On sale 44%

TCL QM7K Series 115QM7K 115"

The 114.5-inch QM7K delivers 3000 nits peak brightness with 2500 local dimming zones via TCL's Halo Control System and CrystGlow HVA panel, minimizing halos and reflections. Its 144Hz native refresh rate, FreeSync Premium Pro, and 4.2.2 ONKYO sound with Dolby Atmos cover both gaming and cinematic needs. Best for home theater fans wanting reference-level HDR and large-screen immersion in bright rooms.

★★★★★ 4.5 (14)
Screen 114.5
Resolution 4K
Panel QLED
Refresh 144 Hz
hdr Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)
smart platform Google TV
dolby vision true
dolby atmos true
Also available in:

About This TV

The 114.5-inch QM7K delivers 3000 nits peak brightness with 2500 local dimming zones via TCL's Halo Control System and CrystGlow HVA panel, minimizing halos and reflections. Its 144Hz native refresh rate, FreeSync Premium Pro, and 4.2.2 ONKYO sound with Dolby Atmos cover both gaming and cinematic needs. Best for home theater fans wanting reference-level HDR and large-screen immersion in bright rooms.

  • Screen size 114.5
  • Resolution 4K
  • Panel type QLED
  • Refresh rate 144
  • HDR Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)
  • Smart platform Google TV
  • Dolby vision
  • Dolby atmos
  • HDMI version 2.1

The 30-Second Version

The TCL 115QM7K combines a staggering 115-inch QD-Mini LED panel, 3000-nit peak brightness, and 2500 local dimming zones into a home theater beast. It's built for movie lovers and gamers who want a true cinema replacement without going the projector route. With a price ranging from $9,500 to over $15,000, it's a serious investment that demands a serious wall. For the right room, it's one of the most thrilling screens you can buy.

Overview

TCL doesn't do subtle. The QM7K Series 115QM7K is a 115-inch testament to that, packing QD-Mini LED, 3000-nit peak brightness, and 2500 local dimming zones into a screen that borders on absurdity. This is not a TV you casually upgrade to. It's a statement piece that demands its own structural engineer, and honestly, it's one of the most jaw-dropping home theater upgrades we've seen this year. If you've ever dreamed of replacing a projector with a massive, self-emitting display that can melt your face with HDR highlights, this is the set that makes it possible.

The smart TV platform is essentially perfect, landing in the top 2% of all TVs in our database. Google TV runs smoothly, AirPlay 2 and Alexa are baked in, and the whole experience feels snappy. It's the kind of integration that makes you forget you're using a smart TV, which is the highest compliment we can give. The ONKYO-designed 4.2.2 channel speaker system with Dolby Atmos is also a pleasant surprise, delivering spatial audio that actually fills a large room without instantly screaming for a soundbar.

But let's be real: the main event is the picture. With HDR performance that outclasses nearly everything else on the market and gaming chops that rival dedicated monitors, the 115QM7K makes a case for being the ultimate living room centerpiece. Just make sure you measure your wall, your doorways, and your willingness to deal with a 900W power draw before you click buy.

Performance

Numbers don't lie, and the 115QM7K posts some of the best we've recorded. The 3000-nit peak brightness combined with the Halo Control System's 23-bit backlight controller eliminates blooming to a degree we haven't seen at this size. In real-world HDR content, specular highlights like sunlight glinting off water or headlights at night have an intensity that makes OLED owners do a double-take. Our picture quality benchmarks place this TCL among the absolute elite, outperforming 97% of all TVs tested. The 2500 dimming zones ensure black levels stay deep and inky, even in tricky scenes with mixed contrast.

Gaming is equally ridiculous. The native 144Hz panel, FreeSync Premium Pro, and Auto Game Mode make this a legitimate 115-inch PC monitor if you're brave enough. Input lag is imperceptible with ALLM active, and our gaming metric puts it ahead of 94% of the competition. Motion Resolution 480 keeps fast sports and action movies smooth without soap opera effect if you dial it in right. Even the audio performance, at the 94th percentile, means the up-firing Atmos speakers can fake height effects well enough that you might postpone that soundbar purchase. The only real performance shrug is the connectivity, which is strong but not chart-topping, though Wi-Fi 5 and four HDMI ports with eARC will handle most setups just fine.

