Every TV aisle in 2026 throws four acronyms at you u2014 OLED, QLED, Mini-LED, MicroLED u2014 and most marketing copy treats them as a hierarchy. They’re not. They’re four different answers to the same engineering problem: how do you make individual pixels show the right brightness and color?
OLED: Self-Lit Pixels, Perfect Black
In an OLED panel, every pixel produces its own light and can switch off completely. That single fact explains almost everything OLED is good and bad at. Turn a pixel off and it’s truly black u2014 not dim, not dark gray, off. In our side-by-side testing, this is most obvious in starfields and night scenes, where OLED panels show stars as pinpoints against true black instead of a faint gray haze.
The tradeoff is brightness and longevity. OLED panels top out lower than LED-backlit alternatives, and the organic compounds do degrade slightly faster over years of heavy use, with burn-in risk on static content like channel logos or news tickers u2014 though this has improved significantly in recent panel generations.
QLED: A Quantum Dot Layer on Top of LED
QLED is, at its core, a conventional LED-backlit LCD panel with a quantum dot film added to boost color volume and brightness. It does not have per-pixel light control u2014 it relies on a backlight shining through a filter layer, which means blacks are never quite as deep as OLED’s.
What QLED trades for that is brightness headroom. In bright rooms with lots of ambient light, a strong QLED panel will simply look more vivid than an OLED at the same price, because raw light output matters more than perfect contrast when sunlight is competing with the screen.
Mini-LED: Smarter Backlighting, Not a New Panel Type
Mini-LED isn’t a competing panel technology so much as a major upgrade to how QLED’s backlight works. Standard LED backlights use a few dozen to a few hundred lighting zones; Mini-LED panels pack thousands of much smaller LEDs behind the same screen, organized into far more independently-dimmable zones.
In our benchmarks, this materially narrows the contrast gap with OLED u2014 a high-zone-count Mini-LED panel handles a bright object against a dark background far better than older LED TVs, though “blooming” (a faint halo around bright objects on dark backgrounds) is still visible if you know where to look.
MicroLED: The Expensive, Self-Emissive Outlier
MicroLED is the newest and rarest of the four. Like OLED, every pixel is its own self-emissive light source u2014 but instead of organic compounds, it uses microscopic inorganic LEDs. That gives it OLED’s perfect blacks and uncapped brightness with none of the organic-material degradation risk.
The catch is cost and availability. MicroLED panels remain dramatically more expensive to manufacture than any other technology here, and outside flagship showcase models, it’s not yet a realistic option for most buyers.
Which Should You Actually Buy?
- Dedicated dark home theater room: OLED. Nothing else touches its contrast in controlled lighting.
- Bright living room, daytime viewing: Mini-LED or QLED. Brightness wins more often than perfect blacks when there’s glare to fight.
- Budget under €1,000: Standard LED/QLED. The other three technologies all carry a premium that’s hard to justify at entry-level price points.
- Money is genuinely no object: MicroLED, if you can find a model in your size and live with the price.
Final Verdict
There’s no universal “best” here u2014 only the right match for your room. Buy for your lighting conditions and viewing habits first, then let the spec sheet settle the rest.
FAQ
Does Mini-LED replace OLED? No u2014 it narrows the gap in bright rooms but still can’t match OLED’s per-pixel blacks in a dark room.
Is MicroLED worth waiting for? Only if budget truly isn’t a constraint; mainstream pricing is still years away.
Will OLED burn-in ruin my TV? Modern OLED panels include pixel-shifting and logo-dimming safeguards that make burn-in unlikely under normal mixed-content viewing.
This article reflects our hands-on testing and publicly available specs and pricing at the time of writing. Display technology, firmware, and pricing change frequently — always confirm current specs with the manufacturer before buying.