Something I find mildly comforting is that in an age when people are encouraged to replace their phone, fitness tracker, or computer every three years — if not faster — TVs haven’t succumbed to the same pattern. In the US, people typically keep a TV for well over five years, and sometimes up to a decade or more. You may end up holding onto yours longer than your car.
The most common TV format today is the LCD, equipped with LED backlights. There are a few variants of this, such as QLED and mini-LED, but they all share the same fundamental technology. How long can you expect an LCD/LED TV to last? The answer is generally encouraging, but not necessarily a huge advantage over OLED except under certain circumstances.
How long will my LED TV last?
Breakdowns, obsolescence, and other factors
In terms of longevity before failure, there’s no definite number, and even broad estimates vary wildly. The weak point in any LCD is its LED backlights, owing to wear caused by heat. Reviewed claims that on average, an LCD should last 40,000 to 60,000 hours when running at maximum (or near-maximum) brightness. That translates into 4.5 to 6.8 years of continuous viewing, but of course most people don’t leave a TV on 24/7, let alone with brightness cranked as high as possible. That means that in calendar years, you can probably expect LCDs to last over a decade, barring defects or fluke incidents.
That raises another issue though, which is build quality. A high-end LCD is liable to last longer than a budget model, and indeed Samsung claims that its QLED TVs should operate for 70,000 to 100,000 hours — roughly 8 to 11 years continuously. In practical terms, that’s so long that reliability is almost irrelevant, unless perhaps you’re hoping to hand a TV down to your child.
The real reason I say “almost” is because there are other ways in which an LCD can break down. Problems with the rest of the display panel could result in dead pixels or visual artifacts. There’s also the potential for port or processor failures, though I’ve never heard any anecdotes along those lines.
An LCD should offer at least 4.5 to 6.8 years of continuous viewing, but of course most people don’t leave a TV on 24/7, let alone with brightness cranked as high as possible.
Arguably, more important than durability is obsolescence. There’s a decent chance that if you bought a TV in 2011, it could still be running today, but it would be a 720p or 1080p set without HDR (high dynamic range), or even HDMI 2.0 ports, which are rapidly being replaced by HDMI 2.1 and 2.2. You’d be missing out on major features such as 4K and high refresh rates. You’d also be stuck with an outdated software interface that would essentially force you to buy an add-on media streamer, since the TV’s proprietary apps will have long been abandoned.
Most TVs now run on common software platforms like Google TV, Fire TV, or Roku OS. Though that ensures better support, it’s not infinite. At some point, your TV’s processor will be considered too slow to keep up with newer features and app updates. So while your TV might continue to work, some apps might not, once again nudging you into replacing your set or buying an add-on streamer.
The good news on this front is that companies aren’t leaving us twisting in the wind, at least not as quickly as they do in the phone world. A Roku TV from 2014 should still be able to update to Roku OS 15, the latest version. Things are less stable for Fire- and Google-based devices — Google TV only premiered in 2020, and Fire TV is transitioning to a badly-needed redesign — but the odds are that something you buy today will get updates for five years or more. Heck, some phones are getting promises of longer update cycles.
How does LCD/LED compare to OLED?
A complicated relationship
Despite its name, OLED operates very differently from an LCD. There aren’t any LED backlights — instead, every pixel is self-illuminating, which is what enables OLED’s extremely precise color and contrast. It’s considered the gold standard for visual fidelity, at least for those of us who don’t have tens of thousands of dollars to drop on state-of-the-art Micro LED technology.
Having fewer parts is beneficial, but complications arise from the “O” part of OLED, which refers to an organic electroluminescent layer. This tends to degrade faster than the synthetic content in LCDs, and that process can accelerate under heavy usage. So while an OLED TV might theoretically run for up to 100,000 hours, some models might last as little as 30,000. That’s still pretty good, practically speaking. You’d have to run a low-end TV for 8 hours a day, every day to kill it in 10 calendar years.
Modern OLEDs use a variety of measures to try to counteract burn-in, such as pixel shifting and dimming the brightness of logos, but the threat still exists.
That’s ignoring a couple of other issues, however, the most critical being burn-in. This is caused by some pixels degrading faster than others when static elements are left onscreen for a long time. Modern OLEDs use a variety of measures to try to counteract this, such as pixel shifting and dimming the brightness of logos, but the threat still exists. You may end up replacing an OLED well before the 10-year mark if burn-in “ghosts” become too noticeable to ignore.
The other problem is brightness reduction. You probably won’t notice for a while, since TVs can ramp up their power use to compensate, but eventually there will be a visible difference versus when you first bought your set. LCDs can fall prey to weakening backlights before they fail outright, to be fair.
Should you choose an LCD/LED or OLED for longevity?
An increasingly irrelevant distinction
Strictly speaking, an LCD is the safer bet. Although both LCDs and OLEDs can potentially last over a decade, the risk of burn-in with OLEDs is real, especially if you spend long hours gaming on them or using them as PC monitors. You can stretch things out by adopting certain habits, like turning your TV off whenever you leave the room, but there’s only so much these and built-in countermeasures can do.
Technology keeps evolving, so by the time OLED burn-in becomes a factor, you might be looking to move on for other reasons anyway.
That said, the two formats are equally vulnerable to hardware and software obsolescence. Technology keeps evolving, so by the time OLED burn-in becomes a factor, you might be looking to move on for other reasons anyway. Who knows, maybe we’ll finally get affordable 8K TVs.
Ultimately LCD and OLED will probably give way to Micro LED. By 2030, you may not even care about owning a TV — companies like Apple, Meta, and Samsung are racing to develop more affordable and compact AR glasses. Beyond the social aspect, there’s not much point splurging on a 75-inch TV when you can simulate a theater-sized screen anywhere you go.
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