TV Model Number Decoder
Enter any TV model number to instantly decode screen size, panel type, resolution, manufacture year, HDMI ports, HDR support, and smart TV platform.
How to Read a TV Model Number
TV model numbers look like a random string of letters and numbers but every character is intentional. Manufacturers encode screen size, panel technology, series tier, manufacture year, and regional variant into the model string. Once you know the pattern for each brand, you can decode any TV on the shelf or a used listing without needing a spec sheet.
Samsung Model Numbers Explained
A Samsung model like QN85QN90DAFXZA breaks down as follows: QN = Quantum (US market, Neo QLED), 85 = 85-inch screen, QN90 = Neo QLED 90-series (tier within the range), D = 2024 model year, A = production variant, FXZA = US region code. Samsung year letters run A=2021, B=2022, C=2023, D=2024. The leading prefix tells you the panel type: QN/Q = QLED or Neo QLED, S = QD-OLED, UN/UE = Crystal UHD LED, LS = The Frame. If the model contains a second QN after the size (like QN85QN90D), that inner QN indicates Neo QLED with Mini-LED backlighting.
LG Model Numbers Explained
LG OLED models follow a clear pattern: OLED65C4PUA = OLED panel + 65-inch + C-series + 4 (year: 2024) + P (production run) + UA (US region). The letter after the size number identifies the tier: C is LG's most popular mid-premium OLED, G is the brighter Gallery OLED, B is entry OLED, and Z is 8K OLED. The single digit after the tier letter is the year: 4=2024, 3=2023, 2=2022, 1=2021. For LG LED TVs, UR suffix = 2023, UQ = 2022, UP = 2021.
Sony Model Numbers Explained
Sony uses two key prefixes: XR (Cognitive Processor XR, flagship) and KD (standard X1 processor). A model like XR-65A95L = Cognitive Processor XR + 65-inch + A series (OLED) + 95 (tier number, higher is better) + L (2023 year). Sony year letters: J=2021, K=2022, L=2023, M=2024. The series letter after the size tells you the panel type: A = OLED, X = LED, Z = 8K. The number following the series letter (90, 95, 80, 70) indicates the tier within that category — 95 outperforms 90, which outperforms 80.
TCL, Hisense, and Vizio
TCL models start with the screen size, followed by the series designator. A 65R655 = 65-inch, R=6-Series, 655 = model variant. TCL's 6-Series (R/C suffix) uses Mini-LED and is considered a budget-friendly premium option. The 5-Series (S) is the value pick. Hisense models like 65U8K = 65-inch, U8 series (ULED Mini-LED), K = 2023 model year. Hisense year letters: G=2022, H/K=2023, N=2024. Vizio models start with a series letter (P=flagship, M=mid-range, V=value) followed by the screen size — a P65QX-J1 = P-Series Quantum, 65-inch, J=2021 production year.
Panel Types Compared: OLED vs QLED vs Mini-LED vs LED
The single most important spec in any TV is the panel and backlight technology. It determines contrast, black levels, brightness, viewing angles, and how well the TV handles HDR content. Here is an honest comparison of every panel type you will encounter in today's TV market.
OLED: Best Contrast, Self-Emissive Pixels
OLED (Organic Light-Emitting Diode) panels have individual pixels that produce their own light and can turn off completely. This delivers true infinite contrast — a black pixel is truly black, not dark grey — and essentially eliminates blooming (the halo effect around bright objects on dark backgrounds). Viewing angles are excellent. The primary limitations are peak brightness (OLED is improving but still generally dimmer than top-tier LED at maximum brightness) and the theoretical risk of image retention on static elements after very long display periods. In 2024, LG, Sony, and Samsung all offer OLED TVs, with QD-OLED (quantum dot layer on OLED) providing significantly enhanced color and brightness over traditional WOLED.
Mini-LED (Neo QLED / QNED / TCL 6-Series): Best Brightness
Mini-LED TVs use thousands of microscopic LED backlights instead of the handful of large LEDs in standard TVs, grouped into many local dimming zones. Samsung markets this as Neo QLED, LG as QNED, and TCL simply calls their 6-Series implementation Mini-LED. The result is dramatically higher peak brightness than OLED (important for HDR performance in bright rooms) with much better local dimming precision than standard LED. The tradeoff is that blooming — a visible glow around bright objects on dark backgrounds — is reduced but not eliminated as it is on OLED. For bright living rooms and sports viewing, a top-tier Mini-LED TV often outperforms OLED.
QLED: Quantum Dot Color Enhancement
QLED is an LED TV with a quantum dot film layer that converts the backlight into more precise colors, improving color accuracy and volume. It is not a fundamentally different display technology — it is still edge or direct LED with a quantum dot enhancement. Samsung's QLED lineup (Q70, Q80, Q90 series) covers the mid-to-upper range below Neo QLED. The performance difference between QLED and Neo QLED is significant in dark room HDR viewing due to Mini-LED's superior local dimming, but in a bright room with SDR content the gap narrows considerably.
Standard 4K LED: Best Value for Bright Rooms
Entry and mid-range 4K LED TVs — Samsung Crystal UHD, LG UR-series, TCL S-series, Hisense A-series — use conventional LED backlighting without quantum dots or mini-LED. They produce excellent images in well-lit rooms at prices well below OLED and Mini-LED. HDR performance is limited because the panels cannot get bright enough or dark enough to show HDR's full range, but for casual daytime viewing they represent exceptional value. A $350 Hisense U6 genuinely impresses in a living room with the lights on.
