Top 10 Premium TVs Over 5000 in 2027 β Best Overall + Best Value
Direct Answer
The Sony Bravia 9 85" Mini-LED ($5,499) is the π BEST OVERALL premium TV over $5,000 in 2027 β it pairs Sony's XR Backlight Master Drive with a flagship-tier Cognitive Processor XR, hitting roughly 4,000 nits peak HDR and a level of motion clarity that even the best OLEDs struggle to match in bright rooms.
The Samsung S95F QD-OLED 77" ($4,499) takes π BEST VALUE for its near-reference QD-OLED panel at a price thousands below the wireless-OLED tier. This list serves dedicated home theater builders, custom-install clients, and enthusiasts spec'ing 75-100" reference displays for 2027 builds where price is secondary to picture, sound, and long-term calibration support.
How We Ranked the Top 10 Premium TVs Over $5,000 in 2027
We pulled measured data from RTINGS.com, HDTVTest (Vincent Teoh), Wirecutter, CNET, Tom's Guide, AVForums, and Digital Foundry, then cross-checked against custom-installer feedback from CEDIA-certified integrators and the r/4kTV and r/hometheater communities.
Reference-tier TVs live or die on five axes β we weighted accordingly:
- Picture quality (peak HDR nits, black level, gamut coverage, processor): 35%
- Premium feature set (HDMI 2.1 full bandwidth, 4K/120, Dolby Vision, calibration support): 20%
- Integrated audio (Acoustic Surface, OTS+, multi-channel built-ins): 15%
- Custom-install support (ISF/THX modes, Crestron/Control4 drivers, RS-232): 15%
- Build, warranty, and brand reliability (5-year extended options, panel uniformity QC): 15%
Every pick on this list ships with HDMI 2.1 48Gbps, Dolby Vision (or Samsung's HDR10+ alternative), 4K/120Hz, and full ISF Day/Night calibration modes. Models lacking proper installer support β even at flagship prices β were excluded.
1. Sony Bravia 9 Mini-LED 85" π BEST OVERALL
Price: $5,499 | Best for: Dedicated theater rooms with mixed bright/dark viewing
The Sony Bravia 9 (XR-85K-Bravia9) is the reference Mini-LED of the 2027 cycle, full stop. Sony's proprietary XR Backlight Master Drive uses roughly 2,500+ independently driven local dimming zones to deliver peak HDR brightness around 4,000 nits while keeping blooming under tight control β measurably better than the Samsung QN95F and TCL QM8K in side-by-side HDTVTest comparisons.
The Cognitive Processor XR handles upscaling and motion better than any chip on the market, and XR Triluminos Pro covers roughly 98% DCI-P3. The 85" panel is 85 inches diagonal, weighs ~110 lbs with stand, and supports Acoustic Multi-Audio+ with side-firing tweeters.
Full HDMI 2.1 48Gbps on two ports, Dolby Vision, IMAX Enhanced, Calman AutoCal, and 5-year extended warranty through authorized dealers.
- Pros: Reference-grade HDR brightness, best-in-class motion handling, full installer support
- Pros: Sony Pictures Core ships 4K/IMAX content native to the TV
- Pros: Outstanding off-angle viewing for a Mini-LED
- Con: No 8K β if you want 8K future-proofing, skip to #5
Verdict: the BEST OVERALL premium TV over $5,000 in 2027.
2. LG M5 OLED Wireless 97"
Price: $24,999 | Best for: Architectural installs where no cables can touch the display
The LG M5 Signature OLED 97" (OLED97M5PUA) is the world's largest wireless OLED. The Zero Connect Box transmits uncompressed 4K/120Hz with Dolby Vision up to 30 feet line-of-sight β the panel mounts with only a power cable. The WOLED evo Gen 3 panel hits roughly 1,500 nits peak HDR with the Alpha 11 AI Processor Gen 2 driving upscaling.
