I've reviewed some of 2024's top TVs and I have one take away – Mini LED needs to stop fighting OLED

Sony Bravia 9 Mini LED TV
(Image credit: What Hi-Fi? / Netflix, Our Planet II)

2024 was pitched by numerous big name TV makers as the year Mini LED would dethrone OLED as the top performer in the premium market.

This initially started with Hisense and TCL, two companies with a strong pedigree in the mid-range and affordable TV market that have long espoused Mini LED as the future

Sure Samsung’s done this before, mainly when it didn’t make OLED TVs and was instead focussed on selling Neo QLED (it’s version of Mini LED) and its Quantum Dot technology as the best TV tech. But it was interesting to see it make the claim again after quietly seeming to concede that OLED is worth it when it launched the S95B in 2022.

Which brings me on to the crux of the question, has the gambit pivoting to push Mini LED in the premium space paid off? With us now half way through the year and having reviewed many of the big name sets, including the Hisense U8N, Sony Bravia 9 and Samsung QNS95D, the answer for now is a firm “no”.

If you look at the Hisense, Sony and Samsung reviews you’ll see a common theme – they all earned good, not great, four star ratings.

LG C4 (OLED48C4) 48-inch TV

(Image credit: What Hi-Fi? / Netflix / Drive To Survive)

Side-by-side this meant our testers agreed the OLEDs, next to their equivalent priced Mini LED rivals, all delivered a more immersive, three-dimensional image, especially during darker, or high contrast scenes.

We said as much in our Hisense U8N review:

“All-in-all if you are coming from a basic LCD, then the U8N will feel like a night and day upgrade. But if you’re used to OLED, you’ll notice the less deep blacks and paler, cooler colour temperature right away.”

And, from our Sony Bravia 9 review: “So, has Sony’s big Bravia 9 gamble paid off? Perhaps not yet.”

And our Samsung QN95D review:

“The S95D, which lurks uncomfortably close on price and with its glorious QD-OLED panel produces a deeper, richer and more cinematic picture overall. While it may not go quite as bright, the S95D's sensational handling of contrast means that it will be the better buy for most people.”

So does that mean Mini LED is generally not worth it, or as good? No. Mini LED still has a very definite place in the TV market. Mini LED is easier to produce than OLED, which is why you’ll find it on mid-range and cheap sets. Done right, these can beat OLED in a key metric; value for money.

The Award-winning TCL C845K we tested last year is a great example. Though it can’t beat OLEDs on pure picture quality, it offers the best performance you'll find at its price – the high cost of OLED means there’s no direct rival for it.

Which is why I think companies should be focusing on growing and improving Mini LED there, using it to fix the ongoing lack of “good” cheap TVs, which I’ve chronicled many times before, rather than pushing it as a replacement for OLED.

MORE:

These are the best OLED TVs we’ve tested

We rate the best 55-inch TVs

Check out our picks of the best 65-inch TVs

Alastair Stevenson
Editor in Chief

Alastair is What Hi-Fi?’s editor in chief. He has well over a decade’s experience as a journalist working in both B2C and B2B press. During this time he’s covered everything from the launch of the first Amazon Echo to government cyber security policy. Prior to joining What Hi-Fi? he served as Trusted Reviews’ editor-in-chief. Outside of tech, he has a Masters from King’s College London in Ethics and the Philosophy of Religion, is an enthusiastic, but untalented, guitar player and runs a webcomic in his spare time.