Top 10 LG TVs in 2027 — Best Overall + Best Value
Direct Answer
The LG G5 OLED evo 65" ($3,399) is the Best Overall LG TV in 2027 — LG's brightest WOLED panel ever, the new META 3.0 primary RGB tandem stack pushing roughly 4,000 nits peak HDR, the α11 AI Gen2 processor, and a Zero-Gap wall-mount design that sits flush like wallpaper.
The LG C5 OLED 55" ($1,499) is the Best Value — the same WOLED self-lit pixel technology, the same webOS 25 platform, and four full HDMI 2.1 (48 Gbps) ports with 4K@144Hz for PC and console gaming, at less than half the G5's price. This 2027 ranking covers every LG-branded TV worth buying — from the M5 OLED Wireless flagship to the QNED Mini-LED bright-room champions to the budget UR9000 LCD — so shoppers can match panel, processor, and price to the room they actually have.
How We Ranked the Top 10 LG TVs in 2027
We pulled current 2027 pricing from LG.com, Best Buy, B&H, and Crutchfield, then weighted picture quality, gaming feature set, smart platform, real-world reliability, and price-to-performance. Picture testing leans on RTINGS.com lab data (peak brightness in 10% windows, near-black gradation, input lag), HDTVTest YouTube panel teardowns from Vincent Teoh, Wirecutter living-room recommendations, and CNET + Tom's Guide side-by-side comparisons.
Reliability draws on Consumer Reports survey data and r/OLED owner threads.
- Picture quality (35%) — peak HDR brightness, black level, color volume, off-axis viewing
- Gaming features (20%) — HDMI 2.1 bandwidth, 4K@144Hz, VRR, auto low-latency, G-Sync
- Smart platform (15%) — webOS 25 speed, app catalog, AI search, voice
- Build + design (10%) — Zero-Gap mounting, M5 wireless box, panel thinness
- Reliability (10%) — burn-in trends, firmware support window, warranty
- Price-to-performance (10%) — what the next dollar actually buys
1. LG G5 OLED evo 65" 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Price: $3,399 | Best for: Flagship picture quality, flush wall-mount, mixed bright-room and movie use
The G5 65" is the brightest WOLED LG has ever shipped, powered by the new Primary RGB Tandem META 3.0 stack and the α11 AI Gen2 processor. RTINGS measured roughly 4,000 nits peak on a 10% HDR window — territory previously owned only by Mini-LED. Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10, and HLG are all supported (LG does not support HDR10+, which is the one real tradeoff versus Samsung).
Four HDMI 2.1 (48 Gbps) ports deliver 4K@165Hz, VRR, ALLM, G-Sync Compatible, and FreeSync Premium. webOS 25 adds AI Concierge, AI Picture Wizard, and the new auto-genre detect that retunes picture and sound on the fly. The Zero-Gap Gallery design sits 24.7 mm off the wall.
- Pros: Brightest WOLED ever, perfect blacks, four full HDMI 2.1, 5-year panel warranty
- Pros: α11 AI Gen2 upscaling is class-leading on 1080p Blu-ray and cable
- Pros: Flush wall-mount makes it disappear into the room
- Con: No HDR10+ (Amazon HDR titles fall back to HDR10)
Verdict: The reference LG TV of 2027 — buy it once and skip the next two refresh cycles.
2. LG M5 OLED Wireless 77"
Price: $6,499 | Best for: Cable-free installs where the TV mounts far from any source
The M5 77" ships the same META 3.0 WOLED panel as the G5, paired with LG's Zero Connect Box that beams 4K@120Hz wirelessly up to 30 feet with line-of-sight. The box holds all four HDMI 2.1 (48 Gbps) ports, every other input, and the tuner — so the TV itself runs a single power cable.
Picture spec mirrors the G5 (α11 AI Gen2, Dolby Vision IQ, ~4,000 nits peak, webOS 25) and gaming is identical at 4K@144Hz with VRR + G-Sync. The compromise is the $3,100 premium over the wired G5 at the same size and a small but measurable wireless latency bump (RTINGS clocked roughly 9.5 ms versus 5 ms wired).
- Pros: Truly cable-free — solves above-fireplace and across-room installs
- Pros: Same panel and processor as the G5 flagship
- Pros: Zero Connect Box hides every wire in a cabinet
- Con: Roughly 60% more expensive than the equivalent wired G5 77"
Verdict: The right answer when the wire problem matters more than the price tag.
