On sale 27%

LG UA7000 Series 75UA7000PUB 75"

★★★★★ 4.8 (1,261)

The Alpha 7 AI Processor Gen8 drives 4K upscaling and dynamic tone mapping on a 75-inch Direct LED panel with HDR10 Pro. webOS delivers 300+ free channels via LG Channels, and the Re:New Program ensures 5 years of OS updates, plus AirPlay 2 and Google Cast for broad streaming compatibility. This TV suits budget-conscious streamers who want a large smart display for casual viewing and integrated smart home control.

Screen 75
Resolution 3840x2160
Panel LED
Refresh 60 Hz
HDR HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)
smart platform webOS
hdmi version 2.0
LG UA7000 Series 75UA7000PUB 75" tv
67 Overall Score
Also available in:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The LG 75UA7000 is a massive 75-inch 4K smart TV that often drops under $400, making it one of the best big-screen values around. Picture quality is just okay by our benchmarks, but real owners love the vibrant colors and easy webOS experience. It lacks advanced HDR, local dimming, and gaming chops. Buy it for casual streaming and everyday TV, not a home theater.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Massive 75-inch screen for as low as $399 puts it in a value league of its own 99th
  • webOS feels snappy and ranks well above average among smart TV platforms 79th
  • Filmmaker Mode preserves director's intent without motion smoothing ruining movies 78th
  • Thousands of owners give it 4.7 stars, making it one of the best-reviewed TVs in our database
  • eARC lets you easily upgrade audio with a soundbar without losing HDMI features

Cons

  • Picture quality sits in the bottom third of TVs we've tested, with no local dimming
  • HDR lacks Dolby Vision and brightness punch, so highlights look flat
  • HDMI 2.0 and 60Hz panel hold back modern gaming features like 4K/120 and VRR
  • Downward-firing 20W speakers are mediocre and lack bass for movies
  • Direct LED backlight can't match the contrast of even basic full-array sets

What owners think

The Word on the Street

4.8/5 (1261 reviews)
👍 Picture quality on this huge screen wows most buyers, who talk up the vibrant colors and crisp 4K detail during movies and streaming.
👍 The webOS smart interface is a recurring highlight, described as fast and simple to navigate, with lots of people appreciating LG Channels for free content.
🤔 Built-in audio is clear but underwhelming for action scenes. Many owners mention planning to add a soundbar for a more cinematic feel.
👍 Setup is quick and straightforward, and the value for the price gets called out constantly, with several people noting they were surprised by what they got for so little money.

How owner sentiment changed over time

Exclusive

Based on when customers actually wrote their reviews — so you can see whether early praise held up.

Owner sentiment has held steady over time
1★2★3★4★5★Q1 '26: 4.8★ · 141 reviewsQ2 '26: 4.7★ · 59 reviews14159Q1 '26Q2 '26
Avg ratingHappy (4-5★)Unhappy (1-2★)Bar height = number of reviews

Based on 200 dated customer reviews, grouped by calendar quarter. Period analysis is in English.

The proof

Performance

When we feed the UA7000 raw 4K content, it puts out a clean, reasonably sharp image. The Alpha 7 processor does decent upscaling with 1080p streams, smoothing out noise without turning faces into wax sculptures. Bright highlights in HDR10 are, well, modest. The TV accepts HLG and HDR10 signals, but the direct LED backlight can't produce the kind of blinding brightness or deep shadows you'd get from a full-array local dimming set. In our picture quality testing, it lands in the 36th percentile. That's not a typo. This is a middle-of-the-road picture performer at best. But here's the twist: actual owners rave about the vivid colors and sharpness. That makes sense for a living room TV. Most content is SDR, and LG's processing pumps up colors and contrast to look pleasing without being accurate. If you watch cable, YouTube, or sitcoms on Netflix, you probably won't notice any weakness.

Gaming performance is locked in at 60Hz, and all three HDMI ports are version 2.0. That means no 4K at 120fps, no variable refresh rate, and no Auto Low Latency Mode beyond the basic Game Mode. Input lag feels fine for casual gaming, but competitive players will want a faster panel. The built-in 2.0-channel speakers pump out 20W of downward-firing sound that's clear enough for dialogue but thin for action. eARC support is a life saver here, since you can easily add a soundbar. Overall, this TV performs best when you accept its limits and just enjoy the sheer acreage of screen real estate.

