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Last updated: December 17th, 2025 at 07:10 UTC+01:00
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Now more people can buy Samsung's Micro RGB TVs.
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Samsung recently launched its first Micro RGB TV. It is a giant 115-inch TV and is priced at around $30,000 in the US, which means not many can afford it or even have enough room to place it in their homes. So, Samsung is planning to remove those hurdles to allow more people to buy its Micro RGB TVs. The company has announced that it will launch its Micro RGB TV in a lot more sizes and at more affordable prices.
The company's Micro RGB TV will be available in six sizes—55-inch, 65-inch, 75-inch, 85-inch, 100-inch, and 115-inch—in 2026. They will be first showcased at Samsung's The First Look event at the CES 2026 expo in the second week of January 2026, and they could be available for purchase in the first half of next year.
Micro RGB TVs sit a step above Samsung's Neo QLED TVs but below its OLED and Micro LED TVs in terms of picture quality. They use an LCD panel featuring individual red, green, and blue-coloured LED lights for backlighting instead of white or blue-coloured LEDs, offering 100% coverage of the BT.2020 wide color gamut, which has been certified by German technical-scientific association Verband der Elektrotechnik (VDE). Those micro-sized LEDs are each sub-100µm in size and are laid across the LCD panel, offering ultra-precise backlight control, close to no blooming, deep blacks, and very high brightness.
The TV incorporates the same Glare Free technology found in some of Samsung's 2025 OLED and Neo QLED models. This technology minimizes glare and reflections, enhancing the viewing experience even in brightly lit environments like those with lamps, light bulbs, doors, and windows.
The TV supports HDR10, HDR10+ Adaptive, and HLG formats for high dynamic range content. Audio-related features of the Micro RGB TV include Adaptive Sound Pro, Dolby Atmos, Eclipsa Audio, and Q-Symphony.
Adaptive Sound Pro tunes audio according to the video genre that is being played on the TV, while Q-Symphony uses the TV's and the connected Samsung soundbar's or speakers' drivers simultaneously for a more immersive and powerful audio experience. Dolby Atmos is a proprietary spatial audio technology from Dolby and is the most widely used surround sound format, while Eclipsa Audio is Dolby Atmos' rival, co-developed by Google and Samsung, and it is royalty-free and will be available in all Samsung TVs that will launch in 2026.
Samsung's Micro RGB TVs boast several AI features including Generative Wallpaper, Live Translate, Microsoft Copilot, and Perplexity. A large language model (LLM) powered Bixby offers significantly improved natural language understanding and maintains conversation context.
Hun Lee, Executive Vice President of Samsung's Visual Display (VD) Business, said, “With Samsung’s latest technology, our Micro RGB portfolio delivers vivid color and clarity that make movies, sports and TV shows feel more expressive and engaging. By expanding the lineup for 2026, we’re establishing a new premium category with sizes that span the full range of modern living spaces while maintaining our highest picture standards.“
Samsung's Micro RGB TV lineup will compete with similar TVs that LG and Sony have planned to launch next year. It will be interesting to see which brand's RGB LED TV offers better picture quality and at more affordable prices.