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Last updated: 09 June 2026

This TV buying guide helps you choose the right television for your room and budget. Start with viewing distance to pick the right screen size, then choose your display technology (OLED, Mini LED, QLED/LED) based on room brightness and how you watch. Finally, check HDR and gaming features (120Hz, HDMI 2.1, VRR) and plan your sound and mounting setup.

This guide is perfect for first-time TV buyers, families upgrading to 4K/8K, gamers, sports enthusiasts and home-cinema builders.

In this guide

  • Learn how to choose the right TV size and viewing distance for your room, from compact 43" TVs up to 85"+ models. Jump to >

  • Check out all he latest screen technology, including OLED, QLED, LED/LCD. Jump to >

  • What you need to know about HDR and picture quality, the formats to look for, and how it affects contrast, colour and brightness. Jump to >

  • Gaming features to look out for including the specs that matter for console and PC gaming, including refresh rate, low input lag and HDMI 2.1. Jump to >

  • Smart TV features from streaming apps, voice control and connectivity to help you pick a TV that fits how you watch. Jump to >

  • Setup and installation tips from placement, wall mounting and getting the best picture once your TV is home. Jump to >

  • Check out the glossary and top frequently asked questions. Jump to >

What type of TV do you need?

This is the biggest decision. The main TV types each display the picture differently and suit different homes. For most households, the best TV is the one that fits your room, suits how you watch and balances upfront price with the picture quality you'll notice every day.

Choose an OLED TV if you want the best contrast and deepest blacks for movies and watch in a darker room where its picture truly shines. Choose a QLED TV if you want bright, punchy colour that holds up in sunny, well-lit living spaces and want premium picture quality at a more accessible price. Choose an LED/LCD TV if you want the lowest purchase price and a reliable all-rounder for everyday viewing. Choose a Mini-LED TV if you want near-OLED contrast with extra brightness for HDR movies and bright rooms. Choose a Lifestyle TV if you want a screen that doubles as wall art or blends into your decor when you're not watching.

Stylish LG OLED TV in timbre living room.

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Samsung Neo QLED TVs

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TCL 65" C7K Premium QD Mini LED Google TV 2025 image

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Quick decision guide

  • Bright room / lots of daytime viewing → Mini LED

  • Best blacks / movie nights → OLED

  • Tight budget / mixed use → LED/LCD

  • Gamers → 120Hz + HDMI 2.1 + VRR

  • Small room → prioritise viewing distance before resolution

TV types compared

Technology

Pros

Cons

Best for

OLED

Perfect blacks & infinite contrast

Wide viewing angles

Fast response times

Lower peak brightness

Potential burn-in risk

More expensive

Movie lovers

Gaming

Wide seating arrangements

Mini LED

Very high peak brightness

Improved contrast

No burn-in risk

Blacks aren't as perfect as OLED

Can still show some light leakage

Premium models can cost close to OLED

Bright room viewing

HDR TV and gaming

Big screens where brightness matters

QLED

Very bright and vivid colours

No burn-in risk

Often better value per inch than OLED

Contrast and black levels aren't as strong as Mini LED or OLED

Viewing angles can be limited

Can show blooming

Bright living rooms

Sports, news, daytime TV

Budget or value-focused buyers

Recommended TV size based on viewing distance

For TV sizing, the key measurement is screen size in inches, measured diagonally across the display. Getting the right size ensures comfortable viewing without straining your eyes or feeling overwhelmed by the picture.

Viewing distance

Mixed TV (≈30° FOV)

Cinematic (≈40° FOV)

Best use

1.5 m

43" – 50"

55" – 65"

Bedroom / compact living

2.0 m

50" – 60"

65" – 75"

Small–medium lounge

2.5 m

55" – 65"

75" – 85"

Standard living room

3.0 m

65" – 75"

85" – 98"

Large lounge / theatre feel

3.5 m

75" – 85"

98" – 110"+

Dedicated home cinema

4.0 m

85" – 98"

110"+

Projector or wall-filling TV

4K - is currently considered the standard TV resolution. All the latest movies, TV shows and video games are released in 4K on game consoles and streaming platforms. According to Sony: 4K TV is best viewed at a distance of at least 1.5 times the TV’s vertical screen height (minimum) for 4K. For example, for a 55" 4K TV you would sit at least 1 metre away. For an 85" 4K TV you would sit at least 1.6 metres away.

