TV Lifespan & Health Estimator

TV Troubleshooting
50+ Brands 4 Panel Types Updated March 2026 100% Free

TV Lifespan & Health Estimator

Find out exactly how much life your TV has left. Enter your brand, panel type, age, and daily usage — get a health score, years remaining, and personalised maintenance tips in 30 seconds.

50+ Brands 4 Panel Types Instant Results
Brand new20 years
1 hr/day18 hrs/day
0 Health Score
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Hours Used
Est. Years Left
Expected Lifespan
Personalised Maintenance Tips
    Time to start thinking about a replacement

    Based on your TV's health score, here are the best replacements on Amazon right now.

    TV Health Guide

    How Long Do TVs Actually Last?

    Manufacturer lifespan ratings measure panel hours — not years — because usage varies so much. At 6 hours a day, here is what each panel type realistically delivers.

    LED / LCD Most common

    Rated at ~80,000 hours. At 6 hrs/day that is 36 years in theory, but real-world lifespan is 7–10 years because capacitors, power boards, and backlights degrade independently of the panel rating.

    QLED Samsung standard

    Essentially LED with a quantum dot filter layer for richer colour. Same ~80,000-hour backlight rating as LED. Longevity is nearly identical — the quantum dot layer itself does not degrade meaningfully.

    OLED Shorter but vivid

    Rated at ~60,000 hours. Organic compounds degrade faster than LED backlights, especially at high brightness or with static content. Typical real-world lifespan: 6–8 years at average use.

    Plasma Discontinued 2014

    Also ~60,000 hours rated. Most plasma sets are now 12+ years old — well into the phosphor fade zone. Picture gradually dims rather than failing suddenly. Repair parts are increasingly unavailable.

    The Real Causes of Early TV Failure

    Panel hours are only part of the story. These are the actual causes of premature failure — in order of how often they occur.

    Heavy daily use Every extra hour per day above 6 accelerates backlight wear proportionally. Going from 6 hrs to 12 hrs per day effectively halves your expected lifespan.
    High brightness Running backlight at 100% vs 50% can cut panel life by 30–40%. Store mode and Dynamic mode are the worst offenders — both ship enabled by default.
    Power surges A single unprotected surge can instantly kill the power board. Surge protectors cost under £15 and prevent the single most common cause of sudden, total TV failure.
    Dust & heat Blocked vents raise internal temperature. Every 10°C of extra heat roughly halves the lifespan of electronic components. Clean vents with compressed air every 6 months.
    Static images Affects OLED most severely. News tickers, game HUDs, and channel logos left on screen for hours leave permanent ghost images. Enable pixel shift and avoid long static sessions.
    Capacitor wear Affects all TVs after 7–10 years regardless of brand. Symptoms: slow startup, random shutdowns. Often fixable by a technician for under £60 — worth trying before replacing.

    Most of these are preventable. A surge protector, lower brightness settings, and keeping vents clear will do more for your TV's longevity than anything else.

    Repair or Replace? The Honest Answer

    Most TV repairs fall into two categories: cheap fixes under £80 (capacitors, power boards, HDMI ports) and expensive fixes over £150 (panel replacement, main board on newer models). The second category is rarely worth it.

    The 40% rule: if repair cost exceeds 40% of a comparable replacement, replace it. For a TV over 8 years old, drop that threshold to 25%.

    One exception: if your TV has a premium panel — a high-end OLED or a large QLED — repair economics shift. A £120 board repair on an 85″ TV that would cost £1,800 to replace is nearly always worth doing.

    Before you decide: get one technician quote. Many faults that look terminal (no picture, random shutdowns, will not turn on) are power board failures that cost £40–£70 in parts. The health tool above gives you the context to decide whether that quote is worth pursuing.

    Frequently Asked Questions