Samsung’s 2026 Micro RGB TVs: 55–100-inch Options
- Samsung will offer Micro RGB LED TVs in 55, 65, 75, 85, 98 and 100 inches, alongside the 115-inch MR95F.
- Micro RGB uses sub-100 μm red, green and blue LEDs for improved color purity and brightness.
- Pricing and exact US availability will be revealed at CES 2026 in January.
What Samsung announced
Samsung confirmed it is expanding Micro RGB LED technology into mainstream screen sizes for 2026. The new family ranges from 55 inches up to 100 inches and complements the 115-inch MR95F the company introduced last fall.
Sizes and model positioning
The announced sizes are 55, 65, 75, 85, 98 and 100 inches, giving living-room buyers more practical options than the earlier 115-inch model. Samsung says these are the smallest Micro RGB sets to date from any manufacturer in terms of marketed sizes.
How Micro RGB works
Unlike conventional LED TVs that use white or blue LEDs with color filters, Micro RGB deploys clusters of individual red, green and blue LEDs. Samsung says each LED in the cluster measures under 100 micrometers (μm), smaller than a strand of human hair.
That arrangement, combined with color filtering, is intended to deliver stronger color purity and brightness versus standard LED backlights, improving wide color gamut and HDR performance.
How Samsung stacks up to rivals
Samsung isn’t the only company moving into RGB-based mini/micro LED. LG recently announced Micro RGB evo models in 75, 86 and 100 inches, while Hisense’s RGB mini-LED currently tops out with a 116-inch 116UX. TCL’s Q9M RGB mini-LED is available in China starting at 65 inches.
Samsung’s new sizes aim to make Micro RGB a realistic option for typical living rooms rather than just large-format home theaters.
When to expect prices and hands-on reviews
Samsung says it will share pricing and availability details at CES 2026 in January. Reviewers and attendees can expect hands-on demos at the show, which will clarify real-world picture quality and how the panels perform against OLED and top-tier mini-LED rivals.
Why it matters
If Micro RGB can scale down successfully without excessive cost, it could push premium LCD performance closer to OLED in color and brightness while offering larger-screen options. For consumers, the key questions will be price, full-spec features, and how these panels handle HDR and blooming in typical living-room setups.