Full HD - is the resolution of standard Blu-rays. If you generally watch free-to-air, have slow internet speed or subscribe to the base level of streaming services, a Full HD TV will be suitable. A Full HD TV is best viewed at a distance of at least 3 times the TV diagonal screen size. For example, for a 55" Full HD TV you would sit at least 2.1 metres away. For an 85" Full HD TV you would sit 2.5 metres away.

HD (High Definition) - is great if you want a small, low-priced television for watching free-to-air and DVDs. Just like a Full HD TV, an HD TV is best viewed at a distance of at least 3 times the TV diagonal screen size. For example, for a 55" HD TV you would sit at least 2.1 metres away. For an 85" HD TV you would sit 2.5 metres away.

“Another way to pick is to work out which size you think you’d be comfortable with now, and then go one size bigger than that. The latest advancements in technology have improved picture quality in TVs so much that it’s generally better to go one size bigger than you’d imagine.”

- Jason Tavoletti, The Good Guys Buyer – Visual and Sound Bars.

The top 6 asked questions

Explore our articles and buying guides — written to answering the questions our customers ask most.

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Key features to look for

Once you've settled on type and size, these are the features worth paying attention to:

Feature

Why you should look for it

HDR (High Dynamic Range)

Means brighter highlights, deeper blacks and more detail in dark and bright scenes at the same time. But how good HDR looks depends on the format and the TV.

HDR10

The basic format supported by all HDR TVs. It uses a single brightness setting for the entire movie/show.

Dolby Vision

An advanced HDR format that adjusts brightness scene by scene or frame by frame.

HDR10+

Is like Dolby Vision, but it is royalty-free.

Contrast

Contrast is the gap between the darkest black and brightest white a TV shows at once — the single biggest factor in picture quality. High contrast looks deep and three-dimensional; low contrast looks flat and washed out. This is where panel type matters most: OLED hits effectively infinite contrast because each pixel switches off for true black, while LED and QLED dim a backlight that can't go as dark.

Brightness

Brightness is how much light a TV outputs, measured in nits. It matters most in bright, sunny rooms where you're fighting glare, and with HDR content, where extra brightness makes highlights pop. QLED and Mini-LED lead here, pushing far higher peak brightness than OLED.

Local Dimming

Local dimming is how an LED TV boosts contrast: the backlight is split into zones that brighten and dim independently, keeping dark areas dark and bright areas bright. More zones means tighter control and blacks closer to OLED. Mini-LED takes this furthest with thousands of tiny zones. It's the key feature separating a budget LED from a premium one — worth checking when comparing models at the same price.

Gaming features

To get the ultimate gaming experience on your TV, make sure it ticks these boxes:

• 120Hz panel: allows the TV to refresh the image 120 times per second for smoother motion

• HDMI 2.1: provides the bandwidth needed for 4K at 120Hz, VRR, and low latency features

• VRR (Variable Refresh Rate): matches the TV’s refresh rate to the game’s frame rate in real time

• ALLM (Auto Low Latency Mode): automatically switches the TV into Game Mode when a console is detected

• eARC (Enhanced Audio Return Channel): sends high-quality audio from the TV to a soundbar or AV receiver

Refresh rates

Typically, refresh rates for TVs sit between 60Hz to 120Hz - all considered to be a range which is comfortable on the eyes. The higher the refresh rate, the more the picture will look lifelike and is therefore important for a greater gaming experience with the ideal Refresh Rate for gaming being one supporting HDMI 2.1 bandwidth for 4K 120Hz gaming. Higher end TVs will have a Refresh Rate roughly between 120Hz - 144Hz, offering a seamless viewing experience.

Motion Handling

Motion handling is how cleanly a TV shows movement without blur or judder — separate from refresh rate, though they work together. Even a 120Hz panel can look smeary if its processing is weak. Good motion handling keeps fast action sharp, so jersey numbers stay readable and panning shots don't smear. Watch for the "soap opera effect," where heavy smoothing makes films look artificial. Matters most for sport and gaming.