Performance Percentiles

Hdr 46.9
Audio 45.9
Smart 79.4
Gaming 33.9
Display 78.1
Connectivity 60.2
Social Proof 98.6
Picture Quality 35.9

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 75"
Resolution 4K
Panel Type LED
Backlight Direct LED
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Curved No

Picture Quality

Motion Tech Dynamic Tone Mapping
Processor Alpha 7 AI Processor Gen8

HDR

HDR Formats HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)
Dolby Vision No
HDR10+ No
HLG Yes

Gaming

Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Game Mode Yes

Smart TV

Platform webOS
Voice Assistant No, No
Screen Mirroring Apple AirPlay 2, Google Cast
Works With Amazon Alexa, Google Home, Apple Home

Audio

Speaker Config 2
Wattage 20
eARC Yes

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 3
HDMI Version 2
USB Ports 1
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 5
Bluetooth 5
Ethernet Yes
Optical Audio Yes
VESA Mount 400x400

Power & Size

Energy Star No
Annual Energy 286
Weight 27.3 kg / 60.2 lbs

vs Competition

Stick the UA7000 next to a TCL QM8K Series 75QM8K and you'll see where the money goes. The TCL packs Mini-LED, full-array local dimming, 120Hz, and HDMI 2.1 with VRR. HDR content actually looks dramatic, and blacks are deep. But that TCL normally costs a fair bit more, so you're paying for the picture quality gap. The Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG follows a similar script. Better brightness, faster panel, and more future-proofed connectivity. Both are better for gamers and movie buffs.

The Samsung QN85D is a Neo QLED that leaps even further ahead in processing and brightness, but you'll pay a premium. On the other end, the Roku Plus Series 55R6C7 is a smaller TV with a simpler platform. LG's webOS is more polished than Roku's basic interface, and the 75-inch size is a huge differentiator. If size rules your decision, the UA7000 has very little direct competition below $800. Just remember that you're sacrificing every next-gen picture and gaming bell and whistle to get that size for so little.

Spec LG UA7000 Series 75UA7000PUB 75" Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 Samsung Neo QLED QN900F TCL QM7K Series 75QM7K Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG Roku Plus Series 75R6C7
Screen Size 75 85 65 75 75 75
Resolution 3840x2160 3840x2160 7680x4320 3840x2160 4K 3840x2160
Panel Type LED MiniLED MiniLED QLED MiniLED QLED
Refresh Rate 60 120 120 144 165 60
Hdr HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG), Dolby Vision HDR10, HDR10+, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)
Smart Platform webOS Google TV Tizen Google TV Google TV Roku TV
Dolby Vision false true false true true true
Dolby Atmos - 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
LG UA7000 Series 75UA7000PUB 75" 46.945.979.433.978.160.298.635.9
Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 Compare 76.29791.878.783.293.595.279.1
Samsung Neo QLED QN900F Compare 84.799.193.488.39996.999.679.1
TCL QM7K Series 75QM7K Compare 91.390.497.593.688.489.68997.3
Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG Compare 91.393.895.895.23796.995.298.5
Roku Plus Series 75R6C7 Compare 76.281.899.856.588.489.699.635.9

Price

Value & Pricing

Price is this TV's superpower. We found the 75UA7000 listed as low as $399 at Newegg, while Best Buy carries it around $850. That's a staggering $481 spread. At the floor price, you're essentially paying for the panel and the smart guts, and nothing at that size comes close in sheer bang-for-buck. Even at $850, it's not a terrible deal compared to budget 75-inch options, but the value proposition weakens fast. For a few hundred more, something like the TCL QM8K delivers Mini-LED contrast, 120Hz gaming, and Dolby Vision.

If you can snag this LG for under $500, stop thinking. For a secondary TV, a garage setup, or a big family room that doesn't need the best picture, it's a steal. The low price doesn't feel cheap in daily use. Setup is simple, the smart features are responsive, and the huge screen instantly makes any room feel like a theater. Just know that you're trading cutting-edge visuals for sheer size.

From CA$800 1 offers across 1 retailers
Bestbuy.ca 1 offers From CA$800
CA$800

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Overview

Here's a TV that doesn't try to impress spec sheet nerds. It just puts a huge, 75-inch 4K screen in your living room without the gut-punch price. The LG UA7000 Series is a direct-lit LED with the company's Alpha 7 AI processor, webOS smarts, and Filmmaker Mode. It skips the fancy Mini-LED backlights, local dimming, and 120Hz panels you see on pricier sets. But that's the point. This is a big-screen streaming workhorse for people who want to watch movies, sports, and shows without selling a kidney. And the pricing can be wild. Across different sellers, we saw it anywhere from $399 to $880. At the low end, that's almost absurd for a 75-inch TV with a decent smart platform.

