LG UQ9000 Review (43UQ9000PUD, 50UQ9000PUD, 55UQ9000PUD, 65UQ9000PUD, 70UQ9000PUD, 75UQ9000PUD) (2024)

Design

Design

Style

Curved No

The LG UQ9000 has a simple design, with thin bezels on three sides. The light gray borders are a bit dated, and it doesn't look as premium as LG's NANO and QNED TV lineups.

Design

Accelerated Longevity Test

Uniformity Pictures

LEARN ABOUT ACCELERATED LONGEVITY TEST

Design

Stand

The 'V'-shaped feet are wide-set and support the TV well, but you need a large table if you aren't planning to wall-mount the TV. The feet lift the display about 2.5 inches above the table, so some soundbars won't fit under the screen. Different model sizes come with slightly different feet, but the 50, 55, and 65-inch models have the feet you see in the photos. There's also a variant of this TV, known as the LG UQ91 in Europe, which comes with a curved center-mounted stand instead of feet.

Footprint of the 65-inch stand: 46" x 10.7".

Design

Back

Wall Mount VESA 300x300

The back of the TV is very plain. There are hooks on the back of the TV to help with cable management. Most of the inputs face to the side, but they're inset into the back of the TV, making it difficult to access if the TV is wall-mounted on a fixed stand. The back of the 43-inch model looks a bit different, with the inputs facing out of the TV's right side.

Design

Borders

Borders 0.47" (1.2 cm)

Design

Thickness

Max Thickness 2.44" (6.2 cm)

7.0

Design

Build Quality

The LG UQ9000 TV has a decent overall build quality. Most of it is plastic, so it's quite light, and the feet support the TV well, with the TV being quite stable. The back panel has a bit of flex, especially near the inputs, but it isn't an issue. However, there are a few quality control issues, like a gap on the top of the display where the panel meets the border.

Picture Quality

1.5

Picture Quality

Contrast

Contrast

858 : 1

Native Contrast

858 : 1

Unfortunately, the LG TV has inadequate contrast, so blacks look gray and patchy if you're in a dark room, and dark scenes lack shadow detail. There's also no local dimming feature to improve the appearance of dark scenes.

Note: The 50, 60, and 70-inch variants of this model use a VA panel and have much better contrast, so blacks look darker in a dark room.

LEARN ABOUT CONTRAST

10

Picture Quality

Blooming

As the TV doesn't have local dimming, its backlight is always on at the same intensity, which leads to a washed-out image in dark scenes. However, it also means that the TV has no blooming around bright highlights and subtitles.

10

Picture Quality

Lighting Zone Transitions

Local Dimming

No

Backlight

Direct

Dimming Zones Count Of Tested TV

N/A

The TV doesn't have a local dimming feature, so it doesn't have lighting zone transitions. We still show the TV's performance in this regard to compare with TVs with local dimming.

4.0

Picture Quality

Contrast And Dark Details In Game Mode

There's no significant difference in contrast and dark details when the TV is set to Game Mode.

5.5

Picture Quality

HDR Brightness

Hallway Lights (~1950 cd/m²)

230 cd/m²

Yellow Skyscraper (~700 cd/m²)

227 cd/m²

Landscape Pool (~300 cd/m²)

159 cd/m²

Peak 2% Window

220 cd/m²

Peak 10% Window

304 cd/m²

Peak 25% Window

304 cd/m²

Peak 50% Window

304 cd/m²

Peak 100% Window

304 cd/m²

Sustained 2% Window

219 cd/m²

Sustained 10% Window

304 cd/m²

Sustained 25% Window

304 cd/m²

Sustained 50% Window

304 cd/m²

Sustained 100% Window

303 cd/m²

Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)

0.022

Unfortunately, the LG UQ9000 has disappointing peak brightness in HDR. Combined with its low contrast ratio and lack of a local dimming feature, bright highlights in HDR content don't stand out. There's no variation in brightness with most scenes, but very small highlights are dimmed considerably.

