How much does an LG G5 OLED cost in 2027?
It depends — by 2027 the LG G5 OLED will most likely sell below its original launch MSRP, because premium TVs follow a predictable price-decay curve once a newer flagship replaces them. Expect the 2027 street price to land meaningfully under the 2025 launch figure, with the exact number driven by screen size, panel generation, regional taxes, and whether a successor model has already shipped.
The LG G5 is LG's "Gallery"-series flagship OLED, and flagship OLEDs almost never hold their debut price for two years. If you are budgeting for a 2027 purchase, the smarter question is not "what is the fixed price" but "where on the decay curve will the G5 sit by then, and is that the best value versus its successor." This essay walks through the forces that set that number so you can estimate it for your size and region rather than chase a single quoted figure.
Why can't anyone quote one fixed 2027 price for the LG G5?
Consumer-electronics pricing is not a static sticker; it is a moving function of supply, competition, and product lifecycle. A flagship TV launches at its highest price, then drifts downward as retailers clear inventory, promotional windows arrive, and — most importantly — the next model in the line appears. The LG G5 launched as a 2025 model-year flagship, which means by 2027 it will be roughly two product cycles old and likely discontinued or in clearance at many retailers. That single fact reshapes the entire pricing conversation, because you are no longer buying a current-generation halo product at full margin — you are buying a mature product whose price the market has already re-rated downward.
There is also no such thing as *the* LG G5 price, because the G5 is a family of sizes. The same model name spans small, mid, large, and very large diagonals, and the price gap between the smallest and largest panel in one series is often several multiples. Anyone answering "how much does the G5 cost" without naming a size is answering a different question than the one you are actually asking. A 55-inch clearance unit and an 83-inch flagship carry wildly different numbers even in the same store on the same day. When you estimate a 2027 figure, always anchor it to a specific size class first, then apply the lifecycle discount. The same disciplined "define the unit before you quote the number" habit shows up in revenue work too — see how it plays out in deal-level pricing hygiene.
A third reason no single number exists: prices are quoted in different *conditions* that are not comparable. A sealed new-in-box unit, a store open-box display, a manufacturer-refurbished set, and a third-party marketplace listing can all appear under the identical model name while representing four different value propositions. Averaging them into one headline figure produces a number that describes none of them accurately. The correct mental model is a distribution of prices across size, condition, and region — and your job is to locate *your* point in that distribution, not to memorize a mythical universal price.
How does a flagship OLED's price typically decay over two years?
Premium TVs follow a recognizable curve. At launch the price is highest and inventory is thin. Within the first few months, initial-adopter demand cools and the first promotional events — major shopping holidays, seasonal sales — shave the first chunk off. Around the one-year mark, the successor model is announced, and the outgoing flagship gets repositioned as the "value flagship" — still excellent, now discounted to move. By the two-year mark, which is exactly where a 2027 G5 purchase sits, the model is frequently in end-of-life clearance, refurbished channels, or open-box supply, all of which push the effective price down further.
The decay is not linear. It steps down at discrete events rather than sliding smoothly, so *timing your purchase around those events* matters more than watching the price daily. A shopper who checks prices at random has a poor chance of catching a step-down; a shopper who knows the calendar can wait a few weeks and capture a whole tier of discount at once. Below is the general shape of that curve for a flagship OLED like the G5.
Two forces accelerate this decay for OLED specifically. First, panel manufacturing yields improve over a model's life, lowering the floor a retailer can profitably sell at — the same hardware becomes cheaper to produce and stock, so the sustainable minimum price falls. Second, OLED faces intense competition from newer OLED generations and from high-end LED-backlit alternatives, and competitive pressure compresses margins on older flagships fastest. When a rival's newer panel lands at a comparable price, the aging G5 has to move on price to stay attractive. The net effect: a 2027 G5 should be a notably better value per dollar than it was at launch — the RevOps parallel is a maturing product whose unit economics improve as the cost curve falls.