LG built this TV for the crowd that cares more about screen inches per dollar than bleeding-edge HDR. The webOS interface loads fast and includes LG Channels for free live TV. You also get five years of software updates under the Re:New program, which is rare at this price point. There's no Dolby Vision, the speakers are basic, and gaming tops out at 60Hz with no VRR. For many living rooms, those are easy compromises. Around 2,200 reviews on the big retailer sites average 4.7 stars, so clearly plenty of people feel the same way.

But let's be straight. Our database shows the UA7000's picture quality sitting in the lower third of all TVs we track. That sounds alarming until you realize it's competing against OLEDs and Mini-LED flagships. For a budget 75-incher, the picture is more than watchable. Colors pop in SDR, the upscaling is solid, and the screen is absolutely massive. Just don't expect cinema-grade blacks or HDR that makes you squint. This TV excels at being good enough for the whole family, not wowing pixel peepers.

Common Questions

Q: Does this TV have local dimming for deeper blacks?

No, the UA7000 uses a direct LED backlight without local dimming. That means blacks can look a bit gray in a dark room, and bright objects may show some backlight bleed. It's fine for well-lit living rooms, but don't expect the deep contrast you'd see on Mini-LED or OLED sets.

Q: Can I game at 120Hz on this TV with a PS5 or Xbox Series X?

No. The panel is locked at 60Hz and the HDMI ports are version 2.0, so you're limited to 4K at 60fps. There's no VRR either. Casual gaming works fine in Game Mode, but if you want the smoothest 120Hz gameplay, look at something like the TCL QM8K or Hisense U7 series instead.

Q: Will it support Dolby Vision for better HDR?

It won't. The UA7000 supports HDR10 and HLG but skips Dolby Vision entirely. HDR content will play, but the brightness is limited compared to TVs with Dolby Vision and higher peak brightness. If you have a large library of Dolby Vision movies, you'll miss some of the dynamic metadata enhancements.

Q: How good is the upscaling for 1080p cable and streaming?

The Alpha 7 AI Processor Gen8 does a respectable job turning 1080p content into 4K. It sharpens details without looking artificial and keeps noise under control. Older standard-definition material won't look amazing, but everyday HD streams from Netflix or YouTube appear crisp and clean on the big screen.

Who Should Skip This

Gamers who want HDMI 2.1, 120Hz, and VRR should steer clear. This TV tops out at 60Hz and can't deliver the fluid motion modern consoles deserve. Look at the TCL QM8K or Hisense U7 for gaming-focused big screens. Home theater fans chasing deep blacks and bright HDR highlights will also be disappointed. The direct LED backlight and lack of Dolby Vision mean dark movies won't have the punch you want. If you're planning to mount this in a dark dedicated theater room, spend more on a set with full-array local dimming. Finally, if built-in audio quality is a dealbreaker, know that the 20W downward-firing speakers are just passable. You'll almost certainly want a soundbar from day one, which adds to the total cost. For anyone who prizes picture over size, a smaller but better-performing TV like the 55-inch Sony BRAVIA 5 might be a wiser choice.

Verdict

For families who want a big screen for casual streaming, sports, and Saturday morning cartoons, the LG 75UA7000 is an easy recommendation, especially if you can find it near that $400 sweet spot. It boxes up 75 inches of 4K goodness with a quick smart platform and enough processing to make everyday content look vibrant. Pair it with a cheap soundbar and you've got a setup that will keep everyone happy without draining your wallet.

Now, if you're someone who notices blooming around bright objects in a dark room, or you want to play PS5 games at 120fps with HDR that pops, walk away. This TV isn't built for you. The lack of local dimming, Dolby Vision, and high refresh support puts a hard ceiling on what it can do. In that case, stretch your budget to a TCL QM8K or Hisense U7 series. But if your biggest priority is simply the biggest screen for the smallest cash, LG's UA7000 lands right on target.

Usage Scores

Overall (66.8)Budget (77.3)Gaming (45.3)Movies (47.5)Sports (55.3)Outdoor (43.4)Portable (46.9)Corporate (61.9)Streaming (68.6)Smart Home (74.1)

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