3. LG G5 OLED 77"
Price: $4,799 | Best for: Big-screen cinephiles who want flagship picture without the M5 wireless tax
Stepping the G5 up to 77" keeps every flagship spec — META 3.0, α11 AI Gen2, ~4,000-nit peak, four HDMI 2.1 (48 Gbps) at 4K@165Hz, Dolby Vision IQ, and webOS 25 — and delivers a 12-pound, 24.7 mm-thin panel that still flush-mounts. RTINGS rated this size the best HDR movie TV of 2027 based on tone-mapping accuracy and black-floor uniformity.
The 77" diagonal hits the sweet spot for a 9-12 foot viewing distance, which is where most living rooms actually land.
- Pros: Flagship picture at the size most rooms want
- Pros: 165Hz gaming for PC players with RTX 50-series cards
- Pros: Flush Zero-Gap mount works in narrow rooms
- Con: Heavy enough (about 70 lbs) that two people are required for install
Verdict: If the wall can hold it, the 77" G5 is the smartest flagship buy.
4. LG C5 OLED 65"
Price: $1,899 | Best for: Living-room all-rounder who wants OLED black levels without the G5 premium
The C5 65" uses the previous-gen META 2.0 WOLED panel and the α9 AI Gen8 processor — about 30% less peak brightness than the G5 (RTINGS measured roughly 1,500 nits peak), but still well above any 2024 OLED and brighter than any non-Mini-LED LCD. All four HDMI 2.1 (48 Gbps) ports remain, gaming is 4K@144Hz with VRR + G-Sync + FreeSync, and webOS 25 ships identical to the G5.
The C5 is what RTINGS, Wirecutter, and CNET all recommend as the best living-room OLED of 2027 for buyers who care about black level but not the absolute brightest highlights.
- Pros: OLED black levels at LCD-tier pricing
- Pros: Full HDMI 2.1 suite — no gaming features stripped
- Pros: 5-year panel warranty included
- Con: Roughly half the peak brightness of the G5 in HDR highlights
Verdict: The default LG OLED recommendation unless the room is genuinely sun-drenched.
5. LG QNED99 8K Mini-LED 75"
Price: $4,999 | Best for: Bright-room buyers who want maximum brightness and a massive screen
LG's QNED99 8K Mini-LED combines a 7680x4320 resolution panel, roughly 2,500 Mini-LED dimming zones, and the α11 AI Gen2 processor with 8K AI Upscaling Pro. Peak brightness hits about 2,500 nits in a 10% window — brighter than any LG OLED and ideal for a sunlit family room or open kitchen.
Four HDMI 2.1 (48 Gbps) ports support 4K@120Hz (native 8K@60Hz capped by current HDMI spec), and Dolby Vision IQ plus HDR10 are handled by the α11. The QNED color stack uses Pure Quantum Dot + Mini-LED with no Cd-based phosphor.
- Pros: Brightest LG TV of 2027 — wins any well-lit room
- Pros: 8K future-proofing for content that's slowly arriving
- Pros: Mini-LED zone count rivals competing Samsung Neo QLED
- Con: Some blooming around bright objects on dark backgrounds (LCD physics)
Verdict: Pick this over the G5 only if the room is genuinely too bright for OLED.
6. LG C5 OLED 55" 💎 BEST VALUE
Price: $1,499 | Best for: Anyone who wants real OLED for the price of a mid-tier LCD
The C5 55" is the best value LG TV of 2027 — full stop. It carries the same META 2.0 WOLED panel, α9 AI Gen8 processor, four HDMI 2.1 (48 Gbps) ports, 4K@144Hz, VRR, G-Sync, Dolby Vision IQ, and webOS 25 as the 65" C5 at $400 less. RTINGS scored this exact SKU 9.0/10 overall and 9.4/10 for movies.
Wirecutter named the C5 line their top OLED pick for 2027 on price-to-performance, and the 55" specifically lands in the $1,400-$1,500 range during sale windows.
- Pros: Full OLED picture quality under $1,500
- Pros: Best price-to-performance in the entire LG 2027 lineup
- Pros: Identical gaming and smart features to the G5
- Con: 55" can feel small in a room wider than 14 feet
Verdict: The default recommendation for 75% of LG TV buyers — the 💎 Best Value of 2027.
7. LG B5 OLED 55"
Price: $1,199 | Best for: Cheapest legit OLED entry point — secondary-room or first OLED buyer
The B5 55" is the entry OLED, built around the older WOLED panel without META brightness boost and paired with the α8 AI Gen2 processor. Peak brightness is the lowest in the OLED range at roughly 750 nits, but black levels and viewing angles are still genuine OLED.
