What actually matters
- 1Panel type decides the picture. OLED gives perfect blacks and the best contrast — superb in dim rooms and for films. Mini-LED / QLED goes brighter and is better value and better in bright rooms. Plain LED is fine for casual viewing on a budget.
- 2Brightness matters more than resolution. Every 55" worth buying is 4K. What separates them is brightness and contrast — that's what makes HDR look punchy. Don't pay for "8K" at this size; there's nothing to watch in it.
- 3Gamers: check for HDMI 2.1, 120Hz and VRR. If you have a PS5 or Series X, these unlock smooth 4K/120 gaming. Also look for low input lag and an ALLM "game mode".
- 4The OS and sound are secondary. Every brand's smart platform runs the main apps; you can add a streaming stick cheaply. Built-in speakers are universally thin — budget for a soundbar.
Typical UK price bands (2026)
| Budget | What you get |
|---|---|
| £330–£500 | A very good Mini-LED/QLED — bright, 4K, gaming-capable. Brilliant value for most living rooms. |
| £600–£900 | Step-up Mini-LED or entry OLED — noticeably better contrast and motion. |
| £1,000+ | Premium OLED — the best picture quality money buys at 55". Worth it for film fans and dim rooms. |
Common mistakes to avoid
- ✕Buying last year's flagship just because it's "a flagship" — a current mid-ranger often beats it and is supported longer.
- ✕Paying for 8K, or for a designer model, when picture quality is what you'll actually watch.
- ✕Trusting the in-store price — TVs are the single most price-volatile category across Currys, Argos, John Lewis, AO and Amazon.
See today's top 55-inch TVs — with live UK prices
Savvey Search asks your budget, room and whether you game, then shows three current, in-stock models with live verified UK prices — and deliberately steers you away from discontinued sets. TV ranges refresh every year, so always check what's current before you buy.
Get my TV picks →Is it actually a good price?
TV pricing is a minefield: the same model can differ by £100–£300 across retailers, "sale" prices are routinely measured against inflated RRPs, and last year's set is often sold alongside this year's at a confusing discount. Savvey matches the exact model number across 40+ UK retailers and shows the cheapest verified price against the market median — so you know whether that "£200 off" is real or theatre.
FAQ
OLED or Mini-LED?
OLED for the best contrast in darker rooms and film nights; Mini-LED/QLED for bright rooms and better value. Both look excellent — it's about your room, not bragging rights.
Is a 2026 model worth waiting for?
New ranges launch in spring; last year's models drop in price as they do. The previous generation is often the smart buy once this year's lands.
Do I need a fancy TV for gaming?
Only if you have a current console or PC and want 4K/120. Then look for HDMI 2.1, 120Hz and VRR — many mid-range sets now include them.