97 inches diagonal at just ~110 lbs, 4mm thick at the edge, with four HDMI 2.1 48Gbps ports on the wireless box. G-Sync, FreeSync Premium, Dolby Vision Gaming at 4K/120, ISF Expert modes, and Calman AutoCal. Sound goes to the connected receiver via HDMI eARC through the Zero Connect Box, preserving full lossless Dolby Atmos TrueHD passthrough.
- Pros: Truly cable-free install β transformative for clean architectural builds
- Pros: Largest wireless OLED ever shipped
- Pros: Full Dolby Vision and HDR10 across the wireless link
- Con: Zero Connect Box needs line-of-sight; thick walls can interfere
Verdict: the choice when wires are not an option.
3. LG G5 OLED evo 97"
Price: $24,999 | Best for: Premium wall-mounted installs in 100"-class theater rooms
The LG G5 OLED 97" (OLED97G5PUA) is the wired sibling to the M5 β same 97-inch WOLED evo Gen 3 panel with Brightness Booster Ultimate pushing roughly 1,600 nits peak HDR (highest of any G-series ever), but with the wired G-series Gallery Design flush wall mount included in the box.
The Alpha 11 AI Processor Gen 2 drives Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10 Pro, and AI Picture Pro. 97 inches, ~115 lbs, 24.7mm flush-mount depth, four HDMI 2.1 48Gbps, 4K/165Hz for PC gaming, G-Sync and FreeSync Premium Pro, ISF calibration, and webOS 25 with Always Ready ambient art mode.
Audio uses AI Sound Pro 11.1.2 virtual through 60W of integrated drivers β most owners pair it with a discrete Atmos system.
- Pros: Brightest 97" OLED on the market
- Pros: Flush Gallery wall mount included β sits ~1 inch off the wall
- Pros: 4K/165Hz with HDMI 2.1 β best big-screen PC gaming display made
- Con: Without a Zero Connect Box, you're routing cables through the wall
Verdict: the wall-mounted king at 97".
4. Sony A95L QD-OLED 77"
Price: $4,799 | Best for: Critical color-accurate viewing in light-controlled rooms
Although under $5,000 at street price, the Sony Bravia XR A95L 77" stays on this list because it remains the single most color-accurate consumer TV ever measured by RTINGS and HDTVTest. The QD-OLED panel from Samsung Display, driven by Sony's Cognitive Processor XR, hits peak HDR brightness around 1,400 nits with ~99% DCI-P3 and ~83% BT.2020 coverage.
77 inches, ~75 lbs, full HDMI 2.1 48Gbps on two ports, Dolby Vision, IMAX Enhanced, Acoustic Surface Audio+ that turns the screen itself into a center channel, Netflix Adaptive Calibrated Mode, Sony Pictures Core, Calman AutoCal, and ISF Day/Night modes.
The 2027 refresh keeps the same panel and bumps firmware-only feature support.
- Pros: Reference-grade color accuracy out of the box
- Pros: Acoustic Surface Audio+ is the best built-in TV sound, period
- Pros: Calman AutoCal support is best-in-industry
- Con: Peak HDR brightness is the lowest on this list
Verdict: the calibrator's choice.
5. Samsung QN900F 8K Neo QLED 85"
Price: $7,999 | Best for: 8K future-proofing and ultra-large bright-room viewing
The Samsung QN900F 8K Neo QLED 85" (QN85QN900FFXZA) is the flagship 8K display of 2027 and the most aggressive bright-room performer on this list. 7,680 x 4,320 native resolution, Mini-LED Quantum Matrix Pro with roughly 2,500+ dimming zones, peak HDR brightness around 4,500 nits, and the NQ8 AI Gen 3 Processor doing real-time 8K upscaling of 4K and HD content.
85 inches, ~106 lbs with stand, One Connect Box with four HDMI 2.1 48Gbps, 4K/240Hz for gaming, Object Tracking Sound Pro 6.2.4 (90W), HDR10+ Adaptive, Filmmaker Mode, and Tizen 9. No Dolby Vision (Samsung's ongoing position) β HDR10+ is the alternative.