These measurements are after calibrating the HDR white point with the following settings:

  • HDR Picture Mode: Cinema
  • Panel Brightness: Max
  • Contrast: Max
  • Color Temperature: Warm 50

The 'Vivid' Picture Mode with the 'Cool 50' Color Temperature is a bit brighter, reaching a peak of 372 cd/m² with a 10% window.

LEARN ABOUT HDR BRIGHTNESS

5.6

Picture Quality

HDR Brightness In Game Mode

Hallway Lights (~1950 cd/m²)

231 cd/m²

Yellow Skyscraper (~700 cd/m²)

226 cd/m²

Landscape Pool (~300 cd/m²)

164 cd/m²

Peak 2% Window

219 cd/m²

Peak 10% Window

311 cd/m²

Peak 25% Window

311 cd/m²

Peak 50% Window

310 cd/m²

Peak 100% Window

310 cd/m²

Sustained 2% Window

218 cd/m²

Sustained 10% Window

310 cd/m²

Sustained 25% Window

310 cd/m²

Sustained 50% Window

310 cd/m²

Sustained 100% Window

310 cd/m²

Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)

0.024

There's no noticeable difference in brightness between 'Game' Mode and the most accurate HDR settings.

These measurements are after calibrating the HDR white point with the following settings:

  • HDR Picture Mode: Game Optimizer
  • Panel Brightness: Max
  • Contrast: Max
  • Color Temperature: Warm 50

8.6

Picture Quality

PQ EOTF Tracking

600 Nit Tracking Delta

0.0091

1000 Nit Tracking Delta

0.0092

4000 Nit Tracking Delta

0.0104

The TV's PQ EOTF tracking is excellent, as most scenes are displayed at the brightness level that the content creator intended, although near-black scenes are a bit too bright due to the TV's low contrast ratio. Content mastered at 600 and 1000 nits hard clips when the TV gets close to its peak brightness, leading to a loss of bright detail. Content mastered at 4000 nits doesn't hard clip as severely as content mastered at 600 and 1000 nits, but the roll-off isn't slow enough to truly preserve bright details.

If you find HDR too dark, setting Auto Dynamic Contrast to 'High' with the Color Tone set to 'Cool 5' increases the brightness of most scenes, as shown in this EOTF, but the overall peak brightness of the display is the same.

LEARN ABOUT PQ EOTF TRACKING

6.1

Picture Quality

SDR Brightness

Real Scene Peak Brightness

256 cd/m²

Peak 2% Window

261 cd/m²

Peak 10% Window

262 cd/m²

Peak 25% Window

262 cd/m²

Peak 50% Window

262 cd/m²

Peak 100% Window

262 cd/m²

Sustained 2% Window

261 cd/m²

Sustained 10% Window

262 cd/m²

Sustained 25% Window

262 cd/m²

Sustained 50% Window

262 cd/m²

Sustained 100% Window

262 cd/m²

Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)

0.000

The LG UQ9000 has just passable brightness in SDR. It's bright enough to overcome a bit of glare, but it isn't recommended for a bright room. On the other hand, there's no variation in brightness with different scenes, which is great.

These measurements are after calibration with the following settings:

  • Picture Mode: Expert (Dark Space, Night)
  • Panel Brightness: Max
  • Color Temperature: Warm 50

If you want the brightest image possible, switching to the 'Vivid' Picture Mode, with Adjust Contrast at 'Max', Auto Dynamic Contrast on 'High' and the Color Temp set to 'Cool 50' results in a noticeably brighter image, reaching a peak of 356 cd/m² with a 10% window.