Ports and connectivity

Don’t end up wishing your TV had the right connections later! Make sure your new TV supports the below:

At least 3 HDMI ports (consoles, Soundbar, streaming box)

• Make sure at least one HDMI port supports 4K @ 120Hz, VRR/ALLM, eARC

• Wi-Fi

• Bluetooth

• Coax (antenna)

Installation tips & tricks

The first and most important thing is to make sure your new TV gets home safely. Secondly, make sure your TV is installed safely and with good cable management to prolong the life of your TV and to ensure the area looks as neat as possible.

Installing a TV safely means not putting it above a fireplace (the heat will damage the panel, plus it’s just a bad angle for your neck), making sure it’s on a table that holds its weight, making sure it’s attached to a part of a wall that can hold its weight, and ensuring it’s at a comfortable viewing angle so you don’t strain yourself.

Not sure if you should wall mount? This is a pretty personal decision and depends on your room, and how things are set up. Wall mounting is great because it saves floor space and keeps your accessories tucked away and tidy. Plus, you can better customise the angle the TV is at. However, some people prefer putting their TV on a tabletop because it’s easier to install and easier to access the ports on the back when you need to plug and unplug devices like Blu-Ray players and game consoles.

Need help installing your new TV? The Good Guys Home Services can organise a professional to do it all for you. Consider getting Gold Service Extras for peace of mind on your purchase, with stress-free support alongside many other benefits.

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Television technology glossary

Let's break down all the tech jargon and acronyms so you can find the perfect TV.

Tech talk

Definition

Diode

Measuring 0.2mm, diodes are the ‘D’ in LED. These are used as the backlight to project the TV picture. Since they are smaller in size than the traditional LED TV diodes, more can be packed into the TV screen. This means that the diodes in Mini LED TVs give you more control to create a better quality image. It also means there is less backlight bleed.

LCD substrate

This is the glass panel on the TV screen that protects the technology encased inside. The tens of thousands of Mini LEDs sit behind this panel, and it works as a transistor for the display to produce the TV colours and picture.

LED

LED stands for "Light Emitting Diode." LED TVs utilise an LCD screen to project their picture. A backlight within the screen controls where light is displayed and when colours are lit up. LED screens are split up into zones that can be controlled independently. The more zones a screen contains, the greater the picture control the TV has.

OLED

OLED stands for "Organic Light-Emitting Diode." OLED screens are made of tiny organic compounds that emit light when an electric current passes through them. This allows each individual pixel to emit its own light, resulting in vibrant colours, deep blacks, and better contrast compared to traditional displays.

QLED

QLED stands for "Quantum Dot Light Emitting Diode." QLED TVs use tiny particles called quantum dots to produce vibrant and accurate colours. These quantum dots are illuminated by LEDs to create the images you see on the screen. QLED displays are known for their excellent colour reproduction and brightness.

Mini LED

Instead of traditional backlighting, mini LED TVs uses thousands of tiny LEDs that are smaller than regular LEDs. These mini LEDs provide more precise control over brightness and local dimming, resulting in better contrast, improved picture quality, and more vibrant visuals. In essence, Mini LED enhances the overall viewing experience by offering sharper and more dynamic images.

HDMI

HDMI stands for "High-Definition Multimedia Interface." It's a type of cable and connection used to transmit high-quality audio and video signals between devices like TVs, Blu-ray players, game consoles, and computers. HDMI cables are commonly used to ensure sharp and clear pictures, as well as excellent sound quality when connecting different devices to your TV or monitor.

HDR content

High-dynamic range content has a higher contrast and a larger colour and brightness range than Standard (SDR) content. It is also more visually impactful than 4K content. Most Mini LED TVs fully support this level of output.

Zones

Premium TVs are able to locally control the colour in areas on a screen, known as zones. These zones can be brightened or dimmed independently, which results in deeper shadows, brighter highlights and more vivid colour.

