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The best time to buy a TV: A guide to the times of year that you'll find the best TV deals

Is it better to buy a TV now or to wait? It depends on the time of year.
By Leah Stodart  on 
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Blue, pink, and purple illustration of person surfing on a TV remote with TVs flying past in air
Whether you want a bigger screen, better streaming or gaming quality, or just the cheapest decent option, there's a way to shop strategically. Credit: Ian Moore / Mashable

Poking around for TVs on sale on any given day of the year is all but guaranteed to turn up at least some results. (We would know. We track TV deals weekly.)

Of course, retailers don't casually offer their best TV prices of the year all the time. The amount of TV deals may be bigger or smaller depending on when you're shopping, and if you do spot a discount, patience and a calendar check could render you more savings down the road.

What time of year do TV prices drop?

Times with an "s" would be a more accurate question, because you're not screwed if you don't have the time or the budget to scope out a new TV on Black Friday (though that is one of the best times to shop). Aside from Black Friday, the NFL playoffs and spring are two other times that you'll find the most TVs on sale at lower-than-usual sale prices, including premium flagship models that don't get much action otherwise. Let's break down your options.

Time #1 to find the best TV deals: Black Friday

Month: Late October, November, and early to mid-December

People may not be throwing down in a Best Buy at the crack of dawn like they used to, but Black Friday TV deals are still unmatched — they're just not nearly as fleeting.

Black Friday is trending toward a month-or-more-long affair at this point, with retailers shifting into Black Friday mode online as early as October. The extended time frame raises the question of whether TV sale prices will drop even further closer to Black Friday. Thankfully, most of the big retailers aren't trying to trick you — in fact, Best Buy and Samsung will straight-up tag a certain deal as a Black Friday deal if they drop it ahead of time, confirming to buyers that there's no need to hold out until the week of Thanksgiving.

This is an especially clutch time for budget shoppers looking for the cheapest possible version of a 4K TV at a certain size. During Black Friday, basic budget-friendly 4K TVs are typically the doorbusters that sell out soon after they drop — and are much less likely to return in the next few months. While premium QLED and OLED TVs will definitely also be on sale, many of those deals tend to stick around for a few months in the new year, and might drop even further in price when football deals start.

Roku TV hanging on wall beside shelf with furniture in foreground
Walmart's $148 50-inch onn. 4K Roku TV sold out quickly during Black Friday. Credit: Roku

Post-holiday sales and New Year sales are absolutely a thing, but you can be confident that most TV prices are generally better before Christmas than after. We've seen firsthand how sale prices on TVs subtly go up by $100 or two (or three) during sales after the holiday compared to their Black Friday and pre-holiday prices. Of the TV deals that fluctuate after the new year, you can expect their Black Friday prices (or a price better than Black Friday) to pop up during the next big time to shop — NFL playoff season.

Time #2 to find the best TV deals: NFL playoff season

Month: Mid-January to early February

The people want to know: Are TVs cheaper after the holidays? The answer is technically yes, but not in the "after-Christmas sales slash New Year's sales" way that you're thinking. If you didn't snag your TV during Black Friday, your next best bet is to wait in the wings until the end of January for football-fueled deals, which kick off near the start of the NFL playoffs (sometime in mid to late January) and last until the big game (some in early to mid-February).

The month-long lead-up to the biggest football game of the year — one of the most-watched sporting events of the year — is prime time to find a TV on sale. In particular, these deals may focus more on TVs that are good for watching sports: i.e., big-screen QLEDs. The vibrant lighting supplied by a QLED panel is ideal for following small details like a ball or tiny score box, as well as the brightness of the team's colors and the field to make your experience feel as live and in-person as possible. It's not uncommon for most of these deals to be identical to what we saw during Black Friday, or in some cases, drop even lower in price due to proximity to CES. (See explanation below.)