LEARN ABOUT SDR BRIGHTNESS

6.7

Picture Quality

Color Gamut

Wide Color Gamut

No

DCI P3 xy

75.23%

DCI P3 uv

80.10%

Rec 2020 xy

54.05%

Rec 2020 uv

58.40%

Unfortunately, the TV has just an okay color gamut. HDR content looks muted because it can't display a wide color gamut. The tone mapping is also very bad with bright scenes, as the TV sacrifices accuracy to push brighter highlights in HDR. In dimmer scenes, the tone mapping is much better:

  • DCI-P3 - 60% Stimulus
  • Rec. 2020 - 60% Stimulus

LEARN ABOUT COLOR GAMUT

5.6

Picture Quality

Color Volume

1,000 cd/m² DCI P3 Coverage ITP

35.0%

10,000 cd/m² Rec 2020 Coverage ITP

16.8%

White Luminance

220 cd/m²

Red Luminance

33 cd/m²

Green Luminance

152 cd/m²

Blue Luminance

15 cd/m²

Cyan Luminance

166 cd/m²

Magenta Luminance

47 cd/m²

Yellow Luminance

202 cd/m²

The TV has poor color volume. Its narrow color gamut in HDR limits it. HDR content looks flat and dull overall, as colors aren't as bright as pure white, and it can't display dark saturated colors well due to the low contrast ratio.

LEARN ABOUT COLOR VOLUME

6.9

Picture Quality

Pre Calibration

White Balance dE

4.16

Color dE

2.29

Gamma

2.21

Color Temperature

7,428 K

Picture Mode

Expert (Dark Space)

Color Temp Setting

Warm 50

Gamma Setting

2.2

The TV has okay pre-calibration accuracy. The white balance is mediocre, but most colors are represented accurately. Cyan is noticeably off, though, and the color temperature is very cool, giving everything a bluish tint. Gamma is close to the target of 2.2 for a moderately lit room, but very dark scenes are a bit too bright.

LEARN ABOUT PRE CALIBRATION

9.3

Picture Quality

Post Calibration

White Balance dE

0.29

Color dE

1.03

Gamma

2.20

Color Temperature

6,979 K

White Balance Calibration

22 point

Color Calibration

Yes

The TV has fantastic accuracy after calibrating to the D65 white point. The white balance and color accuracy are both fantastic, and gamma is perfect. The TV was relatively easy to calibrate, but sadly the color temperature is still too cool.

You can see our full calibration settings here.

LEARN ABOUT POST CALIBRATION

6.3

Picture Quality

Gray Uniformity

50% Std. Dev.

4.568%

50% DSE

0.247%

5% Std. Dev.

0.731%

5% DSE

0.124%

The LG UQ9000 has mediocre gray uniformity. There are noticeable bars across the screen, which is distracting when watching sports or using it as a PC monitor, or any other time you have large areas of uniform color on the screen. The sides of the screen are also darker than the center.

LEARN ABOUT GRAY UNIFORMITY

6.1

Picture Quality

Black Uniformity

Std. Dev.

N/A

Native Std. Dev.

1.945%

Unfortunately, the TV has mediocre black uniformity. The entire screen appears blue due to the low contrast ratio, and near-dark scenes are patchy. Unfortunately, there's no local dimming feature to improve this.

Note: The 50, 60, and 70-inch variants of this model use a VA panel and have much better contrast, resulting in better black uniformity.

LEARN ABOUT BLACK UNIFORMITY

7.1

Picture Quality

Viewing Angle

Color Washout

26°

Color Shift

68°

Brightness Loss

29°

Black Level Raise

70°

Gamma Shift

28°

The TV is a decent choice for a wide seating arrangement, as the image remains consistent when viewed at a moderate angle. Beyond about 30°, a noticeable decrease in brightness causes colors to appear washed out.

Note that the 50, 60, and 70-inch variants of this model use a VA panel and have much worse viewing angles. Those sizes look best when viewed directly in front.

LEARN ABOUT VIEWING ANGLE

7.6

Picture Quality

Reflections

Screen Finish

Semi-gloss

Total Reflections

4.7%

Indirect Reflections

0.5%

Calculated Direct Reflections

4.2%

The TV has good reflection handling. It can handle a bit of glare as its semi-gloss finish reduces the intensity of reflections, but due to its limited peak brightness, it can't overcome intense glare in a bright room.