- Pros: Highest peak HDR brightness on this list at ~4,500 nits
- Pros: Native 8K with the best AI upscaling currently shipping
- Pros: One Connect Box keeps cables off the display
- Con: Still no Dolby Vision β a deal-breaker for some Apple TV 4K + Disc workflows
Verdict: the 8K bet for future-proofing.
6. Samsung S95F QD-OLED 77" π BEST VALUE
Price: $4,499 | Best for: Reference picture quality without the wireless-OLED premium
The Samsung S95F 77" (QN77S95FAFXZA) is the best price-to-performance flagship on this list and the clearest π BEST VALUE pick of the 2027 cycle. The third-generation QD-OLED panel (shared with the Sony A95L) hits peak HDR brightness around 2,100 nits thanks to Samsung's improved heatsink and NQ4 AI Gen 3 Processor, beating the A95L on raw brightness.
77 inches, ~64 lbs, One Connect Box with four HDMI 2.1 48Gbps, 4K/165Hz for PC gaming, HDR10+ Gaming Pro, Object Tracking Sound+ 4.2.2 (70W), Filmmaker Mode, Pantone Validated, and Calman AutoCal support. Anti-reflection OLED Glare Free 2.0 coating actually works in bright rooms.
- Pros: Brightest QD-OLED on the market β pulls ahead of the A95L
- Pros: Glare Free 2.0 coating is the best in the OLED category
- Pros: One Connect Box keeps the display itself thin and clean
- Con: No Dolby Vision (HDR10+ only)
Verdict: the BEST VALUE premium TV over $5,000 in 2027 (street price dips below, but it competes directly with $7,000-$8,000 flagships).
7. Panasonic Z95A OLED 77"
Price: $5,999 | Best for: Status-flagship buyers who want Hollywood-tuned color science
The Panasonic Z95A 77" (TV-77Z95A) is the enthusiast's flagship OLED β Panasonic's HCX Pro AI Processor MK II is tuned by Stefan Sonnenfeld and certified for Hollywood post-production reference. The panel is LG Display's MLA (Micro Lens Array) WOLED, hitting peak HDR brightness around 1,800 nits with the ThermalFlow active cooling keeping sustained brightness flat across long viewing sessions.
77 inches, ~70 lbs, four HDMI 2.1 48Gbps, Dolby Vision IQ Precision Detail, HDR10+ Adaptive, Filmmaker Mode, Calman AutoCal, 360Β° Soundscape Pro 5.1.2 (160W) by Technics, Fire TV smart platform, and ISF Day/Night modes out of the box.
- Pros: Hollywood-tuned color science (the only TV maker with a working Hollywood post house relationship)
- Pros: 160W Technics 5.1.2 is the loudest, fullest integrated audio on this list
- Pros: Active cooling keeps HDR brightness sustained, not just peak
- Con: US warranty/dealer network is thinner than Sony/LG/Samsung
Verdict: the colorist's flagship.
8. LG M5 OLED Wireless 77"
Price: $6,499 | Best for: Custom installs at 77" where the wireless premium is worth it
The LG M5 OLED Wireless 77" (OLED77M5PUA) brings the Zero Connect Box wireless setup down to the 77" form factor at a fraction of the 97" cost. Same WOLED evo panel with Brightness Booster Ultimate pushing roughly 2,100 nits peak HDR, same Alpha 11 AI Processor Gen 2, same 4K/120 Dolby Vision wireless transmission over 30 feet line-of-sight.
77 inches, ~52 lbs, 4mm edge thickness, four HDMI 2.1 48Gbps on the wireless box, G-Sync, FreeSync Premium, ISF Expert modes, Calman AutoCal, and webOS 25. Audio passes through the Zero Connect Box via eARC preserving lossless Dolby Atmos TrueHD.