There is one group of TVs that still may not be seeing their lowest possible sale price during football sales: If you're eyeing one of the most premium, most recent models from a certain brand and still aren't seeing a discount of more than $100 or two, you might consider pumping the breaks until spring.

Time #3 to find the best TV deals: Spring

Month: March and April

Flagship TVs from big brands don't go on sale that often (we typically see more deal action happening with their mid-tier and base-tier counterparts). When the deals do happen on these expensive models, the discount may barely even be big enough to feel like a deal. ($200 off a $2,000 TV? Wow, you shouldn't have.)

Until CES happens, that is. CES is a Las Vegas-based tech trade show where the latest and greatest consumer tech is unveiled to gadget enthusiasts in the industry ahead of release to the public. The annual TV release cycle mostly revolves around CES, as it's where brands like Samsung, LG, TCL, and Hisense show off their new TV designs for the year. While these fresh releases aren't the ones going on sale, TV deal shoppers should care about those new TVs because they force last year's TV models to go on sale.

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The key here is that the best deals start not when the TVs are announced at the event in January, but once they're officially up for grabs to the public in the spring. In 2024, we'll be on the lookout for premium stragglers (the LG C3 and G3 OLEDs or the latest version of Samsung's The Frame, for example) that have been at a plateaued price for months to finally see a new noteworthy discount during post-CES sales.

LG C3 TV with lava lamp screensaver sitting on TV stand with lamp in corner
Now that LG has announced the M4 OLED, the popular LG C3 OLED should get receive a more intense discount. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

The one outlier here is Sony, which has been sitting CES out for the past few years in favor of its own release schedule — a very Apple and iRobot-coded tactic. In 2023, Sony announced its new line of TVs for the year in March (the month that most competitors begin shipping the TVs they announced at CES two months prior) and began shipping those new TVs in the fall. With this logic, you could only assume that Sony's TVs from the previous year will be seeing their best discounts in the fall, which could coincide with early Black Friday deals.

Honorable mention: Prime Day(s)

Amazon is typically pretty low on the list of best places to buy a TV. While it does sell most of the same brands of TVs as competing retailers do, its sale prices are more volatile and often plagued by inflated original prices that make discounts look more intense than they are. (Pro tip: You can get a good idea of what an actually-good sale price range for any TV at Amazon by pasting the listing URL into Camelcamelcamel, a free Amazon price tracking site.)

However, Amazon stands out as a TV destination during the shopping holidays it made up for itself: Prime Day and Prime Big Deal Days (basically a second Prime Day). These events usually happen in July and October, respectively.

Naturally, Fire TVs are the focal point during Prime events, and these deals go hard — hard as in a 43-inch Amazon Omni 4K Fire TV for $99.99 for Prime Day 2023 and a 50-inch Hisense QLED TV for $149.99 for Prime Big Deal Days 2023. (These are wild screen size to price ratios that can only be rivaled by similar Walmart doorbusters on its TV brand, onn.) Both of those jaw-dropping deals were invite-only deals that you have to request to unlock, but it's still a first come, first served situation that would be the case with any doorbuster deal. Interestingly enough, Amazon's Black Friday invite-only deals for 2023 didn't include a TV.

Speaking of other retailers, Amazon Prime events also trigger competing sales at Walmart, Best Buy, and Target. Unless Fire TV is already your comfort streaming platform, your best bet for finding TV deals during July and October Prime events is still to peep the wider variety of TV deals at Amazon's competitors.

Frequently Asked Questions


Any TV bought brand new since the late 2010s is almost guaranteed to be a smart TV, and smart TVs are so solidly the norm now that you'd probably only be able to find one at a yard sale or on eBay.

Have a trusty older model that's still kicking? You can turn a normal TV into a smart TV by buying an external streaming device like an Amazon Fire TV Stick or Roku player. These WiFi-enabled devices plug into a TV's HDMI port and provide a makeshift smart TV platform to access streaming apps when the TV's input selection is that HDMI port.