LEARN ABOUT REFLECTIONS

8.0

Picture Quality

HDR Native Gradient

100% Black to 50% Gray

4.0

50% Gray to 100% White

10

100% Black to 50% Red

8.0

50% Red to 100% Red

10

100% Black to 50% Green

8.0

50% Green to 100% Green

6.0

100% Black to 50% Blue

8.0

50% Blue to 100% Blue

10

The TV has very good HDR gradient handling. There's significant banding in dark grays and noticeable banding in bright greens, but other color gradients look great.

LEARN ABOUT HDR NATIVE GRADIENT

7.8

Picture Quality

Low-Quality Content Smoothing

Smoothing

8.5

Detail Preservation

6.0

The TV has good low-quality content smoothing. It's particularly good at avoiding any macro-blocking in dark scenes. The detail preservation when smoothing low bitrate content is mediocre, however.

6.0

Picture Quality

Upscaling: Sharpness Processing

The TV upscales 480p content, like from DVDs, very well.

LEARN ABOUT UPSCALING: SHARPNESS PROCESSING

Picture Quality

Pixels

Subpixel Layout

RGB

Type LED

Sub-Type

IPS

Most sizes of the LG UQ9000 use an IPS panel. The RGB subpixel layout helps ensure text from a PC is clear and easy to read. The 50, 60, and 70-inch variants use VA panels, which likely have BGR subpixel layouts, which causes text clarity issues when used as a PC monitor.

Motion

5.4

Motion

Response Time

80% Response Time

9.3 ms

100% Response Time

16.9 ms

Sadly, the TV has a poor response time. Most transitions are slow, resulting in a long blur trail behind fast-moving objects. The low-frequency flicker of the backlight also causes a double image to appear, so this isn't ideal for fast-paced action gaming or sports.

LEARN ABOUT RESPONSE TIME

4.0

Motion

Flicker-Free

Flicker-Free

No

PWM Dimming Frequency

120 Hz

The TV uses pulse width modulation (PWM) to dim the backlight, causing it to flicker at 120Hz at all brightness levels. It causes a double image when watching 60fps content and can cause headaches and eye strain in people sensitive to flicker.

LEARN ABOUT FLICKER-FREE

Motion

Black Frame Insertion (BFI)

Optional BFI

No

Min Flicker For 60 fps

120 Hz

60Hz For 60 fps

No

120Hz For 120 fps

N/A

Min Flicker for 60 fps in Game Mode

120 Hz

The TV doesn't have an optional backlight strobing feature, commonly known as black frame insertion (BFI). The backlight always flickers at 120Hz, reducing the appearance of persistence blur, but introducing a distracting double image.

LEARN ABOUT BLACK FRAME INSERTION (BFI)

Motion

Motion Interpolation

Motion Interpolation (30 fps)

Yes

Motion Interpolation (60 fps)

No

The TV has an optional motion interpolation feature, but unfortunately, it doesn't work.

LEARN ABOUT MOTION INTERPOLATION

8.0

Motion

Stutter

Frame Hold Time @ 24 fps

24.8 ms

Frame Hold Time @ 60 fps

0.0 ms

Thanks to this TV's slow response time, there's very little stutter when watching low frame rate content, like movies.

LEARN ABOUT STUTTER

10

Motion

24p Judder

Judder-Free 24p

Yes

Judder-Free 24p via 60p

Yes

Judder-Free 24p via 60i

Yes

Judder-Free 24p via Native Apps

Yes

The TV can remove judder from any source, which is great. It ensures a clear and smooth movie-watching experience.

LEARN ABOUT 24P JUDDER

0

Motion

Variable Refresh Rate

Native Refresh Rate

60 Hz (except 70'', 75'')

Variable Refresh Rate

No

HDMI Forum VRR

No

FreeSync

No

G-SYNC Compatible

No

4k VRR Maximum

N/A

4k VRR Minimum

No VRR support

1080p VRR Maximum

N/A

1080p VRR Minimum

No VRR support

1440p VRR Maximum

N/A

1440p VRR Minimum

No VRR support

VRR + Local Dimming No Local Dimming

Unfortunately, this TV doesn't support advanced gaming features like variable refresh rate technology (VRR), and most sizes are limited to a 60Hz refresh rate. The 70 and 75-inch models have a 120Hz refresh rate but still don't support VRR.

