Sony Bravia A95L QD-OLED
Reference color
Sony's Bravia XR processor is why film-first buyers pay the premium. Motion, upscaling and tone mapping are the class benchmark, and the built-in speakers routinely embarrass competitors.
Reference color
Sony processing
| Model | Tech | Size | Peak nits | HDMI 2.1 | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sony Bravia A95L QD-OLED | QD-OLED | 65″ | 1500 | 2× | $3,499 |
| Sony Bravia X90L Full-Array LED | QLED | 75″ | 900 | 2× | $1,799 |
Sony strengths: Best-in-class image processor; Cinema-accurate colour out of the box; Sound is a step above rivals.
Sony weaknesses to weigh: Premium pricing; Only 2× HDMI 2.1 on most models; Google TV can be sluggish.
Where Sony shines is QD-OLED and Mini LED — 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 Bravia A95L QD-OLED is the strongest all-round pick for most rooms — Reference color.
Yes — Sony'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.