All three refer to a TV's lighting situation behind the screen, which effects things like how bright the TV gets, how well HDR support is utilized, how contrasted shadows are and how legible dark content is, and how rich colors are. The tech you'll like the best depends on the type of content and lighting of the room in which you'll be using the TV the most. Here's a quick TV lighting guide:

LED (light-emitting diode) is the baseline. Despite their general affordability across the board, one LED TV can beat another out by incorporating full-array local dimming: a collection of lighting zones that adjust independently across the entire screen. Without those crucial in-between zones, the middle of the screen of many cheaper LED TVs can get a little hazy, falling victim to edge-lit dimming that just can't extend light across with the same oomph.

QLED is a luminous spin on traditional LED. The "Q" refers to the an extra layer of quantum dots sandwiched between the standard LED panel and the screen to make a wider range of colors pop off the screen with enhanced brightness. The juicier picture is ideal for viewing or gaming in bright rooms and for honing in on content with small details, like sports.

Not every brand refers to their quantum dot TVs as QLED. While Samsung and TCL refer to QLED as QLED, brands like LG, Sony and Hisense use similar technology marketed under different names (QNED, Triluminos Pro, and ULED, respectively).

Mini LEDs have also entered the chat in recent years. These are about half the size of regular LEDs, allow manufacturers to pack more LEDs into the same size panel, allowing for more local dimming zones and more precise tweaking of brightness in each area.

OLED is its own thing, despite the negligible difference in the title letters itself. Unlike LED and QLED, OLED doesn't require an external backlight. That's because the pixels — the organic light-emitting diodes that represent the "O" in OLED — emit their own light instead. This comes in handy during dark scenes, when the TV screen needs to get as dark as possible to differentiate shadowy shades from each other. While backlit QLED pixels' forced dimming can cause a kind of halo effect around bright objects, OLED pixels can turn off completely. This makes OLED the gold standard for the stark contrast and black uniformity needed for viewing or gaming in dark rooms.

Also unlike QLEDs, OLED TVs are the least likely to come in budget-friendly options.


LED, QLED, and OLED have nothing to do with the screen's resolution (that's what HD, 4K, and 8K are for). This means that the frequently-asked question, whether 4K or QLED is better, isn't really a question at all, because the two aren't mutually exclusive. In fact, nearly every QLED TV is 4K (with some 8K options sprinkled in, but 8K is overkill for nearly any household situation right now). While any rendition of -LED refers to the light source behind the TV, 4K refers to the screen's resolution, or how many pixels are squeezed across the screen horizontally (4,000-ish).


Some 32-inch and 40-inch 4K TVs do exist, but 43 inches is the smallest that most 4K TVs run — and because 4K is the market standard now (over HD), most 43-inch TVs at any price point are going to be 4K anyway.

43 inches is also the smallest size where 4K (3840 x 2160 pixels) is even worthwhile in a TV. While a 15-inch 4K laptop screen makes sense because you're looking at it from just a foot or two away, you're unlikely to notice the resolution benefits of 4K on a screen smaller than 43 inches when you're sitting several feet away. Once you get past 40 inches, the TV is large enough to really showcase the crisp details that 4K provides, making small details like a football score or subtitles more legible, especially if you're watching from several feet away.

Leah Stodart
Leah Stodart
Senior Shopping Reporter

Leah Stodart is a Philadelphia-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable where she covers essential home tech like vacuums and TVs as well as sustainable swaps and travel. Her ever-growing experience in these categories comes in clutch when making recommendations on how to spend your money during shopping holidays like Black Friday, which Leah has been covering for Mashable since 2017.

Leah graduated from Penn State University in 2016 with dual degrees in Sociology and Media Studies. When she's not writing about shopping (or shopping online for herself), she's almost definitely watching a horror movie, "RuPaul's Drag Race," or "The Office." You can follow her on X at @notleah or email her at [email protected].


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