Refresh rate

Refresh rate refers to how many times per second a display updates the images on screen. It's measured in Hertz (Hz). A higher refresh rate, such as 60Hz or 120Hz, means the screen can change what you see more frequently, making motion smoother and reducing blur in fast-moving scenes, like in video games or sports. A higher refresh rate is generally better for a smoother and more responsive visual experience.

AI upscaling

AI upscaling is a technology that uses artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the quality of images and videos. It works by analysing and interpolating pixels in lower-resolution content to make it look sharper and more detailed. Essentially, AI upscaling takes something that might look a bit blurry or pixelated and uses smart algorithms to make it appear clearer and more refined. This can improve the viewing experience when watching older videos or content with lower resolutions on modern, high-resolution screens.

Lag input

Input lag refers to the delay between when you perform an action, such as pressing a button on a controller or remote, and when that action is reflected on the screen. In gaming, lower input lag is better because it means your commands are executed more quickly, leading to a more responsive and enjoyable gaming experience. High input lag can result in a noticeable delay between your actions and the on-screen response, which can be frustrating, especially in fast-paced games. So, the lower the input lag, the more responsive and enjoyable your gaming or interactive experience will be.

Dolby Atmos

An advanced audio technology that provides immersive, three-dimensional sound by placing audio "objects" in specific locations within the listening space.

Dolby Vision

Dolby Vision is an advanced HDR technology that offers dynamic metadata, optimising the HDR experience scene by scene for improved picture quality.

Bezel

The frame around the TV screen; thinner bezels provide a more immersive viewing experience.

Aspect ratio

The ratio of the width to the height of the TV screen. Common aspect ratios include 16:9 (widescreen) and 4:3 (traditional).

Casting/Mirroring

The ability to wirelessly display content from a mobile device or computer on the TV screen.

IMAX Enhanced

A certification program for audio and video quality. If a TV is IMAX Enhanced, it means it meets certain standards for delivering a more immersive and high-quality audio-visual experience, similar to what you'd get in an IMAX movie theatre. This can include better picture clarity, enhanced sound, and specialised content that's been optimised for home viewing.

FAQs

Budget range

What to expect

Description

Key pros

$400 - $800

Solid 4K, basic smart features, good for secondary rooms

A reliable everyday 4K TV, with a built-in smart platform and all the major streaming apps.

Great value; full 4K resolution; built-in streaming; good size for the price

$800 - $1,800

Premium smart OS, better contrast, gaming features

A step up in brightness and contrast thanks to QLED panels and local dimming, plus gaming extras like 120Hz and low input lag. The sweet spot for most family lounge rooms.

Brighter, punchier picture; local dimming; 120Hz gaming support; strong value per inch

$1,800 - $4,000

Great for flagship picture quality and larger screens.

Genuine flagship picture quality, whether OLED's perfect blacks or premium Mini-LED brightness — in larger, cinema-ready sizes built for serious movie and gaming setups.

Flagship picture quality; premium processing; larger screen sizes; full gaming feature set

$4,000 +

Top-tier performance, size, and advanced tech

The best of the best! The brightest panels, highest resolutions, and screen sizes built for a true home-cinema experience.

Best-in-class picture; massive screen sizes; flagship processing and design; future-proof tech

The most trusted TV brands in Australia are Samsung, LG, Sony, Hisense and TCL, the five names that dominate local shelves and consistently rate well in independent testing. Each has a strength: LG leads in OLED, Samsung in QLED and Neo QLED, Sony in picture processing, Hisense in value across QLED and OLED, and TCL in affordable QLED and Mini-LED.

The first and most important thing is to make sure your new TV gets home safely. Secondly, make sure your TV is installed safely and with good cable management to prolong the life of your TV and to ensure the area looks as neat as possible.

Installing a TV safely means not putting it above a fireplace (the heat will damage the panel, plus it’s just a bad angle for your neck), making sure it’s on a table that holds its weight, making sure it’s attached to a part of a wall that can hold its weight, and ensuring it’s at a comfortable viewing angle so you don’t strain yourself.

Need help installing your new TV? Or just want to make sure the cables are properly hidden, like in a wall? The Good Guys Home Services can organise a professional to do it all for you.

Measuring your TV is actually easier than you might think! When you see TV sizes - it is referring to the diagonal length, measuring from the top left hand corner of the TV screen to the lower right hand corner. TV measurements are typically written in inches.