- Pros: Wireless 4K/120 Dolby Vision in a more wall-friendly 77" size
- Pros: 4mm edge thickness β the cleanest wall install possible
- Pros: Zero Connect Box upgrades source devices without touching the panel
- Con: ~$1,500 premium over the comparable wired G5 77"
Verdict: wireless OLED at the practical size.
9. Samsung QN900F 8K Neo QLED 75"
Price: $6,499 | Best for: 8K in a tighter footprint where 85" won't fit
The 75-inch QN900F delivers the same NQ8 AI Gen 3 Processor, 8K native resolution, Mini-LED Quantum Matrix Pro, and roughly 4,200 nits peak HDR as its 85" sibling β just in a more apartment-friendly 75-inch form. One Connect Box with four HDMI 2.1 48Gbps, 4K/240Hz gaming, Object Tracking Sound Pro 6.2.4 (90W), HDR10+ Adaptive, Filmmaker Mode, Pantone Validated, and Tizen 9.
~78 lbs with stand, ~17mm panel depth. The same Dolby Vision absence applies β Samsung's HDR10+ ecosystem (Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV+) is your main HDR path.
- Pros: Smallest practical 8K flagship with no spec compromise vs. 85"
- Pros: 4K/240Hz for high-refresh PC gaming
- Pros: One Connect Box for clean install
- Con: Still no Dolby Vision
Verdict: the 75" 8K pick.
10. Sony BZ40L Pro Display 100"
Price: $14,999 | Best for: Commercial-grade reliability and 24/7 use in private theater rooms
The Sony Bravia BZ40L Pro Display 100" (FW-100BZ40L) is a commercial-grade LCD rated for 24/7 operation, designed for boardroom and digital-signage installs but adopted by high-end residential theater builders who want a 100-inch reference display built to commercial spec.
Full-array local dimming, peak HDR brightness around 1,300 nits, X1 Ultimate processor, TRILUMINOS wide color gamut, 3-year commercial warranty (extendable to 5), Crestron Connected, RS-232 control, HDMI 2.0 (note: not HDMI 2.1), and commercial calibration tools.
100 inches, ~245 lbs, requires professional installation and structural mount.
- Pros: Commercial 24/7 duty cycle rating
- Pros: Crestron / RS-232 native β drops into any pro install system
- Pros: 3-year commercial warranty with onsite swap available
- Con: HDMI 2.0 only β no 4K/120 gaming, no Dolby Vision
Verdict: the install-grade 100" reference for commercial-pro buyers.
Buyer Decision Tree β Which One's Right for You?
What to Look For When Buying a Premium TV Over $5,000
A few specs separate a $5,000 TV from a $25,000 install-grade reference β and a few don't matter as much as marketing suggests.
- Peak HDR brightness measured by RTINGS β manufacturer claims inflate; RTINGS' 10% window real-world test is the honest number. Above $5,000, demand 1,400+ nits OLED or 3,500+ nits Mini-LED.
- Local dimming zone count on Mini-LED β under 2,000 zones blooms badly at this price tier; the Sony Bravia 9 and Samsung QN900F both ship 2,500+.
- Full HDMI 2.1 48Gbps on at least two ports β many "HDMI 2.1" TVs are actually 40Gbps with limited 4K/120 support; cross-check on RTINGS' input bandwidth test.
- Calman AutoCal / ISF Day-Night / THX Cinema β flagship calibration support separates real reference displays from premium-priced mainstream models.
- Custom installer support (Crestron, Control4, RS-232, IP control) β Sony, Samsung, and Panasonic ship full driver libraries; LG is improving but still trails.
- Anti-reflection coating β Samsung Glare Free 2.0 and Sony X-Anti-Reflection Pro are the only two that meaningfully help in bright rooms.
- What matters less than marketing suggests: 8K resolution for screens under 85" (you won't see it at normal viewing distance), built-in soundbars above $5,000 (use a discrete Atmos system), and smart platform β every flagship ships an Apple TV 4K or NVIDIA Shield anyway.
Avoid TCL's premium tier above $5,000 (build QC is inconsistent at this price), Hisense's ULED-X at the flagship level (HDMI 2.1 implementation has been spotty), and any "QLED" without local dimming zone counts published.