Two of the four HDMI ports support full HDMI 2.1 at 4K@120Hz (versus all four on the C5/G5), VRR, ALLM, and G-Sync Compatible. Dolby Vision IQ and webOS 25 ship as standard.
- Pros: True OLED picture under $1,200
- Pros: Same webOS 25 smart platform as the flagship
- Pros: Excellent secondary-room or bedroom pick
- Con: Only two of four HDMI ports run full HDMI 2.1 bandwidth
Verdict: The right entry point for a first OLED or a second TV — pick the C5 if you can stretch $300 more.
8. LG QNED85 65" Mini-LED
Price: $1,699 | Best for: Bright-room buyers under $2,000 who want Mini-LED contrast
The QNED85 65" drops to 4K resolution, roughly 900 Mini-LED zones, and the α8 AI Gen2 processor, but keeps peak brightness around 1,800 nits — brighter than the C5 OLED in a sunlit room. Two of four HDMI ports support 4K@120Hz (versus all four on the C5), VRR, and ALLM.
Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10, and HLG all work. The QNED85 is what Tom's Guide recommends for buyers who can't go OLED because of room lighting but still want LG's webOS and α-series processing.
- Pros: Brighter than any LG OLED in this price band
- Pros: Mini-LED contrast crushes traditional LED LCD
- Pros: Strong $1,700 price for 65" Mini-LED
- Con: Blooming and off-axis color shift versus OLED
Verdict: The right LCD when OLED isn't viable for the room.
9. LG C5 OLED 42" PC-Monitor
Price: $999 | Best for: PC gaming as a true desk monitor with TV-grade picture
The C5 42" is the smallest OLED LG makes and the de facto best PC gaming monitor of 2027. Four HDMI 2.1 (48 Gbps) ports run 4K@144Hz with VRR, G-Sync Compatible, FreeSync Premium, and ALLM. RTINGS measured input lag at roughly 5.4 ms in Game Mode — better than most dedicated 4K monitors.
The 42" diagonal sits perfectly on a deep desk at 3-4 feet viewing distance, and DisplayPort-to-HDMI adapters work fine with NVIDIA RTX 50-series and AMD Radeon 9000-series cards.
- Pros: 4K@144Hz OLED desk monitor for under $1,000
- Pros: Full HDMI 2.1 — every spec a flagship monitor has
- Pros: Doubles as a small living-room or bedroom TV
- Con: Burn-in risk from static desktop UI (use LG's pixel shift + screen saver)
Verdict: The gaming PC builder's secret weapon of 2027.
10. LG UR9000 65" Entry 4K LCD
Price: $499 | Best for: Rock-bottom budget — bedroom, guest room, garage gym
The UR9000 65" is the cheapest 65" LG worth buying — basic IPS LCD (no Mini-LED, no quantum dots), α5 AI Gen6 processor, 60Hz native refresh, and HDR10 only (no Dolby Vision at this tier). Peak brightness is roughly 400 nits. Two HDMI 2.0 ports support 4K@60Hz, ALLM, but no VRR and no HDMI 2.1.
webOS 25 still ships, so the smart-TV side is identical to the G5. Wirecutter and CNET both flag this class as a "good enough" budget pick — never a recommendation for a primary living room.
- Pros: 65" 4K at $499 is hard to beat
- Pros: Full webOS 25 smart platform
- Pros: Reliable IPS panel with wide viewing angle
- Con: No HDMI 2.1, no VRR — skip for any gaming use
Verdict: The honest budget answer — buy with eyes open about what you're giving up.
Buyer Decision Tree — Which One's Right for You?
What to Look For When Buying an LG TV
- META 3.0 panel brightness boost — only the G5 and M5 ship the new Primary RGB Tandem stack that pushes WOLED to ~4,000 nits peak. The C5 uses the older META 2.0 at roughly 1,500 nits, and the B5 runs the un-boosted WOLED at ~750 nits. Match the panel generation to the room's ambient light.
- LG's no-HDR10+ tradeoff — every LG TV supports Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10, and HLG, but none support HDR10+. Amazon Prime Video titles that ship HDR10+ fall back to HDR10. If the household watches a lot of Amazon HDR exclusives, this is the one real reason to consider Samsung instead.