LEARN ABOUT VARIABLE REFRESH RATE

Inputs

9.7

Inputs

Input Lag

1080p @ 60Hz

10.2 ms

1080p @ 60Hz Outside Game Mode

118.1 ms

1080p @ 120Hz

N/A

1080p @ 144Hz

N/A

1440p @ 60Hz

10.5 ms

1440p @ 120Hz

N/A

1440p @ 144Hz

N/A

4k @ 60Hz

10.2 ms

4k @ 60Hz + 10-Bit HDR

10.1 ms

4k @ 60Hz @ 4:4:4

10.2 ms

4k @ 60Hz Outside Game Mode

117.7 ms

4k @ 60Hz With Interpolation

119.0 ms

4k @ 120Hz

N/A

4k @ 144Hz

N/A

8k @ 60Hz

N/A

The TV has incredibly low input lag, resulting in a responsive gaming or desktop experience.

LEARN ABOUT INPUT LAG

7.1

Inputs

Supported Resolutions

Resolution 4k

480p @ 59.94Hz (Widescreen)

Yes

720p @ 59.94Hz

Yes

1080p @ 60Hz @ 4:4:4

Yes

1080p @ 120Hz

No

1080p @ 144Hz

No

1440p @ 60Hz

Yes (forced resolution required)

1440p @ 120Hz

No

1440p @ 144Hz

No

4k @ 60Hz

Yes

4k @ 60Hz @ 4:4:4

Yes

4k @ 120Hz

No

4k @ 120Hz @ 4:4:4

No

4k @ 144Hz

No

8k @ 30Hz or 24Hz

No

8k @ 60Hz

No

The TV supports most common formats, but only at 60Hz on model sizes smaller than 70". Chroma 4:4:4 signals are displayed properly with all supported formats, essential for clear text from a PC, but you must set the input label to 'PC'.

LEARN ABOUT SUPPORTED RESOLUTIONS

Inputs

PS5 Compatibility

Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM)

Yes

4k @ 120Hz

No

1440p @ 120Hz

No

1080p @ 120Hz

No

HDR

Yes

VRR

No

The LG UQ90 can't take full advantage of the PS5. Model sizes below 70" don't support high refresh rate gaming at 120Hz, and none of the sizes support variable refresh rate (VRR). On the other hand, when you start playing a game, it automatically switches to the low latency 'Game' mode, so you don't have to worry about changing settings when gaming.

Inputs

Xbox Series X|S Compatibility

Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM)

Yes

4k @ 120Hz

No

1440p @ 120Hz

No

1080p @ 120Hz

No

HDR

Yes

VRR

No

The LG UQ90 can't fully exploit the Xbox Series X|S. Model sizes below 70" don't support high refresh rate gaming at 120Hz, and none of the sizes support variable refresh rate (VRR). On the other hand, when you start playing a game, it automatically switches to the low latency 'Game' mode, so you don't have to worry about changing settings when gaming.

Inputs

Inputs Specifications

HDR10

Yes

HDR10+

No

Dolby Vision

No

HLG

Yes

HDMI 2.0 Full Bandwidth

Yes (HDMI 1,2,3)

HDMI 2.1 Class Bandwidth

No

CEC Yes

HDCP 2.2 Yes (HDMI 1,2,3)

ATSC Tuner

1.0

USB 3.0

No

Variable Analog Audio Out No

Wi-Fi Support Yes (2.4 GHz, 5 GHz)

Sadly, this TV is limited to HDMI 2.0 bandwidth, and unlike LG's higher-end TVs, it doesn't support Dolby Vision or HDR10+, so you're limited to HDR10. It doesn't change much overall, as this TV can't display HDR well anyway.