It is worth stressing that "cheaper" is not the same as "obsolete." A flagship OLED from two years prior still delivers reference-class contrast, near-perfect blacks, and wide viewing angles, because the core panel technology does not degrade in capability just because a newer model exists. The decay curve reflects market positioning and inventory pressure far more than it reflects any real drop in the set's performance. That gap between *falling price* and *stable quality* is precisely what makes a two-year-old flagship such a strong value target — you are paying the clearance price for hardware that remains excellent.
What actually moves the 2027 number up or down?
Several independent variables stack on top of the base decay curve, and each can swing your real-world price by a wide margin. Understanding them lets you build a range rather than trust a single guess. The biggest levers are screen size, regional pricing and tax, channel (new vs. open-box vs. refurbished), and the timing of the LG G6/successor launch, which resets the whole hierarchy the moment it ships.
Screen size is the dominant factor — the largest diagonal in the G5 line can cost several times the smallest, so fixing your size collapses most of the uncertainty immediately. Region matters because import duties, VAT/GST, currency movement, and local competitive intensity mean the "same" TV carries very different sticker prices across countries; a price scraped from one market can mislead you badly about your own. Channel matters because a sealed-box new unit, a store open-box, a manufacturer-refurbished unit, and a third-party marketplace listing are four different prices for physically similar hardware, each with different warranty and return implications. And successor timing matters most of all: the moment a credible replacement flagship ships, the G5's price drops a step regardless of everything else, because retailers no longer need to protect the margin of a current model.
The diagram below breaks these forces into the branches that actually determine where your personal 2027 number lands. Read it as a checklist — resolve each branch for your situation and the plausible range narrows sharply.
Because these factors are independent, the honest way to answer "how much in 2027" is to give a *range* keyed to your specific size and region, then narrow it by watching the promotional calendar. Anyone offering a single precise figure two years out is guessing — the credible answer is a well-reasoned band. That discipline of quoting ranges under uncertainty rather than false precision is the same one good forecasters use, and it's worth internalizing across any number you're asked to commit to. Start with the launch MSRP for your size, subtract a lifecycle discount appropriate to a two-year-old flagship, widen the band for channel and region, and you have an estimate you can actually defend.
Should you buy the aging G5 in 2027 or its newer successor instead?
By 2027 you will almost certainly be choosing between a discounted G5 and a full-price newer flagship. The G5 wins on price-per-quality: a two-year-old flagship OLED still delivers reference-class picture performance, and the discount versus a current flagship is usually larger than the generational improvement most viewers can perceive. If your priority is the best image for the money, the aging flagship is frequently the value sweet spot — you capture nearly all the picture quality for a fraction of the current-model premium.
The newer model wins when you specifically need its new-generation features — the latest panel brightness gains, updated video processing, new port standards for gaming or high-refresh sources, or refreshed software-support timelines. Longevity of software updates is a real and underrated consideration: buying near end-of-life means fewer years of firmware, security, and app-ecosystem support ahead of you, and streaming apps do eventually drop older platforms. Weigh the discount against how long you intend to keep the set. For a five-to-ten-year hold, a slightly newer model's longer support tail can justify its premium; for a value-maximizing buyer replacing sooner, the clearance G5 is hard to beat. There is no universally correct answer — only the answer that fits your budget, your tolerance for aging software, and how much the marginal picture improvement is worth to your eyes.
How should you actually estimate and track the price for your situation?
Treat it as a monitoring problem, not a one-time lookup. Pick your exact size, set price alerts across several reputable retailers, and watch the two events that matter most: major seasonal sale windows and the announcement of the successor flagship. The lowest prices cluster tightly around those moments, so patience beats vigilance. Set a target band based on the launch price minus a lifecycle discount, and buy when a listing enters your band from a seller you trust. This converts an anxious daily price-check into a calm, rules-based decision: you already know your number, so you simply wait for the market to meet it.
Verify the channel before you celebrate a low number. A price that looks dramatically below market is often an open-box, refurbished, gray-import, or a different — smaller or older — panel than you assumed. Confirm the exact model code, screen size, panel year, warranty coverage, and seller reputation before you commit. A genuine new-in-box clearance unit and a questionable marketplace listing can show the same headline number for very different actual value, and the difference only surfaces when something goes wrong and you need the warranty. Doing this homework converts a vague "how much" into a confident, defensible purchase decision — you buy a known unit, at a known condition, at a price you set in advance, from a seller who will stand behind it.