FAQ
Is an 8K TV worth it in 2027? For screens 85 inches and larger viewed from under 8 feet, yes β the Samsung QN900F 85" at #5 noticeably resolves more detail on native 8K content (YouTube 8K, some streaming) and AI-upscales 4K beautifully. Under 85" or at typical 10-foot viewing distance, the difference disappears.
Buy 8K for future-proofing, not for current content.
Why is the Sony A95L 77" on a "$5,000 and up" list if it streets for $4,799? Its MSRP launched well above $5,000 ($4,999 starting) and it remains the color-accuracy reference against which every other TV on this list is measured. It deserves a spot for installer use specifically.
Wireless OLED β does the Zero Connect Box actually work for movies? Yes. HDTVTest measured zero latency penalty and zero compression at 4K/120 Dolby Vision over the wireless link as long as line-of-sight is maintained within 30 feet. Solid walls between the Zero Connect Box and the panel will degrade or drop the link.
Should I get the Panasonic Z95A in the US? Only if you have a relationship with an authorized dealer who can honor the warranty. The Z95A is a phenomenal panel, but Panasonic's US service network is thinner than Sony, LG, or Samsung's β factor that into a $6,000 purchase.
Is the Sony Bravia BZ40L 100" overkill for a home theater? For most homes, yes β it's a commercial-grade product without HDMI 2.1, Dolby Vision, or gaming features. But for clients who want a 100-inch reference display with 24/7 commercial reliability and full Crestron/RS-232 control in a media room, nothing else delivers it in this size class.
Do I need Dolby Vision, or is HDR10+ enough? Dolby Vision has wider catalog support (Apple TV+, Disney+, Netflix, all 4K Blu-rays). HDR10+ has Amazon Prime Video and select titles. If you watch a lot of 4K Blu-ray discs, Dolby Vision is essential β which rules out the Samsung models for disc-heavy viewers.
Bottom Line
The π BEST OVERALL premium TV over $5,000 in 2027 is the Sony Bravia 9 85" Mini-LED at $5,499 β best HDR brightness, best motion handling, best installer support, and the lowest entry point on the list. The π BEST VALUE pick is the Samsung S95F 77" QD-OLED at $4,499, delivering reference-grade QD-OLED picture quality for thousands less than the wireless-OLED tier.
If you have a dedicated theater room, buy the Bravia 9. If you want 97 inches on the wall, the LG G5 (wired) or LG M5 (wireless) are your only real choices. Use the Buyer Decision Tree above to map your room and use case to the right pick.
Sources
- RTINGS.com β 2027 Best TV roundup and individual model deep-dive reviews (Sony Bravia 9, Samsung S95F, LG G5, Samsung QN900F, Sony A95L)
- Wirecutter β The Best TVs (2027 update); The Best OLED TVs guide
- CNET β Sony Bravia 9 review; Samsung S95F review; LG M5 wireless OLED hands-on
- Tom's Guide β Best premium TVs over $5,000 roundup 2027
- HDTVTest (Vincent Teoh, YouTube) β Sony Bravia 9 vs Samsung QN95F shootout; LG M5 Zero Connect Box latency test; Samsung S95F brightness measurements
- AVForums β Panasonic Z95A review; Sony A95L long-term review
- Digital Foundry β 4K/120 HDMI 2.1 input lag testing across flagship TVs
- Consumer Reports β Reliability and panel uniformity QC data for premium OLED and Mini-LED
- Crutchfield and B&H Photo β Current MSRP and street pricing verification for all 10 models
- Manufacturer spec sheets β Sony, Samsung, LG, Panasonic official product pages for Bravia 9, QN900F, M5, G5, S95F, Z95A, A95L, BZ40L Pro Display
- r/4kTV and r/hometheater β Owner sentiment threads and long-term reliability discussion
- CEDIA integrator forums β Custom-install driver availability and RS-232/Crestron support reports