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Roku Select Series 40R3E5 40"

The 1080p Full HD Direct LED display and responsive Roku platform deliver automatically updated streaming with fast app launches. It offers unique value through 500+ free live TV channels and Apple AirPlay 2 integration for effortless device sharing. This 40-inch TV is best for budget-conscious smart home users placing a secondary screen in bedrooms or kitchens where voice control matters more than gaming.

★★★★★ 4.8 (137)
Screen 40
Resolution 1920x1080
Panel LED
Refresh 60 Hz
smart platform Roku TV
dolby vision false
dolby atmos false
hdmi version 2.0
Roku Select Series 40R3E5 40" tv
44 Overall Score
Also available in:

About This TV

The 1080p Full HD Direct LED display and responsive Roku platform deliver automatically updated streaming with fast app launches. It offers unique value through 500+ free live TV channels and Apple AirPlay 2 integration for effortless device sharing. This 40-inch TV is best for budget-conscious smart home users placing a secondary screen in bedrooms or kitchens where voice control matters more than gaming.

  • Screen size 40
  • Resolution 1920x1080
  • Panel type LED
  • Refresh rate 60
  • Smart platform Roku TV
  • HDMI version 2.0

The 30-Second Version

A stunning 4.7-star satisfaction rate and a smart platform in the 90th percentile make this a crowd favorite for casual streamers. But the display lands in the bottom 6% of all TVs, and gaming performance scrapes the 17th percentile, so it's strictly a secondary TV for undemanding rooms. At $130 to $230, you're buying the Roku experience, not the picture.

Overview

The Roku Select Series 40R3E5 lands with a 4.7-star rating from over 2,000 buyers, pushing its social proof into the 98th percentile, and the smart platform sits in the 90th percentile. That tells you exactly what this 40-inch 1080p TV gets right: a dead-simple, fast Roku experience that people genuinely love. But those are just about the only numbers worth celebrating. The display ranks in the bottom 6% of all TVs we track, picture quality flounders at the 36th percentile, and gaming performance is abysmal at the 17th. So you're looking at a TV that nails the streaming interface part and fumbles the part that actually puts images on the screen.

If you're hunting for a secondary screen for a bedroom or kitchen, where pixel-level perfection isn't the priority, the Roku OS and $130 to $230 price tag make a tempting pair. The direct LED backlight and 60Hz panel deliver a functional, no-fuss picture, but don't expect any HDR magic (the 13th percentile score is a warning label). Audio is merely adequate, and connectivity sits exactly average. Everything about this model says "cheap and cheerful second TV," and the owner reviews overwhelmingly agree it delivers on that no-frills promise.

Performance

The 1080p direct LED panel is the main story, and it's a sobering one. Our scoring puts the display quality at the 6th percentile, meaning 94% of all TVs we've assessed outperform it. Brightness is modest, contrast is nothing special without any local dimming, and colors never pop the way they would on even an entry-level 4K quantum dot set. The "Roku Smart Picture" processing tries to tidy things up, but you can't polish away the core limitation: this is a basic 1080p screen in a world that's moved on. If you're streaming mostly sitcoms, news, or kids' cartoons, it gets the job done, but anything cinematic looks a bit flat and lifeless.

Gaming is an afterthought here, landing at the 17th percentile. The 60Hz refresh rate and HDMI 2.0 ports mean no variable refresh rate, no 120Hz support, and input lag that's probably not atrocious but certainly not optimized. If you planned to hook up a PS5 or Xbox Series X, you'll be staring at a 1080p/60Hz ceiling while every modern console begs for more. Audio from the 2.0-channel speakers ekes out a 41st percentile score, so dialogue comes through clearly enough, but there's zero bass weight or volume headroom for a larger room. You'll want a budget soundbar for anything beyond casual viewing.

Performance Percentiles

Hdr 13.1
Audio 40.4
Smart 86.4
Gaming 17.1
Display 6
Connectivity 52.4
Social Proof 98.1
Picture Quality 36.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Roku smart platform ranks in the 90th percentile and feels snappy every time you use it 98th
  • 4.7-star owner satisfaction (98th percentile social proof) tells you most buyers are genuinely happy 86th
  • Pricing between $130 and $230 makes it one of the cheapest name-brand TVs around
  • Lightweight 4.7kg body and 200x200 VESA mount make wall installation a breeze
  • Three HDMI ports and Bluetooth 5.2 give decent connectivity for a budget set

Cons

  • 1080p direct LED display sits in the bottom 6% of our database for overall display quality 6th
  • Picture quality scores a dismal 36th percentile, so nothing you watch will look particularly impressive 13th
  • Gaming is a hard pass with a 17th percentile rating and no 120Hz or VRR support 17th
  • HDR effectively doesn't exist here (13th percentile); you'll get a washed-out image if you force it
  • The included stand is widely reviled as flimsy, and audio scrapes by at the 41st percentile

The Word on the Street

4.7/5 (2058 reviews)
👍 Owners repeatedly highlight how fast and frustration-free the Roku operating system is.
👍 Many buyers feel the 1080p picture looks crisp enough for everyday shows in small rooms.
👎 A persistent complaint is the cheap, unstable table stand that makes the TV wobble.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 40"
Resolution FHD
Panel Type LED
Backlight Direct LED
Curved No

HDR

Dolby Vision No
HDR10+ No
HLG No

Gaming

Refresh Rate 60 Hz

Smart TV

Platform Roku TV
Voice Assistant Not Applicable
Screen Mirroring Apple AirPlay 2, Miracast
Works With Apple Home, Amazon Alexa, Google Home

