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Advertorial Technology Updated: April 2026 8 min read

OLED vs QLED: Which TV Technology Is Right for You?

DiskHead Editorial Team
Updated April 2026 · 8 min read
TV screen glow in dark room — OLED vs QLED

Walk into any electrical retailer (or browse Argos.co.uk) and you'll encounter two premium TV technologies competing for your attention: OLED and QLED. Both produce stunning pictures. Both command premium prices. But they achieve their results in fundamentally different ways — and which one is right for you depends entirely on your room, your habits and your budget.

This guide cuts through the marketing jargon to explain what actually matters in the real world, illustrated with specific TVs you can buy at Argos today.

Short answer: OLED wins in dark rooms and for cinema/gaming. QLED wins in bright, sunny rooms and offers better value for money. Read on for the full picture.

How OLED and QLED work

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OLED — Organic Light-Emitting Diode

Each pixel produces its own light and colour

In an OLED screen, every single pixel is individually lit. When a pixel needs to display black, it simply switches off completely — emitting zero light. This is why OLED blacks are so profound: they're not "very dark grey", they're genuinely pitch black.

LG makes the OLED panels used in most consumer TVs, including the LG C3, Sony OLED, and Philips OLED ranges. Samsung has its own OLED technology called QD-OLED, which adds a quantum dot layer for even wider colour.

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QLED — Quantum Light-Emitting Diode

LED backlight filtered through quantum dot layer

QLED is Samsung's branded name for LED TVs with a quantum dot enhancement layer. A powerful LED backlight shines through this layer, which converts the light into highly pure, saturated colours. The result is significantly brighter and more vivid than standard LED, but still relies on a backlight.

Hisense and TCL also use similar quantum dot technology in their QLED ranges, at notably lower prices than Samsung.

Picture quality: contrast, blacks and colour

Contrast and black levels — OLED wins clearly

This is OLED's superpower. Because every pixel switches off independently, OLED can display a star field where individual stars float in genuine darkness — no grey haze, no halo around bright objects. The contrast ratio of an OLED is effectively infinite.

QLED uses local dimming — dimming groups of LEDs behind dark areas of the screen — to approximate this effect. It's significantly better than standard LED, but you can still notice bloom (light leaking around bright objects against dark backgrounds) on some content.

Verdict: OLED leads in dark scenes, black levels, and overall contrast. QLED is competitive but doesn't match it.

Colour — it's a draw

Both technologies now produce exceptional colour. OLED's self-emissive pixels create pure, accurate colour, while QLED's quantum dot layer enables exceptionally wide colour gamut coverage. In real-world viewing, both are outstanding — the differences are subtle enough that most viewers won't notice them.

Category scores (out of 10)

Black levels
10
7.2
Peak brightness
7.2
9.4
Colour accuracy
9.1
8.9
Viewing angles
9.5
7.5

OLED QLED

Brightness: QLED's big advantage

This is where QLED fights back — and wins convincingly. Because QLED uses a powerful LED backlight, it can produce far higher peak brightness than OLED. Samsung's top QLED panels can hit 2,000–4,000 nits; premium OLED sits around 1,000–1,500 nits.

In a bright British living room with a south-facing window, this matters a great deal. QLED images remain vibrant and watchable even in direct sunlight. OLED, by contrast, can look washed out and its anti-reflective properties, while good, don't compensate for the brightness gap.

Key insight: If you can't control the light in your room — south-facing windows, no blackout curtains — QLED is the right choice. The Samsung Q80C is our top recommendation for bright rooms.

Gaming performance

For PS5 and Xbox Series X gaming, OLED has a compelling edge. The LG C3 OLED, for example, offers:

The near-instantaneous pixel response of OLED means fast motion — whether in FIFA, Elden Ring, or a first-person shooter — looks crisper than on QLED. For dedicated gamers, this is a meaningful difference.

The Samsung Q80C QLED is still a capable gaming TV with 120Hz support and low input lag, and its brightness advantage makes HDR game worlds look spectacular. But for serious gamers, OLED is the better choice.

Longevity and burn-in

Burn-in — where a static image leaves a permanent ghost on the screen — is the risk most commonly associated with OLED. It's real, but modern OLED TVs include multiple pixel-refreshing technologies that make it very uncommon in normal viewing conditions.

The situations most likely to cause burn-in are: watching news channels with static tickers for many hours per day, leaving the same video game paused for extended periods, or leaving a static screen saver running. For typical UK households watching a mix of streaming, live TV and sport, burn-in is extremely rare.

QLED has no burn-in risk whatsoever — it's simply not a property of LED-based displays. If you have concerns about this (perhaps for a commercial display or a TV left on in a waiting room), QLED is the safer choice.

Price comparison at Argos

TV Technology Price (55") Best For
LG C3 OLED OLED ~£1,099 Cinema, gaming, dark rooms
Samsung Q80C QLED QLED ~£749 Bright rooms, gaming, sports
Sony X85L LED LED ~£649 Everyday streaming, upscaling
Hisense A7NQ QLED ~£379 Budget value, casual viewing
TCL C655K QLED ~£329 Budget, streaming, Google TV

The verdict: which should you buy?

Choose OLED if you…

  • Watch films in a darkened room
  • Play PS5 or Xbox Series X seriously
  • Want the absolute best picture quality
  • Have blackout curtains or can control light
  • Budget allows £1,000+

Choose QLED if you…

  • Have a bright room or south-facing windows
  • Want excellent value for money
  • Watch lots of live sport
  • Are concerned about burn-in
  • Budget is under £800

Our OLED and QLED recommendations at Argos

Best OLED: LG 55" C3 (OLED55C34LA)

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LG C3 OLED 55" — Score: 9.6/10

From £1,099 at Argos

Perfect blacks · Dolby Vision IQ · 2× HDMI 2.1 · 120Hz · Best-in-class gaming

View at Argos ↗

Best QLED: Samsung 55" Q80C (QE55Q80CATXXU)

Samsung Q80C QLED 55" — Score: 9.1/10

From £749 at Argos

High brightness · Anti-reflection · 120Hz · Excellent Tizen smart TV

View at Argos ↗

Best budget QLED: Hisense 55" A7NQ (55A7NQTUK)

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Hisense A7NQ QLED 55" — Score: 8.2/10

From £379 at Argos

QLED under £400 · Dolby Vision · All UK streaming apps

View at Argos ↗

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