Inputs

Input Photos

Inputs

Total Inputs

HDMI 3

USB 2

Digital Optical Audio Out 1

Analog Audio Out 3.5mm 0

Analog Audio Out RCA 0

Component In 0

Composite In 0

Tuner (Cable/Ant) 1

Ethernet 1

DisplayPort 0

IR In 0

Inputs

Audio Passthrough

ARC/eARC Port

eARC

eARC: Dolby Atmos Over Dolby Digital Plus

Yes

eARC: Dolby Digital Plus 7.1

Yes

eARC: LPCM 7.1 Over Dolby MAT

Yes

eARC: Dolby TrueHD 7.1

Yes

eARC: DTS:X Over DTS-HD MA

No

eARC: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1

No

eARC: LPCM Channels (Bitstream)

7.1

ARC: Dolby Digital 5.1

Yes

ARC: DTS 5.1

No

Optical: Dolby Digital 5.1

Yes

Optical: DTS 5.1

No

Unfortunately, this TV doesn't support DTS formats, which is disappointing as many Blu-rays use this format for their main audio track. If you plan on using the TV with a UHD Blu-ray player, connect the audio from your player to your home theater system instead of using eARC.

Sound Quality

6.7

Sound Quality

Frequency Response

Low-Frequency Extension

95.14 Hz

Std. Dev. @ 70

3.74 dB

Std. Dev. @ 80

4.05 dB

Std. Dev. @ Max

5.27 dB

Max

87.2 dB SPL

Dynamic Range Compression

3.41 dB

The TV has an okay frequency response. Like most TVs, the low-frequency extension (LFE) is very high, so it has very little bass and very little thump or rumble. Above the LFE, the frequency response is well-balanced at moderate listening levels, so dialogue is clear and not lost in the background. There's a bit more compression at max volume, especially in the mid and high-treble range.

LEARN ABOUT FREQUENCY RESPONSE

7.2

Sound Quality

Distortion

Weighted THD @ 80

0.074

Weighted THD @ Max

0.435

IMD @ 80

1.75%

IMD @ Max

6.81%

This TV has decent overall distortion performance. There's relatively little distortion in the mid to treble range, where most people will notice it. Even at max volume, there's very little total distortion.

LEARN ABOUT DISTORTION

Smart Features

8.5

Smart Features

Interface

Smart OS webOS

Version 22

Ease of Use

Easy

Smoothness

Average

Time Taken to Select YouTube

2 s

Time Taken to Change Backlight

5 s

Advanced Options

Many

The TV runs the 2022 version of LG's webOS proprietary smart interface. The interface is fast and easy to use, and it supports user profiles, so you can customize the home page for different users.

0

Smart Features

Ad-Free

Ads

Yes

Opt-out

No

Suggested Content in Home

Yes

Opt-out of Suggested Content

No

Unfortunately, like almost all smart TVs on the market, there are ads throughout the smart interface, and you can't fully disable them.

LEARN ABOUT AD-FREE

8.0

Smart Features

Apps and Features

App Selection

Great

App Smoothness

Average

Cast Capable

Yes

USB Drive Playback

Yes

USB Drive HDR Playback

Yes

HDR in Netflix

Yes

HDR in YouTube

Yes

The TV has a great selection of additional apps, so you're sure to find your favorite content.

9.0

Smart Features

Remote

Size

Large

Voice Control

Many Features

CEC Menu Control

Yes

Other Smart Features

Yes

Remote App LG ThinQ

This TV comes with the same LG Magic Remote found on high-end LG TVs, like the LG C2 OLED. You can use the remote like a pointer, making it easy to navigate through menus. It also supports voice control, which works well. You can use voice commands to change inputs, open apps, search within apps for content, and even adjust basic settings.

Smart Features

TV Controls

A single button is on the bottom of the TV in the middle. You can turn the TV on or off with it, change inputs or channels, or control the volume.

Smart Features

In The Box

  • Power cable
  • Remote (with 2x AA batteries)
  • Cable management clips and cable tie
  • User manuals

Smart Features

Misc

Power Consumption 62 W

Power Consumption (Max) 138 W

Firmware 3.10.65

LG UQ9000 Review (43UQ9000PUD, 50UQ9000PUD, 55UQ9000PUD, 65UQ9000PUD, 70UQ9000PUD, 75UQ9000PUD) (2024)
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