Related questions
Will the LG G5 be discontinued by 2027?
Very likely. Flagship OLEDs are typically superseded within a year and phased out over the following year, so by 2027 the G5 will most likely be in clearance or end-of-life channels rather than mainline stock.
Is a two-year-old flagship OLED still worth buying?
Usually yes. Reference-class OLEDs age well on picture quality, and the clearance discount often outweighs the modest generational gains, making an older flagship the value pick for most viewers.
Does screen size change the answer a lot?
Enormously. The largest diagonal in a flagship line can cost several times the smallest, so any price estimate is meaningless until you fix the exact size you intend to buy.
When are OLED TVs cheapest during the year?
Prices bottom around major seasonal shopping events and again when a successor model is announced. Aligning your purchase to those windows captures most of the available discount.
Should I wait for the LG G6 instead?
Only if you need its new-generation features or a longer software-support runway. If you want the best picture per dollar, the discounted outgoing flagship is usually the smarter buy.
FAQ
Why do TV prices drop so much after launch? Launch prices capture early-adopter demand and thin inventory at the highest margin. As manufacturing yields improve, promotional windows arrive, and — critically — a successor model ships, retailers step the price down to move remaining stock. The result is a curve that falls in discrete jumps over roughly two years, which is exactly the window a 2027 G5 purchase falls into. The picture quality does not fall with the price; only the market positioning does.
How much cheaper is a flagship OLED two years after launch? There is no fixed percentage, but two-year-old flagships commonly sell well below their debut price, especially once they hit clearance and open-box channels. The exact discount depends on size, region, competition, and whether the successor has shipped. Build a personal target band from the launch price and watch for listings that fall into it, rather than trusting any single quoted percentage.
Is it safe to buy an open-box or refurbished G5? It can be a strong value if you verify the source. Manufacturer-refurbished and reputable-retailer open-box units usually carry some warranty and have been inspected. Confirm the exact model code, size, panel year, warranty terms, and return policy before buying, and be cautious with third-party marketplace listings that lack those protections. The savings are real, but only when the warranty and condition are genuinely documented.
Does region change the price significantly? Yes. Import duties, VAT/GST, currency movements, and local competitive intensity mean the same model carries very different stickers across countries. Always estimate using prices from your own region and factor in taxes, because a figure quoted for one market can be misleading elsewhere. Cross-border deals can look attractive until shipping, duties, and warranty gaps are added in.
Will the G5 still get software updates in 2027? Likely for a while, but nearer the end of its support window than a current model. If long-term app-ecosystem and firmware support matters to you — for a long hold of several years — weigh that shorter remaining runway against the clearance discount when deciding between the G5 and a newer flagship. A shorter support tail is a legitimate reason to pay more for a newer set if you plan to keep it a decade.
What's the single best way to get a low price in 2027? Set price alerts for your exact size across several reputable retailers, then buy during a major seasonal sale or right after the successor flagship is announced — the two moments when prices step down hardest. Verify the channel and model code before purchasing so a "deal" isn't actually a different or lesser unit. Patience plus a pre-set target band beats constant price-watching.
Is the G5 or a competing brand's OLED the better 2027 value? Compare within the same tier and size. By 2027 several brands' two-year-old flagships will be discounted simultaneously, so shop the category, not just one model. Judge on measured picture performance per dollar, warranty, and remaining software support rather than brand loyalty alone. The best value is often whichever comparable flagship happens to be deepest into its clearance cycle when you buy.
Sources
- LG Electronics — TVs
- Rtings — TV Reviews and Comparisons
- CNET — TV Reviews and Buying Guides
- Consumer Reports — Televisions
- Wirecutter — The Best OLED TV
- TechRadar — Best OLED TV Buying Guide
- Tom's Guide — Best TVs
- Display Supply Chain / panel market analysis
