OLED burn-in in 2026: is it still a problem?
Updated 7 May 2026
The short answer: for varied viewing, burn-in is not a realistic concern on any 2024-2026 OLED. For 8+ hours daily of the same static content, there is some risk. Here is the actual science, the modern mitigation tech, the manufacturer warranty terms, and the practical risk profile by user type.
The science
What actually causes burn-in.
OLED pixels are organic compounds that produce light by passing current through them. The compound degrades very slowly with use; this is normal and is the same reason every TV technology eventually dims over its lifespan. The issue specific to OLED is that uneven use creates uneven degradation. If a channel logo sits on a single region of pixels for thousands of hours while the rest of the panel sees varied content, those logo pixels age slightly faster.
The blue subpixels degrade fastest because blue OLED requires the most energy. WOLED uses a white sub-pixel partly to share the load. QD-OLED relies on quantum dots to convert blue light into red and green, which means the blue emitter does less work per converted output and runs cooler.
Modern mitigations
What every 2024-2026 OLED already does.
Mitigation 01
Pixel shifting
The image moves by 1-2 pixels every few minutes, imperceptible to the viewer but enough to spread wear across more pixels.
Mitigation 02
Automatic brightness limiting (ABL)
Static elements (logos, score tickers, taskbars) detected by the panel are automatically dimmed to slow wear.
Mitigation 03
Logo dimming / luminance detection
Specifically tuned to detect TV channel logos, news ticker bars, and game HUD elements. Dims them by a small percentage.
Mitigation 04
Panel refresh cycles
Run automatically every few hundred hours of cumulative use. The TV equalises pixel wear across the panel during a brief overnight cycle.
Mitigation 05
Screen savers
Activate after a set idle period. Useful if you pause content for an extended break.
Mitigation 06
Power-on logo movement (Sony, LG)
TV-channel and app logos shift position slightly on power-on to avoid a fixed wear pattern over years.
Risk profile by user type
Honest risk by usage.
| Usage profile | Hours per day | Realistic risk | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Casual viewer (films, mixed TV) | Under 3 hours | None practical | OLED is fine |
| Moderate household viewer | 4-6 hours, varied | Negligible | OLED is fine |
| Heavy mixed viewer | 7+ hours, mixed content | Low but present | OLED is fine, manage brightness |
| Single-channel news watcher | 8+ hours same channel daily | Real over years | QLED is the safer choice |
| PC desktop primary monitor | 8+ hours with taskbar/UI | Real over years | QLED is the safer choice |
| Marathon single-game player | 8+ hours same HUD daily | Real over years | QLED is the safer choice |
| Commercial signage | 12+ hours static content | High | Use a commercial-grade panel |
Warranty coverage 2026
What manufacturers cover.
Brand
LG (WOLED)
2 years standard
Includes burn-in on most OLED ranges. Excludes commercial use.
Brand
Samsung (QD-OLED / WOLED)
2 years standard
Burn-in covered on QD-OLED ranges. Conditions vary by region.
Brand
Sony (QD-OLED / WOLED)
2 years standard
Limited burn-in coverage; check region-specific terms.
Brand
Panasonic
2 years standard
EU coverage often longer; burn-in clauses in fine print.
Brand
Hisense / TCL OLED
1-2 years standard
Less common; check local distributor terms.
Brand
Extended warranty (retailer)
Up to 5 years
Best Buy Geek Squad, John Lewis, Amazon Square Trade often extend burn-in coverage. Read the fine print.
Warranty terms vary by region and model year. Always read the specific terms for your purchase.
Prevention tips
Habits that keep an OLED healthy.
- Vary your content. Avoid leaving the same channel or app on the screen for many hours daily.
- Use screen savers. Activate after 5-10 minutes of idle time.
- Avoid max brightness on static content. A picture preset other than Vivid is kinder to the panel.
- Run panel refresh periodically. Most OLEDs prompt this automatically; do not skip it.
- Hide taskbars on PC use. Auto-hide reduces persistent UI wear.
- Switch to filmmaker mode for films. Lower brightness, no oversaturation, healthier wear pattern.
Aisle 10 / FAQ
Frequently asked.
Will my OLED definitely burn in?+
No. For varied viewing (films, mixed TV, casual gaming) burn-in on a 2024-2026 OLED is rare to vanishingly rare. RTINGS' multi-year accelerated wear test on OLEDs from major manufacturers showed minimal image retention after thousands of hours of static content. Modern mitigation tech (pixel shift, ABL, panel refresh, logo dim) handles normal use cases well.
What activities actually cause burn-in?+
Static content shown for very long periods at high brightness. The classic high-risk profile is a 24-hour cable news channel left on for 8+ hours daily for years on max brightness. Other elevated-risk patterns: PC desktop use as a primary monitor with persistent taskbars, the same single game with fixed HUD for marathon sessions daily, or commercial signage. Casual mixed viewing has near-zero realistic risk.
How long does burn-in take to develop?+
On a modern OLED with mitigations active, thousands of hours of repeated static content. RTINGS test units showed first signs of uneven wear after 5,000-10,000 hours of static logo content (the equivalent of leaving the same channel on for several years). Real-world varied viewing produces no detectable burn-in within typical TV lifespans.
Does Samsung QD-OLED burn in less than LG WOLED?+
Possibly. QD-OLED runs cooler because the blue OLED emitter does less work (quantum dots convert efficiently). Lower thermal stress on the organic layers may reduce wear. WOLED has more years of real-world data showing reliable performance. For practical purposes both are very burn-in resistant in normal use.
What does the manufacturer warranty cover?+
LG: 2 years standard, with burn-in coverage on most OLED ranges. Samsung: 2 years on QD-OLED with burn-in coverage. Sony: 2 years standard with limited burn-in coverage. Panasonic: similar. Coverage typically excludes commercial use and burn-in caused by extended static images. Read the warranty for your specific model and region.
Should I just buy QLED to avoid the worry?+
If burn-in worry would genuinely affect how you use your TV, yes. A flagship Mini-LED QLED removes the concern entirely and produces an excellent picture. If you would otherwise enjoy OLED but the worry is purely theoretical, the practical risk is low enough that picture-quality preferences should drive the decision.