Universal Remote Compatibility Check
Select your TV brand and the universal remote you own or are considering buying. Get the exact codes to enter, the programming method for that specific remote, and confirmation of which features will work.
What brand is your TV?
Select the manufacturer name shown on the front of your TV
Which universal remote do you have?
Select the remote you own or are thinking of buying
The 3 Programming Methods — Which One Your Remote Uses
Universal remotes use three different programming methods. The method is fixed per remote model — you can't choose. Understanding which one your remote uses saves 20 minutes of failed attempts.
You type a 4 or 5-digit code directly using the number buttons while holding the Setup or Program button. The remote stores the code and starts working. Fastest method when you have the right code — worst method if you have to try 10 codes in sequence.
Hold the TV power button while the remote cycles through every code in its library automatically. The TV turns off when the right code is found — you stop there. Works without needing any specific code. Takes 2–10 minutes depending on the brand's position in the library.
The remote connects to an app or online database (Logitech MyHarmony, Sofabaton app) that downloads the correct code set for your exact TV model. Most accurate method — handles TV-specific button mappings that generic codes miss.
A dedicated "Code Search" button starts a manual scan. You press the TV power button once per second, and the remote increments through codes. Slower than auto-search but gives you more control. Common on One For All and Philips remotes.
Why Some Features Don't Work With Universal Codes
Universal remotes work by sending infrared (IR) codes that match your TV's signal library. Basic functions — power, volume, channel, input — use standardised codes that almost any universal remote can replicate. Advanced functions use manufacturer-specific codes that many universal remotes don't carry.
What almost always works: Power on/off, volume up/down, mute, channel up/down, input/source switching, and number entry. These are standardised across every universal remote.
What often doesn't work: Smart TV home button, settings menu, app-specific buttons (Netflix, Prime, Disney+ shortcuts), voice activation, and anything requiring Bluetooth rather than infrared. These require either the original remote or a smart universal remote with a comprehensive online database.
When to Buy a New Universal Remote vs Just Using the Original
A universal remote makes sense in specific situations. In others, the original remote — or a manufacturer replacement — is a better choice. Here's how to decide.
HDMI-CEC: How to Control Your TV With Any Remote (No Codes Needed)
If you're using a streaming stick, cable box or gaming console, you may not need a universal remote at all. HDMI-CEC lets the device's remote control your TV volume and power — no programming required.
For households where the TV is primarily used with a streaming stick, the Roku remote or Fire Stick Alexa remote handles everything via CEC — and those remotes are free with the device. The only reason to add a universal remote in this setup is if you want to also control a soundbar or cable box from the same handset.
Frequently Asked Questions
If none of the direct-entry codes work, switch to the Auto Code Search method: hold the Setup button until the LED blinks twice, press and hold the TV button, then slowly press the TV Power button once per second. When the TV turns off, immediately press Setup to lock in the code. This method cycles through the entire code library and will find a working code if one exists.
This is a partial code match — the remote found a code that controls some basic functions but not all. Try the second and third codes in the list above. Volume and power are the most common partial matches because they use industry-standard codes. Channel and input buttons require a more specific match to your TV's exact IR library.
For basic functions (power, volume, channels, input), yes. For Smart TV navigation — the home button, settings menus, and app shortcuts — most budget universal remotes only work partially or not at all. The smart menu buttons on LG webOS, Samsung Tizen and Sony Google TV require either the original remote, a brand-specific smart remote, or a high-end universal remote like the Logitech Harmony or Sofabaton U2 that pulls codes from an online database.
Budget universal remotes (GE, RCA, Philips) typically control 2–6 devices depending on the model — TV, cable box, DVD player, soundbar. Each device takes one of the remote's preset slots. Smart universal remotes (Logitech Harmony, Sofabaton) control 8–15 devices including IR devices, Bluetooth devices and smart home hubs.
Newer TV brands (TCL, Hisense, Element, Sceptre) have been added to remote code databases in recent years, but older physical code booklets don't include them. Visit the remote manufacturer's website for an updated code list — GE, RCA and Philips all maintain searchable online databases. Alternatively, use the Auto Code Search method, which cycles through the full library regardless of what the booklet says.
Yes. Most universal remotes include code sets for projectors and monitors in addition to TVs. The programming process is identical — select the device type (TV, projector or AUX depending on the remote), enter the brand code, and test. The same brands that make TVs (Epson, BenQ, ViewSonic) are included in most remote databases.

