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Best 65-inch 4K TVs of 2017: the best big screen TVs for any budget

If you’re looking for a way to revolutionize the way that you binge your favorite TV shows, or experience your favorite movies, the best 65-inch TVs will do all of that and more. These TVs might take up a lot of space, but that’s a negligible compromise to pay to have a theater-like experience from the comfort of your couch.

Any 65-inch TV that stands above the rest of the pack this year is going to have a 4K Ultra HD display and will probably have High Dynamic Range (HDR). 4K offers a super crisp image that’s absolutely essential on a 65-inch display, and HDR adds some stunning color recreation that will make the viewing experience even more enjoyable.

Aside from the immense 65-inch display sizes, you’ll also see Sony, Philips and Panasonic offering OLED display technology, which has amazing contrast ratios, while Samsung offers its own QLED technology that functions similarly. There are even some LCD displays still showing great image performance in spite of the age of the technology.

After all that, you’ve still got to find a TV with all the connectivity and access to content you want. But, we’ll help you figure it out with our recommendations for the best 65-inch TVs of 2017. 

Sony KD-75X9405C

The LG OLED C7 stands far above the competition and sits comfortably at the top of our list – available in a 65-inch iteration as well as a 55-inch. It's here because it delivers better light control and brightness than last year’s C6 (something we previously thought was impossible), making it a high dynamic range performer that doesn't sacrifice OLED’s renowned standard dynamic range capabilities. It delivers this exciting display technology at a price that finally makes OLED a financially viable alternative to top-end LCD sets  making it, beyond the shadow of a doubt, one of 2017’s most essential TVs.

There are other OLEDs worth considering this year (see: Sony's A1E OLED or LG's B7 and W7) but when considering just how much LG's OLED C7 offers for its price, there's just no TV this year that matches it.

Read the full review for the 55-inch version: LG OLED C7 (OLED55C7)

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Panasonic TX-65CZ950

It’s unfortunately an inevitable truth that LCDs will never reach the same black levels that OLED displays can. However, Sony’s X900E’s HDR capabilities bring it within reach of those titanic heights. 

This is possible because of the panels direct LED backlight, which allows it to achieve a brightness uniformity that edge-lit displays are incapable of producing. 

Add in phenomenal detail and motion handling, the Sony BRAVIA XBR-65X900E (called the KD-65XE90 in the UK) strikes a fantastic balance between price and performance for mid-range 4K TVs and is well worth considering ... even if its Android TV interface can feel a little clunky, and its remote a little flimsy.  

Read the full review: Sony BRAVIA XBR-65X900E

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LG 65EF950V

The first Ultra HD Premium-rated TV to land in the UK was a real head-turner. We loved the vibrancy of its images, and the native HDR the picture performance bordered on breathtaking. The full array backlight presented problems (don't think we forgot), but we reckon the visual benefits probably outweigh content-specific backlighting issues.

Having Netflix and Amazon 4K on tap is a major plus point, and more good news is that it can also look pretty great with Full HD content, particularly Blu-ray.

It might not have the hutzpah to overtake some of this year's best and brightest panels from LG and Samsung, but considering how well it performs for its price, it may very well be the screen to convince you that HDR is the next giant quantum leap in image quality we've all been promised. 

Read the full review: Panasonic TX-65DX902B

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LG 65EC970V

If you have the money to bankroll them, the 65A1E – and the A1E OLED series overall – are crowd pleasers in just about every way. Their ‘picture only’ design has been beautifully realized, managing to be simultaneously subtle and dramatic. Their vibrating screen delivers a far more powerful and effective sound performance than we’d ever thought possible.  

The real stars of the show here, though, are the A1’s exquisitely detailed, contrast-rich and colorful pictures. These prove emphatically what we’ve long suspected: More brands using OLED technology can only lead to good things. 

Read the full review: Sony Bravia OLED A1E

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Samsung UE65JS9500

Samsung was the first brand to introduce an HDR-compatible screen way back in 2015, but it's not been resting on its haunches ever since. 

It's latest flagship, the QN65Q9F (QE65Q9FAM in the UK), is a perfect example of this. It ups the brightness to 1500 nits, 50% higher than the level required for UHD Premium certification, making it one of the brightest TV we've ever tested. 

Outside of an impressive-sounding number this brightness has a real impact on the set's image quality. Detail is preserved in even the brightest areas of the image, and colors are exceptionally vivid and bright. That means even non-HDR content looks fantastic thanks to Samsung's SDR upscaling technology. 

No TV is perfect, and the Q9F can occasionally suffer from some backlight clouding around bright objects and some settings cause color striping in HDR colors, but in all other respects this is the best television around at the moment. 

Read the full review: Samsung Q9F QLED TV

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Samsung UE65JS9000

Look, there aren't many people out there willing to drop a few months' of rent on Sony’s 2016 flagship TV. But those who are will be teated to some of best images this side of a high-tech movie theater. 

In fact, it might just be the holy grail of television for 2016: a TV able to combine the extreme, high dynamic range-friendly brightness of LCD technology with a 600 LED backlight arrangement capable of getting LCD closer than ever before to the stunning light control you get with OLED technology.

If all that wasn't enough, the 65Z9D also sports the ‘X1 Extreme’ video processing system and the latest version of Sony’s reliable Triluminos wide color technology for unlocking the extended color spectrums associated with HDR sources – a must-have if you want to get the most from your movie collection.

Read the full review: Sony XBR-65Z9D

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LG 60UF850V

LG's 'B' line of OLEDs has consistently offered a great entry point into the display technology without compromising on what makes it so exciting. 

And the B7 series is no different. 

Contained within the TVs is exactly the same panel that's powering the more expensive C7, E7 and yes even the W7 LG televisions, which means an exceptional bump over last year's OLED panels at a much lower price. 

So where has LG saved the money? In a word, sound. The B7's downward firing speakers are the worst all the company's OLED TVs. Not only that, but the set is also currently unable to pass Dolby Atmos to an external sound system over HDMI (although a firmware update to fix this is on the way). 

If however, you're content to put up with a standard surround sound experience, then the B7 is a fantastic entryway into a piece of TV tech that still feels futuristic in 2017. 

Read the full review of the 55-inch vesion: LG OLED C7 (OLED55C7)

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Best 65-inch TV

By introducing its exceptional X1 video processor further down its TV range than ever before and being brave enough to dial down the brightness a bit to deliver a more even, immersive backlight experience, Sony's struck mid-range gold with the XBR-65X850E (KD-65XE8596 in the UK). 

While it's not the brightest or most colorful TV on the list, the simple fact is that few TVs we’ve seen in recent times have balanced price, contrast, brightness and color quite so all-round effectively as the 65X850E.

All that said, if you're looking for a great TV that doesn't destroy the bank account, Sony's X850E 65-inch star is the clear winner.

Read the full review: Sony XBR-65X850E



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