size options
- Slim, chic design
- Excellent cloud gaming hub
- Viewing angles just OK
- Occasional blooming
- No local dimming
Why We Like It
Cramped living rooms or binge-watching in bed might mean that a smaller TV will be your main TV — but a small screen doesn't mean you have to settle for crappy picture. Samsung's most affordable QLED option is the way to go if you're down to splurge a little bit on a 43-inch or 50-inch TV.
Compared to similarly-priced competitors, the Q60B's grasp on brightness and deep blacks offers a more reliable experience across rooms with multiple lighting situations. While most budget QLED options ace the color and brightness test for daytime viewing, fewer are able to produce the level of black uniformity needed for watching in the dark.
Details
LG QNED 80
Best viewing angles
The Good & The Bad
- High peak brightness and good reflection handling
- Filmmaker mode
- Low input lag and snappy response time
- Great sound with Dolby Atmos
- Colors could pop more for the price
- Would be nice to have a slightly cheaper mini LED option
Why We Like It
LG's version of QLED is QNED (Quantum Nano-Emitting Diode): a mashup of the company's NanoCell tech (an extra filter that absorbs stray light) and multiplied dimming zones through mini LEDs. The result of boosted hues and brightness is similar to that of QLED, but that extra light filter of nanoparticles is particularly good at maintaining color depth at different viewing angles. This makes LG's QNED a better choice for rooms with wide seating arrangements.
We've picked the QNED 85 Series over the lower-end 80 Series that omits the mini LED backlight. Though the cheaper 80 Series is still a solid choice, dark scenes are a bit washed out in dark rooms. The 85 Series provides more legible shadows, and gets brighter. If you can deal without mini LEDs, the 80 Series starts at just $699.99.
Details
Topics Samsung
Frequently Asked Questions
Dolby Vision is better. HDR10 and Dolby Vision are both versions of HDR (high dynamic range), but there's one major difference in the way the technologies pull and upscale content. HDR10 uses static metadata, which only grabs information from a single data point on the screen. Dolby Vision, however, adjusts frame by frame through dynamic metadata, which is able to produce more colors and hit higher peak brightness. HDR10+ is also dynamic, but maxes out at 10-bit color depth compared to Dolby's 12-bit.
Many TVs support one or the other (for instance, Samsung doesn't do Dolby Vision), but some brands support both.
Leah Stodart is a Philadelphia-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable where she covers and tests essential home tech like vacuums and TVs, plus eco-friendly hacks. Her ever-evolving experience in these categories comes in clutch when making recommendations on how to spend your money during shopping holidays like Black Friday, which Leah has been covering for Mashable since 2017.