2026 is going to be the year of RGB TVs. The biggest TV makers have sets coming out using next-gen RGB backlight technology, which basically replaces the blue or white backlight of a traditional mini-LED LCD TV with one that has full RGB color support, meaning that these TVs are more efficient, offer richer and more accurate colors, and can suffer less light leakage into dark areas.
Obviously, we need to wait and see just how well these TVs perform in practice – but TechRadar’s TV team has seen several of them in early demos, and they’re incredibly impressive. Wide viewing angles (often an issue with LCD TVs), vibrant yet realistic colors, inky deep black tones, powerful HDR highlights… they look like a huge danger to the best OLED TVs.
That’s in no small part because RGB TVs are set to arrive at only slightly higher prices than standard mini-LED technology, and that’s in their first year – think about how quickly standard mini-LED prices have dropped in the few years since their inception, meaning you can get a large-screen, great-quality mini-LED set for under $500 / £500 these days.
At the high end of OLED TVs (like the LG G5 and the Samsung S95F), there’s been significant development over the last few years – micro lens array, QD-OLED, Primary RGB Tandem, next-gen quantum dots.
The progress in mini-LED TVs, plus the arrival of competition for the creation of OLED panels between LG and Samsung, lit a fire under the high-end OLED world. It’s improving faster now than at any time in the 13 years OLED TVs have been mainstream.
But at the more affordable end? Not so much.
The LG C5 OLED uses essentially the same panel as the LG C4, and as the LG C3 – and the LG C6 also has it (although there will be a new LG C6H at larger sizes with a better panel).
The LG B5 affordable OLED uses basically the same panel as the LG B4, the B3, and… you get it.
And that’s been okay, because the TVs have been very high quality, and mini-LED TVs haven’t really been able to match OLED in the key area that people buy them for: the perfect black tones maintained down to the individual pixel.
That truly cinematic look just hasn’t come across the same in mid-range mini-LEDs… but RGB TV could change that. Sony told me that one of the advantages of using colorful backlights is that some light wavelengths are more easily absorbed in black areas than others, meaning that there will naturally be less ‘blooming’ from light areas to dark, as you get in current mini-LED TVs.
If mid-range RGB TVs get close to the contrast of cheaper OLEDs while outperforming them in color and brightness, even purists may turn to the RGB side.
Why is this still a problem for OLED?
The problem for OLED TVs has always been in the manufacturing. The materials needed for the organic pixels haven’t changed enough in price over time, and the complicated nature of depositing the material hasn’t shifted enough either. Yield rate is another major issue that still holds it back – the manufacturing process just isn’t reliable enough to keep prices from dropping.
There have been breakthroughs in areas like the holy grail new blue phosphor material, or the developments in inkjet-printed OLED materials – but I’ve been told by insiders that the latter is probably three years away from even starting to be used on TV-sized panels, and blue phosphor just won’t be enough on its own.
The costs of making OLED panels just haven’t changed enough over time to have ever made them truly cheap TVs, and while there’s no magic wand for making them less expensive suddenly now, there’s certainly more incentive.
Nothing motivates like an existential threat – and RGB TVs certainly have the potential to be just that for today’s affordable OLEDs.

The best TVs for all budgets
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