When you think of LG, high-end OLED TVs usually come to mind. There’s a good reason for that, considering they regularly rank highly on our best TVs list. While LG’s 2025 TVs get several upgrades across the board, it’s the brand’s entry-level QNED TVs that arguably get the most significant boost in terms of value for money.
If you take a look at last year’s TVs from LG, the range started from the affordable UT80 series. They were the baseline 4K (or UHD) TVs labelled with a wallet-friendly price. While you don’t get all of the premium features under the sun, like high refresh rates for gaming, the price point made finding a big TV fairly approachable.
This year, the cheapest LG TVs, dubbed the “NANO80A” series, come with the brand’s “NanoCell” technology, an enhanced version of regular LED panels. LG’s website explains a bit about NanoCell, but the main difference is colour reproduction.
According to LG, the 2024 UT80 TVs produced 78% of the colour range on the DCI-P3 gamut, the spectrum used for movies. Put simply, the closer to 100%, the more colours and more accurate a display is when showing movies. NanoCell technology reportedly displays 84% of DCI-P3’s colours, a decent increase over LG’s vanilla LED TVs of yesteryear.
Notably, while last year’s entry-level TVs started at $899 for the 43-inch UT80, the corresponding NANO80A costs $749. So, you get a panel with better colours at a better year-on-year price. Like most of LG’s 2025 TVs, they’re available to purchase starting from today.
2025 LG QNED TVs go evo
LG also gave its higher-end QNED TVs a glow-up, labelling some models with the “evo” branding previously exclusive to its OLED TVs. Evo is LG’s way of designating which of its TVs fit into its premium category, with upgrades to the QNED93A and QNED86A resulting in better brightness, colours, and image processing.

Both of these models use Mini LED technology, backlit by many tiny LEDs to produce a bright picture suitable for well-lit living rooms. Then there’s the QNED81A, which doesn’t use Mini LED, but it still outputs more colours than last year’s range in addition to LG’s cheaper NanoCell TVs.
Most of the LG QNED81A and QNED86A TVs arrive in Australian stores today, while the fancier QNED93A is due out in May. Here’s how much each of the 2025 LG Nano and QNED TVs cost in Australia:
TV model | Size | Price (RRP) |
---|---|---|
QNED evo QNED93A |
85QNED93A | $4,999 |
75QNED93A | $3,599 | |
65QNED93A | $2,799 | |
QNED evo QNED86A |
100QNED86A | $8,999 |
86QNED86A | $4,299 | |
75QNED86A | $2,999 | |
65QNED86A | $2,199 | |
55QNED86A | $1,799 | |
QNED81A |
86QNED81A | $3,699 |
75QNED81A | $2,499 | |
65QNED81A | $1,899 | |
55QNED81A | $1,499 | |
50QNED81A | $1,299 | |
43QNED81A | $1,099 | |
NANO80A | 86NANO80A | $2,899 |
75NANO80A | $1,899 | |
65NANO80A | $1,299 | |
55NANO80A | $999 | |
50NANO80A | $899 | |
43NANO80A | $749 |
Even though LG is likely to remain best known for its OLED TVs, it’s encouraging to see the standard for entry-level TVs continually getting higher.
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