Smart TVs are televisions with integrated internet and interactive web features to open up a whole new world of entertainment. Whether this be browsing the internet, streaming music or even viewing pictures.

There are a few things you should consider when buying a TV to make sure it is the right fit for you and your home. This includes TV size, resolution, tech and more. Make sure you read this in depth Buying Guide to understand what features matter to you!

QLED stands for Quantum Light-Emitting Diode. To put it simply, that means a QLED TV is just like a regular LED TV, except it uses tiny nanoparticles called quantum dots to supercharge its colour.

For a 4K TV, your ideal screen size in inches is approximately your viewing distance divided by 1.5

Ideal screen size ≈ viewing distance ÷ 1.5

See the table below for common screen sizes

TV size (inches)

Ideal distance

55-65"

~2m

75"

~3m

85"+

~4m

It’s usually better to buy a higher-quality TV before buying a bigger one, but it depends on your viewing preferences and the size of your space. Picture quality matters, because a larger screen with poor image quality will show imperfections more clearly. However, a bigger screen can improve the viewing experience, especially if you sit far from the TV.

For the best viewing experience, the centre of your TV should be at your eye level when seated. For most cases, that works out to ~100–110 cm (40–43 inches) from the floor to the centre of the screen. To measure this, sit where you normally watch TV, measure the distance between the floor and your eyes, mount the TV so the screen's centre matches that height.

Yes, you can mount a TV on plasterboard. First, check what's behind the plasterboard - if there are wood or metal studs, mount the bracket into the studs. If there are no studs, you can still mount a TV, but make sure to use heavy-duty plasterboard fixings such as toggle bolts, snap toggles or metal cavity anchors. Look up the weight of your TV and compare it to the rated load of the fixings to make sure your fixings can comfortably support it. Fixed or tilt mounts are safer than full-motion mounts when mounting directly to plasterboard.

In an OLED TV, each pixel emits its own light, giving perfect black levels and excellent contrast. OLED is typically best for dark rooms, movies, and gaming. Mini LED TVs use thousands of tiny LEDs behind an LCD panel, providing a very bright picture with good contrast and no risk of burn-in — making them a great all-around option. QLED TVs use LED backlights combined with quantum dots to produce bright, vivid colours that work well in bright rooms for daytime TV and sports viewing.

OLED burn-in is possible but unlikely, and the risk varies depending on usage. For sports, the risk is low to moderate, with static elements like scoreboards and logos being the main concern — avoid leaving these on for hours every day. For news channels, the risk is low, since tickers and graphics are constantly moving. For gaming, the risk is slightly higher because on-screen elements such as health bars and maps are often displayed for the entire session. Modern OLEDs include features like pixel-shifting, logo luminance adjustments, and screen savers to further reduce the risk.

The best refresh rate for you will depend on what you will be using your TV for. See example table below:

Refresh rate

Best for

60Hz

Movies, TV shows

120Hz

Sports, action movies

144Hz+

PC gaming

HDMI 2.1 is a gaming upgrade port that supports up to 48 Gbps, providing the bandwidth needed for higher resolutions and frame rates. For the best gaming experience on PS5 or Xbox, especially 4K 120Hz gaming, fast-paced shooters or racing games, and smooth motion with VRR and low latency, a TV with HDMI 2.1 is essential.

VRR stands for Variable Refresh Rate. Most TVs have a fixed refresh rate, but a TV with VRR can match its refresh rate to the frame rate of a game, resulting in smoother gameplay. Without VRR, the TV might display repeated frames or stutter during fast-paced action.

Yes, if you’re gaming, a Game Mode or low input lag TV is highly recommended. Input lag is the delay between pressing a button on your controller and seeing the action on screen, so a TV with low input lag provides more responsive gameplay. Most TVs have a Game Mode that turns off extra image processing (like motion smoothing or noise reduction), reduces input lag and works with HDMI 2.1 features.

No, you don't need Wi-Fi 6 or Ethernet to stream in 4K. However, Wi-Fi 6 can provide a more stable connection with fewer dropouts, while an Ethernet connection is the most stable option and is ideal if the TV is near the router.