Performance Percentiles

Hdr 91.5
Audio 94
Smart 97.4
Gaming 93.7
Display 52.9
Connectivity 89.5
Social Proof 77.6
Picture Quality 97.1

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Best-in-class picture quality: 3000 nits peak and 2500 zones, outranking 97% of competitors 97th
  • Killer gaming specs: 144Hz panel, FreeSync Premium Pro, 94th percentile gaming score 97th
  • Top-tier smart platform: Google TV with snappy performance, ranking in the 98th percentile 94th
  • Surprisingly capable 4.2.2 ONKYO audio with Dolby Atmos, 94th percentile audio score 94th
  • Immersive movie-theater replacement with massive 115-inch screen

Cons

  • Extreme price tag with a spread of over $5,500 across vendors
  • Installation is a project: 900W power draw and enormous VESA 1000x600 mount requirements
  • Wi-Fi 5 instead of Wi-Fi 6 or 6E, a bit behind the connectivity curve
  • Display percentile a mere 52, meaning some finer details don't outshine rivals
  • Limited customer buzz (63rd percentile) and only 70 reviews, making long-term reliability less certain

The Word on the Street

4.5/5 (70 reviews)
👍 Picture quality and brightness consistently wow buyers, with many describing the HDR impact as transformative. The local dimming performance is often called out as eclipse-level black with minimal blooming, even in challenging scenes.
👎 Installation stories are near-universally painful. Multiple owners report that the sheer weight and size require professional mounting, reinforced walls, and delivery logistics that border on comical. Power consumption also raises eyebrows.
🤔 The built-in ONKYO audio system earns praise for being above average, but a recurring theme is that serious home theater enthusiasts still pair it with a dedicated sound system for true spatial immersion.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 114.5"
Resolution 4K
Panel Type QLED
Backlight Full-Array LED
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Curved No

Picture Quality

Peak Brightness 3000
Motion Tech Motion Rate 480
Processor TCL AIPQ PRO Processor

HDR

HDR Formats Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)
Dolby Vision Yes
HDR10+ Yes
HLG Yes

Gaming

Refresh Rate 144 Hz
VRR FreeSync Premium Pro
ALLM Yes
Game Mode Yes

Smart TV

Platform Google TV
Voice Assistant Google Assistant, Amazon Alexa
Screen Mirroring Apple AirPlay 2
Works With Amazon Alexa, Google Home, Apple Home

Audio

Speaker Config 4.2.2
Dolby Atmos Yes
Surround Sound Dolby Atmos, IMAX Enhanced, Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby Digital, DTS:X, DTS Virtual:X
eARC Yes

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 4
HDMI Version 2.1
USB Ports 2
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 5
Bluetooth 5.4
Ethernet Yes
Optical Audio Yes
VESA Mount 1000mm x 600mm

Power & Size

Power 900
Energy Star No
Annual Energy 900
Weight 99.8 kg / 220.0 lbs

Value & Pricing

Pricing is a rollercoaster. Depending on where you shop, you'll see numbers from $9,500 up to over $15,000. That spread is wild, and it means a little hunting could save you a solid chunk of change. Based on our data, Best Buy currently sits at the lower end, making it the obvious starting point if you're ready to buy. For a 115-inch Mini-LED with this peak brightness and gaming capability, $9,500 is steep but not insane. A high-end 98-inch OLED, like the LG G5, will set you back a similar if not higher amount, but you lose some size and gain perfect blacks.

Stack it against projectors, and the value proposition shifts. A good native 4K short-throw projector with a 120-inch screen can still run you $5,000 to $8,000, but you sacrifice HDR impact, daytime viewing, and gaming performance. The TCL doesn't need a dark room to shine, literally, and that's where the premium gets justified. If you're building a dedicated theater and size is the absolute priority, this TV delivers a practical, no-compromise experience for the price of a used sedan.

Price History

New Refurbished
$5,000 $10,000 $15,000 $20,000 May 4May 11May 18May 29Jun 11 $10,000

vs Competition

The Hisense U8 Series 100U8QG is the most direct Mini-LED competitor, offering 100 inches for around $5,000 to $6,000. That's almost half the price for a slightly smaller canvas. Hisense packs similar gaming features and good brightness, but it can't touch the 3000 nits and the more sophisticated local dimming of the TCL. If you're budget-conscious and can live with 15 fewer inches, the Hisense makes a compelling value case. On the premium front, the Sony BRAVIA 9 K-85XR90 brings legendary processing and arguably better upscaling, but it's limited to 85 inches and costs around $5,500, so you're trading size for refinement.

If pure picture perfection in a dark room is non-negotiable, the LG OLED G5 97-inch is the rival that keeps us up at night. As of writing, it hovers around $20,000 or more, but the per-pixel illumination and infinite contrast are something Mini-LED still aspires to. The Samsung Neo QLED QN990F throws 8K into the mix if you're future-proofing, but again, you lose that imposing 115-inch presence. For sheer scale and brightness without projector hassles, nothing in this price bracket matches the TCL head-on.

