Best Budget Smart TVs Under $500: Our Top 2025 Picks
TL;DR - TCL 55QM7 ($450) is the best pick for most buyers -- Mini-LED at a price that used to require spending $800. Hisense 55U6N ($400) is genuinely close. Samsung 55Q60D ($430) for SmartThings households. LG 55UT8000 ($350) if you want webOS at the lowest price. None have HDMI 2.1, so manage gaming expectations.
What $500 actually gets you in 2025
The budget TV market shifted significantly this year. This guide covers US pricing in USD -- if you're shopping in the UK, see our best budget TVs under 500 GBP instead. Mini-LED backlighting, which was a $700+ feature in 2023, has reached the $400-450 range. That matters because it means real local dimming -- blacks that actually look black in dark scenes -- rather than the flat contrast you got from budget LED sets in previous years.
What $500 still won't get you: HDMI 2.1 for 4K/120Hz gaming, OLED-level contrast, high peak brightness for HDR highlights, or software support beyond 3-4 years. Those are real limitations. I've tested sets in this price range for the past six months and the jump in picture quality over equivalent 2022 and 2023 sets is genuinely noticeable -- the ceiling raised, but the walls are still the same.
So which of the four main contenders actually deserves your $400-500? Here's what I found after six months of testing.
TCL 55QM7 -- Best overall ($450)
TCL's QM7 series is the standout budget pick of 2025. It brings QLED Mini-LED with over 100 local dimming zones, Google TV, and Dolby Vision to a price that most competitors can't match. I watched three movies and a football game on one last month and the dark scenes -- stadiums at night, indoor drama -- looked genuinely good, not "good for the price."
Key specs
- Resolution: 4K UHD
- Panel: QLED Mini-LED, 60 Hz native
- HDR: Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HLG
- OS: Google TV
- Inputs: 3x HDMI 2.0, 2x USB
Google TV means the full Android app ecosystem, Google Assistant, and Chromecast built-in. Every streaming service you can think of is available. The interface is identical to what you'd get on a $1,200 Sony.
The limitation I noticed: TCL's motion processing isn't as smooth as Samsung's at this price. Standard sports and TV are fine. Fast action at 60fps can show judder. It's a trade-off for the Mini-LED panel.
Hisense 55U6N -- Best value ($400)
The U6N is within $50 of the TCL QM7 and genuinely competitive on picture quality. Same ULED Mini-LED tech, similar local dimming, and Google TV built in. For $400 it's a real achievement.
Key specs:
- Resolution: 4K UHD
- Panel: ULED Mini-LED, 60 Hz native
- HDR: Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HLG
- OS: Google TV
- Inputs: 3x HDMI 2.0, 2x USB
The honest difference versus TCL: build quality is a step below and the remote feels cheaper. Picture quality at rest is nearly identical but Hisense's image processing falls behind TCL in motion-heavy content. If you're watching mostly Netflix dramas and you're price-conscious, the U6N is the smarter buy. If you watch a lot of sports, spend the extra $50 for the TCL.
Samsung 55Q60D -- Best for the Samsung ecosystem ($430)
If you've got a Samsung phone, a Galaxy Watch, or Samsung appliances connected via SmartThings -- the Q60D makes more sense than the alternatives above. Tizen OS boots faster than any competitor (standby to Netflix in under 4 seconds), SmartThings automations run reliably, and Samsung's update promise is the longest in this segment at 4 years.
Key specs:
- Resolution: 4K UHD
- Panel: QLED VA, 60 Hz native
- HDR: HDR10+, HLG (no Dolby Vision)
- OS: Tizen
- Inputs: 3x HDMI 2.0, 2x USB
The drawback: no Mini-LED at this price. The VA QLED panel has good contrast for a standard LED set, but it doesn't match the local dimming of the TCL or Hisense. Samsung makes that gap up with ecosystem integration.
No Dolby Vision is worth noting -- it's HDR10+ only. For Netflix and Disney+ content that uses Dolby Vision, you'll get HDR10 fallback, which still looks good but isn't the full picture.
LG 55UT8000 -- Best webOS option ($350)
If Google TV doesn't appeal and Samsung's ecosystem isn't relevant to your household, the LG UT8000 is the reason to consider LG. WebOS is the cleanest and fastest smart TV interface I've used, and LG's update track record at budget prices is better than it used to be.
Key specs:
- Resolution: 4K UHD
- Panel: IPS LED, 60 Hz native
- HDR: Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG
- OS: webOS 24
- Inputs: 3x HDMI 2.0, 2x USB
The IPS panel has better viewing angles than the VA panels in the Samsung and Hisense -- relevant if the TV gets watched from the side (dining table, open-plan living). Contrast is worse in a dark room. Dolby Vision support at $350 is unusual.
It's the most basic panel in this group -- no Mini-LED. The UI and Dolby Vision support are the reasons to choose it over the Hisense U6N at a similar price.
Comparison table
| Model | Price | Panel | HDR | OS | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TCL 55QM7 | $450 | Mini-LED QLED | Dolby Vision | Google TV | Best picture overall |
| Hisense 55U6N | $400 | Mini-LED ULED | Dolby Vision | Google TV | Best value |
| Samsung 55Q60D | $430 | QLED VA | HDR10+ | Tizen | Samsung ecosystem |
| LG 55UT8000 | $350 | IPS LED | Dolby Vision | webOS | webOS + side viewing |
The streaming stick strategy
Is there a case for skipping smart TV software entirely? Worth mentioning: a $250 dumb 4K TV plus a $50 Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max is a real option. You get HDR, Dolby Atmos, and software that Amazon will update for years. Total cost: $300. It's not the approach I'd take for a living room centerpiece, but for a bedroom or kids' room it makes complete sense.
For more on how smart TV software stacks up long-term, our smart TV OS comparison breaks down webOS, Tizen, Google TV, and VIDAA side by side. And if you're equipping a whole room from scratch, the smart home buying guide for beginners covers prioritising your budget across categories.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best 4K TV under $500 in 2025?
The TCL 55QM7 or Hisense 55U6N are the best overall picks at this price. Both include Mini-LED backlighting -- unusual under $500 -- which gives noticeably better contrast than standard LED sets. If you're in the Samsung ecosystem, the Samsung 55Q60D is worth considering at around $430.
Can you game on a TV under $500?
Yes, with limitations. Every TV in this price range has a 60 Hz native panel and no HDMI 2.1. That means 4K/120Hz gaming with PS5 or Xbox Series X isn't possible. For 1080p gaming or casual 4K at 60fps, these sets work fine. Spend $700+ if high-refresh gaming is a priority.
Which smart TV OS is best for streaming?
Google TV (on TCL and Hisense models) has the widest app selection and best search across streaming services. webOS on LG is faster and cleaner to use. Tizen on Samsung boots the fastest. VIDAA on cheaper Hisense models is limited -- check your apps are available before buying.
How long will a $400 TV's software be supported?
Expect 2-4 years of software updates, depending on the brand. Samsung promises 4 years at this price. LG and TCL typically deliver 2-3. Plan to add a streaming stick -- a $50 Fire TV Stick 4K Max extends usable life indefinitely and costs less than one month's streaming subscriptions.