Either built-in apps or a streaming box will work, depending on your use case. Built-in apps are fine if your TV is new and feels responsive, while a streaming box is better if you want smoother performance and longer software support.

Most modern mid to high-end TVs support Dolby Atmos. However, without external speakers, you won’t get true Atmos and will instead hear a downmixed or virtual version through the TV’s built-in speakers. With a soundbar or AV system, you can experience true Atmos and much better sound.

TVs come with built-in speakers, which work fairly well, but Soundbars take your audio game to the next level. A Soundbar is mandatory if you care about movie dialogue, you game or watch sports, or, if you want Dolby Atmos or surround sound. If you're only using your TV for quiet, casual viewing, you can probably skip the Soundbar.

Before the delivery team leaves, inspect the box for dents or damage, ask the delivery drivers to power the TV on and check for cracks in the screen, vertical lines, black spots or flickering. Make sure the TV remote, stand, screws and power cables are included. Then, run a quick screen check; turn the TV on and look for dead pixels, uneven brightness and shadowy patches or cloudiness. Connect your TV to Wi-Fi or Ethernet, update the firmware and select your region or country.

You'll need HDMI cables if you plan on connecting devices like streaming boxes, gaming consoles, DVD players and Soundbars to your TV. If you watch live TV, you'll need an antenna/coax cable. You typically won't need an optical cable unless your sound system is older and doesn’t support HDMI ARC. Connecting an Ethernet cable to your TV is an optional extra and is useful if your TV is near your Wi-Fi router, you stream a lot in 4K or your Wi-Fi is unreliable.

To get great picture right out of the box, go to your TV settings, navigate to Picture or Picture Mode and choose one of these:

  • Movie

  • Cinema

  • Filmmaker Mode

  • ISF (Dark/Bright)

Turn off motion smoothing and adjust the brightness depending on your room. Bright room → slightly higher brightness, dark room → lower brightness.

Start with your viewing distance. As a rough guide: 2m = 55–65", 3m = 65–75", 4m = 75–85"+. If you’re sitting closer, going bigger usually looks better with 4K content—just make sure it fits the space and you’re not craning your neck.

Look for HDMI 2.1, 120Hz, VRR (Variable Refresh Rate), and ALLM (Auto Low Latency Mode). In plain English: you’ll get smoother gameplay, less screen tearing, and the TV will automatically switch into game mode when you fire up the console.

If you want 4K at 120Hz for gaming, use an Ultra High Speed HDMI cable (that’s the HDMI 2.1 standard). For normal streaming and free-to-air, a regular high-speed HDMI cable is usually fine. Quick tip: buy the cable for the job you want the TV to do.

Count your gear: soundbar, console, streaming device, maybe a Blu‑ray player. Most people are happiest with at least 3–4 HDMI ports. Also check for eARC on one HDMI port if you’re adding a soundbar—makes audio setup much simpler.

eARC is basically the “good” audio return channel. It lets your TV send higher-quality audio to a soundbar or AV receiver via a single HDMI cable. Translation: better sound, fewer cables, fewer headaches—especially for Dolby Atmos-capable soundbars.

HDR is what gives you that punchy contrast and bright highlights. Most TVs support HDR10. Dolby Vision and HDR10+ are “enhanced” HDR formats—great if your streaming apps and the TV both support the same one. If you’re choosing between two TVs, stronger brightness + good HDR handling matters more than chasing a logo.

For most people, no, there’s still far more 4K content than 8K. A great 4K TV with strong brightness, contrast and motion usually looks better than a cheaper 8K TV. If you’re future-proofing and buying very large (say 85"+), 8K can be a nice-to-have, not a must-have.

Before you bin anything: inspect the screen, confirm it powers on, and keep the box for a bit (handy for returns or moving). Once it’s set up, run the software update, choose a sensible picture mode (Movie/Cinema for night viewing is a great start), and do a quick check of your HDMI inputs and audio.

The typical lifespan of display technologies really varies greatly depending on the type. LCD TVs generally last around 7 to 11 years at typical viewing habits. OLED displays can average a bit less due to organic materials that may degrade over time. But remember this is a really rough guide only, it's super important to consider how you use your TV, your settings preferences etc, as brightness and contrast levels can also affect display longevity.