What to Look for When Buying a TV: Specs That Actually Matter
TV spec sheets are cluttered with marketing terms and proprietary feature names designed to obscure comparisons. Here is what actually matters for picture quality and which specs are mostly marketing noise.
Specs That Genuinely Matter
Panel and backlight type — The single most important spec. OLED, Mini-LED, or edge-LED determines contrast, black levels, and HDR capability more than anything else. Peak brightness — Measured in nits. HDR content needs at least 600 nits to show meaningful HDR, and 1000+ nits for impactful highlights. OLED TVs typically peak at 800 to 2000 nits depending on the model; Mini-LED TVs can reach 2000 to 4000 nits. HDMI version — HDMI 2.1 for 4K 120Hz gaming. At least one HDMI 2.1 port is essential for PS5 and Xbox Series X. Input lag — A game mode input lag below 15ms is good; below 5ms is excellent for competitive gaming. Local dimming zones — More zones means better HDR performance. Mini-LED TVs have hundreds to thousands of zones; standard LED TVs may have 10 to 60.
Specs That Are Mostly Marketing
Refresh rate claims like 120Hz "effective" or "TruMotion 240" — The native panel refresh rate matters; multiplied "effective" rates are interpolation processing and not a true panel capability. Look for native 120Hz for gaming and sports. Contrast ratio numbers — Manufacturers measure these differently and the numbers are not comparable between brands. Panel type is a better predictor of contrast than the stated ratio. Speaker wattage — TV speakers are uniformly poor regardless of wattage claims. A soundbar or home theater system is always worth prioritizing over premium TV speakers. HDR format count — Supporting 10 HDR formats sounds impressive but what matters is whether the TV can actually display high peak brightness to take advantage of any HDR format.
The Best Value Picks by Budget in 2024
Under $400: TCL S-Series or Hisense A6 for a bright-room LED TV. $400 to $700: TCL 5-Series QM5 or Hisense U7 for QLED with real HDR performance. $700 to $1200: TCL QM8, Hisense U8, or Samsung QN85B/QN85C (previous year Neo QLED on sale) for Mini-LED with excellent HDR. $1200 to $2000: LG C3 OLED or Samsung S90C QD-OLED for the best dark-room picture at a realistic price. Above $2000: LG G4 OLED, Samsung S95D QD-OLED, or Sony XR-A95L for flagship performance without budget compromise.
Frequently Asked Questions
Your TV model number appears in several places: on a sticker on the back of the TV (usually near the bottom edge or on the side panel), in the TV menu under Settings > Support > About This TV (or System Information), on the original box or receipt, and on the remote control packaging. The model number is typically a string of 8 to 18 characters mixing letters and numbers. On Samsung TVs it often starts with QN or UN. LG models often start with OLED or a size number. Sony models start with XR or KD.
OLED (Organic Light-Emitting Diode) has individual self-emissive pixels that turn off completely for perfect blacks and infinite contrast. QLED (Quantum Light-Emitting Diode) is an LED TV with a quantum dot filter layer that enhances color and brightness — it still uses a backlight, so black levels are not as deep as OLED but peak brightness is often higher. Neo QLED uses miniaturized LED backlights (Mini-LED) in addition to the quantum dot layer, which gives much better local dimming and brightness than standard QLED while narrowing the gap with OLED. QD-OLED combines a quantum dot layer with an OLED panel for both exceptional blacks and color volume.
The year suffix identifies which annual product cycle the TV belongs to. For Samsung, D = 2024, C = 2023, B = 2022, A = 2021. For LG OLED, the digit after the series letter indicates the year: 4 = 2024, 3 = 2023, 2 = 2022. For Sony, M = 2024, L = 2023, K = 2022, J = 2021. The year matters because newer models typically have improved processors, better HDR support, updated software, and current HDMI 2.1 ports. Older model year TVs are often available at significant discounts when newer models launch.
HDMI 2.1 supports up to 48 Gbps bandwidth, enabling 4K at 120Hz, 8K at 60Hz, Variable Refresh Rate (VRR), and Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM). These features are critical for PS5 and Xbox Series X gaming, which run games at 4K 120fps. HDMI 2.0 is limited to 4K at 60Hz — fine for most streaming and Blu-ray playback, but a bottleneck for next-generation gaming. If you own or plan to buy a current-gen gaming console, ensure your TV has at least one HDMI 2.1 port.
FALD stands for Full Array Local Dimming. It means the LED backlight is divided into multiple independently controlled zones behind the entire screen. When part of the image is dark, those zones dim or turn off completely, improving contrast. An edge-lit TV only has LEDs around the perimeter, which produces uneven lighting called blooming around bright objects on dark backgrounds. More dimming zones generally means better contrast and HDR performance. Mini-LED TVs like Samsung Neo QLED and LG QNED take this further with thousands of tiny zones for very precise dimming.
It depends on the brand and series. For OLED TVs, LG and Sony typically improve peak brightness and processing each year — the C3 (2023) is noticeably brighter than the C2 (2022). For mid-range LED TVs, the year-over-year differences are often minor: panel quality, input lag, and feature sets change incrementally. The most meaningful upgrades tend to happen every 2 to 3 years. Buying last year's flagship often provides better value than this year's mid-range — the 2023 LG C3 OLED discounted after the C4 launched frequently outperforms the 2024 B4 at a lower price.

