LG OLED B4
Entry-level OLED
LG builds the panels that end up in most rival OLEDs, and their C-series is the reference mid-priced OLED that reviewers benchmark others against. If you want OLED without paying Sony flagship prices, LG is the default answer.
Entry-level OLED
Perfect blacks
MLA panel
| Model | Tech | Size | Peak nits | HDMI 2.1 | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LG OLED B4 | OLED | 65″ | 700 | 4× | $1,299 |
| LG OLED C6 | OLED | 65″ | 1000 | 4× | $2,199 |
| LG OLED G6 Gallery | OLED | 77″ | 1500 | 4× | $4,499 |
LG strengths: Class-leading WOLED panels; Feature-complete gaming (4× HDMI 2.1); webOS is fast and clean.
LG weaknesses to weigh: OLEDs still trail Samsung/Sony peak brightness; Motion handling can feel aggressive out of the box.
Where LG shines is OLED — the panel technologies the brand invests most in. If your requirements land squarely in a different tech tier, another manufacturer may be a better fit; the brand comparison pages below spell out exactly where.
The OLED B4 is the strongest all-round pick for most rooms — Entry-level OLED.
Yes — LG's current OLED and QD-OLED sets ship with 4× HDMI 2.1, VRR and ALLM, matching the best gaming TVs on the market.
See the brand-vs-brand comparisons below for head-to-head picture, gaming and value analysis against every major rival.
Every recommendation combines your viewing distance, room lighting, primary use and budget. Sizes come from THX and SMPTE field-of-view standards; technology ranking uses documented panel behaviour in each lighting condition.
Availability and pricing vary by market. Use the market selector on the TV Decision Assistant to see the exact models sold locally and current retailer offers.
Run the TV Sizer calculator for a distance-based size recommendation, then use the assistant for a model shortlist tuned to your lighting, budget and use case.