Yes, burn-in and image retention are concerns primarily associated with OLED and older plasma displays. Burn-in may happen when static images are displayed for prolonged periods, causing permanent discoloration on the screen. OLEDs, due to their organic compounds, are more susceptible to this, especially if high brightness settings are used continuously. LCD screens are generally less prone to burn-in but can experience temporary image retention under certain conditions. To minimize these risks, it’s advisable to use screen savers, avoid static content for extended durations, and adjust brightness levels appropriately.

Viewing angles significantly affect how display brightness and contrast are perceived. As the angle between the viewer and the screen increases, the brightness may diminish due to the way light disperses, making the image appear dimmer or duller. Similarly, contrast ratio tends to decrease because the difference between the darkest and brightest areas becomes less distinct, often causing colors to appear washed out. Understanding the viewing angles in your room is really important for ensuring consistently great looking content no matter where you view from.

A nit is a unit of brightness - the more nits, the brighter the TV can get and fight glare from windows and lights.

  • 400–600 nits → OK for dim or moderately lit rooms

  • 600–800 nits → Good for bright rooms with some daylight

  • 800–1,200 nits → Ideal for very bright rooms

  • 1,200+ nits → Excellent for sun-filled rooms and strong HDR

Go Mini LED (or a bright LED/QLED) so the picture stays clear in daylight and doesn’t look washed out.

Ready to get rid of your old TV? There are recycling collection points for old or broken televisions across Australia, including some The Good Guys locations. Alternatively, check to see if you can trade-in your old TV.

Look out for 5 star reviews when shopping! Our real customer reviews are available on each product page on our website.

Modern TVs look great but sacrifice speaker size, so if the dialogue on your TV sounds quiet or muffled or you keep adjusting the volume between scenes, you probably need a Soundbar.

Simple rule of thumb:

Room type

TV size

Recommendation

Small room/bedroom

<43"

Soundbar optional

Medium room/living room

50-65"

Basic Soundbar recommended

Large room/open-plan space

65"+

Soundbar strongly recommended

Wondering where the perfect placement of your TV. It depends on quite a few variables like personal preference, the size of your TV and the size of your room. A good rule of thumb is to place the TV directly in from or you ideally 15 degrees upwards or downwards, or around 40 degrees from left to right.

Media players could be the solution to elevating your entertainment system. Streaming devices like Apple TV, Chromecast and Amazon Fire Sticks could help you stream your favourite content and are a cost effective solution.

There are so many TV settings that can be adjusted to suit your preferences and space best, these include: picture mode, brightness, backlight, contrast, colour settings and more.

Yes — OLED is worth the premium if you watch movies, game, or view in a dark room. OLED TVs deliver perfect blacks because each pixel lights and switches off individually, plus the widest viewing angles and the fastest response times of any TV type, so motion stays sharp with virtually no blur.

OLED is most worth it for movie and prestige-TV watchers, console and PC gamers, and anyone viewing in a dark or dimly lit room, where those inky blacks have the biggest impact.

OLED is less necessary in bright, sun-filled rooms, where QLED and Mini-LED TVs go brighter and handle glare better. Heavy sports and free-to-air viewers also get excellent results from a quality LED TV without paying the OLED premium. And on a tight budget, a high-end LED still delivers outstanding picture quality for less.

In short: OLED rewards dark-room movie lovers and gamers most, while bright-room and budget shoppers have strong, cheaper alternatives in QLED, Mini-LED, and premium LED.

The main difference between QLED and OLED is how each TV produces light: QLED is brighter for sunny rooms, while OLED delivers perfect blacks for dark rooms. QLED is an LED TV with a quantum-dot layer that boosts brightness and colour, lit by a backlight behind the screen. OLED is a self-lit technology where every pixel makes its own light and switches off completely for true blacks and wider viewing angles. So QLED suits bright, well-lit spaces, while OLED is best in dark or dimly lit rooms. For a full comparison of picture quality, brightness, pricing, and which suits your room, read our complete QLED vs OLED guide.