- webOS 25 vs the competition — LG's smart platform is fast, has every major app, includes free LG Channels streaming, and adds AI Concierge, AI Picture Wizard, and auto-genre detect in 2027. CNET and Tom's Guide both rate it ahead of Samsung Tizen on responsiveness and app catalog. The remote's pointer-style Magic Remote remains divisive.
- LG's gaming features — all 2027 OLEDs (G5, C5, B5, M5) ship HDMI 2.1, VRR, ALLM, G-Sync Compatible, FreeSync Premium, and the new Game Optimizer 2.0 dashboard. The C5/G5 run 4K@144Hz native, the G5 specifically scales to 4K@165Hz for high-refresh PC gaming. The UR9000 has none of this.
- Panel longevity and burn-in policy — LG's 2027 OLED panels include brightness limiter, pixel shift, screen saver, and logo dimming. RTINGS' long-term torture test still shows OLED burn-in is real but slower than it used to be. LG covers panel defects for 5 years on G5/M5 and 2 years on C5/B5 — Best Buy adds a 4-year protection plan for around $200 that covers burn-in.
- QNED vs OLED price-performance — at the same size, a QNED Mini-LED typically costs 30-40% less than the equivalent OLED but trades perfect black for higher peak brightness. The honest test: stand in the room at 2 PM. If sunlight hits the screen, QNED wins. If the room can be controlled, OLED wins.
FAQ
Does any 2027 LG TV support HDR10+? No. LG continues to back Dolby Vision IQ over HDR10+, which means Amazon Prime Video HDR10+ titles fall back to base HDR10. Every other HDR format is fully supported.
Is the LG M5 Wireless worth the $3,100 premium over the wired G5? Only if cable routing is the actual problem you're solving — above-fireplace mounts, across-room source equipment, or a no-wire aesthetic. Picture and gaming spec are otherwise identical.
C5 vs G5 — which one should I actually buy? The C5 for 75% of buyers — same gaming, same smart platform, half the price. Step to the G5 only if the room is bright, the TV will wall-mount flush, or HDR peak highlights matter more than dollars.
Will LG OLEDs still get burn-in in 2027? Yes, but slower than 2020-era panels. META 3.0 spreads heat more evenly and the brightness limiter is more aggressive. Use pixel shift + screen saver and avoid static logos at max brightness for hours daily.
Is 8K (QNED99) worth it in 2027? Not for content — native 8K is still rare. Worth it only if the buyer specifically wants the brightest LG and the largest size, and views the resolution as future-proofing for the late 2020s.
Can I use the LG C5 42" as a desktop monitor? Yes — RTINGS, Linus Tech Tips, and Hardware Unboxed all recommend it as one of the best 4K@144Hz PC monitors of 2027. Use LG's pixel shift and a screen saver to mitigate burn-in from static UI.
Which LG has the lowest input lag for competitive gaming? The C5 and G5 both clock around 5 ms in Game Mode with ALLM engaged — among the fastest TVs in the world, per RTINGS testing.
Bottom Line
The LG G5 OLED evo 65" at $3,399 is the Best Overall LG TV of 2027 — brightest WOLED ever shipped, α11 AI Gen2 processing, full HDMI 2.1 gaming, and flush wall-mount design. The LG C5 OLED 55" at $1,499 is the Best Value and the default recommendation for most buyers — full OLED picture quality at less than half the G5's price.
Match the panel to the room: OLED for controlled lighting, QNED Mini-LED for sunlit rooms, UR9000 only when the budget genuinely caps at $500. The Buyer Decision Tree above maps the use case to the pick.
Sources
- Wirecutter — "The Best OLED TVs for 2027" guide
- RTINGS.com — LG G5 OLED evo, LG C5 OLED, LG M5 Wireless, LG QNED99 lab reviews
- CNET — "LG G5 vs Sony Bravia 8 II vs Samsung S95F" 2027 head-to-head
- Tom's Guide — "Best LG TVs 2027" roundup
- HDTVTest (Vincent Teoh) — LG G5 META 3.0 panel measurements and tone-mapping analysis
- Consumer Reports — 2027 TV reliability survey + brand ranking
- LG.com — official spec sheets for G5, C5, B5, M5, QNED99, QNED85, UR9000
- B&H Photo — current 2027 pricing and stock for all 10 SKUs
- Crutchfield — installation guides and Zero Connect Box documentation
- R/OLED + r/LGOLED — owner long-term burn-in and firmware threads
- Digital Foundry — HDMI 2.1 bandwidth + 4K@144Hz console/PC compatibility testing
- AVForum — LG webOS 25 smart-platform deep-dive