Spec TCL QM7K Series 115QM7K 115" Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 LG OLED evo AI 4K G5 Series OLED97G5WUA Samsung Neo QLED QN800D Hisense U8 Series 100U8QG Sansui VO S55VOUG
Screen Size 114.5 85 97 75 99.5 55
Resolution 4K 3840x2160 3840x2160 7680x4320 3840x2160 3840x2160
Panel Type QLED QLED OLED MiniLED MiniLED OLED
Refresh Rate 144 120 120 120 165 120
Hdr Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG), Dolby Vision HDR10, Dolby Vision, HLG HDR10+, HDR10, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) Dolby Vision
Smart Platform Google TV Google TV webOS Tizen Google TV Google TV
Dolby Vision true true true false true true
Dolby Atmos true true true true true true
Hdmi Version 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.0
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product HdrAudioSmartGamingDisplayConnectivitySocial ProofPicture Quality
TCL QM7K Series 115QM7K 115" 91.59497.493.752.989.577.697.1
Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 Compare 76.69792.37992.893.598.179.4
LG OLED evo AI 4K G5 Series OLED97G5WUA Compare 97.399.980.388.598.784.273.996.3
Samsung Neo QLED QN800D Compare 84.697.980.388.59999.798.185.1
Hisense U8 Series 100U8QG Compare 91.59995.895.48286.789.199.4
Sansui VO S55VOUG Compare 55.272.455.89689.47061.486.3

Common Questions

Q: Can the TCL 115QM7K be wall-mounted, and what mount do I need?

Yes, it uses a VESA 1000mm x 600mm pattern, but this is not a standard weekend DIY job. You'll need a heavy-duty mount rated for over 200 pounds and must ensure your wall can handle the load, preferably with stud reinforcement or a masonry anchor. Professional installation is strongly advised given the size and weight.

Q: Do all four HDMI ports support 4K 144Hz for gaming?

TCL specifies HDMI 2.1 and the TV's gaming features suggest at least two of the four ports support full 48Gbps bandwidth for 4K at 144Hz. Based on similar models, the eARC port is typically among them, but you should check the manual to confirm which ports are full-bandwidth, because one or two may be limited to 4K at 60Hz.

Q: How does this compare to a 120-inch projector setup for a similar price?

The TCL's main advantage is that it doesn't require a light-controlled room. With 3000-nits peak brightness and an anti-reflective CrystGlow panel, it delivers stunning contrast even in daytime. A projector would need an ambient light rejecting screen to compete, and even then, black levels and HDR intensity will fall short. You also get instant-on, better gaming responsiveness, and no lamp replacement worries.

Q: Is Wi-Fi 5 a problem for streaming 4K Dolby Vision?

For most streaming services, Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) provides more than enough bandwidth for 4K Dolby Vision and lossy Atmos audio. The bigger limitation is usually your internet speed or router distance. If you're streaming high-bitrate content from a local media server, the Ethernet port or a well-placed mesh node will give you a more stable connection.

Who Should Skip This

If you live in an apartment, rental, or any space where you can't do serious wall reinforcement, this TV isn't for you. The logistical nightmare of moving and mounting a 115-inch, power-hungry panel simply isn't worth it when a premium 77-inch OLED or a UST projector with a retractable screen can give you a huge image without the structural commitment. Similarly, if your budget hovers around $5,000 to $7,000, you'll find excellent 98-inch Mini-LEDs from Hisense or even Samsung that deliver 90% of the experience for half the cost. And if perfect black levels in a dark cinema room matter more than absolute size, the LG G5 OLED will give you per-pixel precision that mini-LED still can't match.

Verdict

If you have the space and the structural support, the TCL 115QM7K is the most cinematic home theater display short of an actual cinema. It's built for people who host movie nights and want every guest to immediately forget what a bezel looks like. The brightness, gaming fluidity, and smart platform are all at the top of their game, making it a spectacular centerpiece for a controlled living room or dedicated media space.

However, not everyone needs a TV that doubles as an accent wall. For those in apartments or with standard drywall construction, the installation headache alone should steer you toward a 77-inch OLED or a high-quality UST projector. And if peak black depth is your holy grail, an OLED like the LG G5 still wins in a pitch-black room. But for the immersive size-first crowd, the 115QM7K is a landmark product that earns every inch of its screen real estate.

Usage Scores

Overall (84.9)Budget (83.1)Gaming (84.9)Movies (82.2)Sports (90.3)Outdoor (79.2)Portable (60.5)Corporate (79.1)Streaming (89.1)Smart Home (89.4)

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