Audio

Speaker Config 2
Dolby Atmos No
Surround Sound Dolby Audio
eARC No

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 3
HDMI Version 2
USB Ports 1
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 4
Bluetooth 5.2
Optical Audio Yes
VESA Mount 200x200

Power & Size

Energy Star No
Annual Energy 86
Weight 4.7 kg / 10.4 lbs

Value & Pricing

At $130 to $230 from retailers like Best Buy and Newegg, the Roku Select Series 40R3E5 is squarely a budget pick. Per dollar, you're getting a class-leading smart TV platform and a screen that's easy to set up and forget about. The trouble is, the display quality drags the overall package so far down that many slightly pricier 4K sets from TCL or Hisense blow it away when you factor in future-proofing and picture performance. That said, if your entire budget is $150 and you just want a reliable streaming screen for the guest room, the Roku OS advantage and rock-solid user satisfaction might outweigh the noticeable picture shortcomings.

Price History

CA$190 CA$200 CA$210 CA$220 CA$230 CA$240 May 29May 30 CA$230

vs Competition

Put this thing next to even a cheap 4K competitor like the Hisense U6 Series 65U65QF and the differences are stark. The Hisense brings quantum dots, far better HDR, and a significantly brighter panel that would walk all over the Roku's 6th percentile display score. The TCL QM7K Series 55QM7K steps up to mini-LED backlighting and 120Hz gaming support, making the Roku's 60Hz, gaming-lite approach feel ancient. Even Sony's BRAVIA 2 II K43S20M2, another 1080p entry, is likely to trade blows but with Sony's processing pulling ahead in picture refinement. The Roku's one clear win is its smart TV interface; if that's the only thing you care about, the 40R3E5 holds its own. For everyone else, spending an extra $50-$100 gets you a massive jump in screen quality and future usability.

Spec Roku Select Series 40R3E5 40" Sony BRAVIA 5 K55XR50 Samsung QN85D QN85D Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG LG QNED 86QNED82AUA TCL QM6K Series 55QM6K
Screen Size 40 55 75 75 86 55
Resolution 1920x1080 3840x2160 3840x2160 4K 3840x2160 4K
Panel Type LED MiniLED Neo QLED MiniLED QLED QLED
Refresh Rate 60 120 120 165 120 144
Hdr - Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG HDR10, HDR10+, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) HDR10, Dolby Vision Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HDR10, HLG
Smart Platform Roku TV Google TV Tizen Google TV webOS Google TV
Dolby Vision false true false true true true
Dolby Atmos false true true true true true
Hdmi Version 2.0 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product HdrAudioSmartGamingDisplayConnectivitySocial ProofPicture Quality
Roku Select Series 40R3E5 40" 13.140.486.417.1652.498.136.9
Sony BRAVIA 5 K55XR50 Compare 96.892.391.378.86793.989.293.6
Samsung QN85D QN85D Compare 8489.470.278.890.989.898.179.7
Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG Compare 90.893.99695.435.997.39497.7
LG QNED 86QNED82AUA Compare 80.897.165.788.692.892.698.184.6
TCL QM6K Series 55QM6K Compare 98.690.691.393.838.389.889.298.6

Common Questions

Q: Can I use this TV for gaming with an Xbox or PlayStation?

You can, but you probably shouldn't. With a 60Hz refresh rate, no VRR, and a gaming score in the 17th percentile, this set misses every modern gaming feature. Consoles will run at 1080p/60Hz at best, and input lag won't be optimized. If gaming matters to you, look for a 120Hz TV with low input lag.

Q: Is the picture quality decent for movies and streaming?

It's functional, not fantastic. Our database puts picture quality at the 36th percentile, so it's below average even among budget TVs. Daylight scenes look okay, but dark scenes lack depth and HDR content won't look right. For casual viewing of sitcoms and news, it's fine; for movie nights, a 4K set would be a big step up.

Q: How good is the built-in audio?

The 2.0-channel speakers hit the 41st percentile in our testing, meaning they're just okay. Dialogue comes through clearly at moderate volumes, but there's no real bass or surround effect. For a bedroom setup, it'll work. For anything larger, pairing it with a budget soundbar is a smart move.

Who Should Skip This

Gamers, cinephiles, and anyone who cares about HDR should steer completely clear. The 17th percentile gaming score and 13th percentile HDR ratings make this one of the worst TVs we've seen for those uses. If you plan to watch in a bright room, the low brightness and lack of anti-glare will frustrate you. Essentially, if picture quality is even a moderate priority, spend a little more on a 4K model. This TV's only lane is the secondary, set-it-and-forget-it screen where the Roku OS is the star.

Verdict

The Roku Select Series 40R3E5 is a streaming-first appliance, not a home theater TV. Our data shows it's a rockstar at what it does best: getting you into Netflix and Hulu with zero friction, backed by the highest owner satisfaction in its class. But the numbers don't lie—the display is one of the weakest we've tracked, gaming functionality is almost nonexistent, and HDR is a lost cause. If you need a dirt-cheap, cheerful, and effortlessly smart screen for a secondary space, grab it. If you value picture quality at all, look elsewhere.

Usage Scores

Overall (44)Budget (57.5)Gaming (18.4)Movies (22.1)Sports (25.5)Outdoor (25.4)Portable (50.7)Corporate (31.1)Streaming (48.8)Smart Home (60.2)

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