- Mid-series Philips OLED810 comes only in a 77-inch size in UK
- Philips has no 42 or 48-inch among its OLEDs from 2025
- Philips Pricing Aggressively the cheaper OLED760 and the higher end OLED910
Philips Mid-Range OLED TVs are extremely good-we gave a glowing review to Philips OLED809 last year and expected the same again this year. In fact, I have a 65-inch model at home-and I previously had Philips OLED806 Mid-Range Oled from a few years ago, so after owning two of Philips’ middle-class Marvel, you can tell that I really like them.
But for me and buyers like me, it seems that three will not be the magic number: The latest Philips OLED810 Mid-Range OLED only comes to the UK in a single size that makes it too big for many living rooms, including mine.
The news comes through my colleagues on what hi-fi?, Who has confirmed that Philips OLED810 will only be sold in the UK as a 77-inch model that costs £ 2,199. And as much as I love a big TV and it’s a great price for an OLED TV in high quality-and literally doesn’t fit into my home, and that will also be the case for many other people (even ignore costs).
So what happens?
What happens to philips oled -tv’s
It seems that Philips is focusing on the higher and lower end of the market with a particular push for the OLED760 area to Entry-Level; It is currently starting at £ 1,199 for 55 inches, rising to £ 1,499 for 65 inches and £ 1,999 for 77-inch. And especially, it’s actually better than the more expensive OLED810 for players, thanks to the presence of four HDMI ports in full fat content with 4K 120Hz support instead of only two in the OLED810 self it doesn’t have such good image processing and we expect the brightness to be lower.
At the other end of the market, there is Philips OLED910, which has the elite’s primary RGB tandem OLED panel – as seen in the LG G5 – for significantly improved brightness.
OLED910 starts at £ 2,199 for 65 inches, which is incredibly aggressive — it is cheaper than the LG C5 at 65 inches, which is a middle-class OLED like OLED810. And OLED910 has built-in Bowers & Wilkins sound that really impressed me when I heard it.
So you can see in some ways how the OLED810 has been pressed by Philips’ other TVs, but given that the OLED910 starts at 65 inches and OLED760 starts at 55 inches, it means that smaller OLED sizes are completely out of luck as there are no 42 inches or 48 inch models.
It looks like Philips has been released the middle -class market for its rivals: OLED810 seems like a solid competitor to LG C5 or Samsung S90F, but not if people can’t fit it in their homes.



