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Best 75 Inch TV in India 2026

At 75 inches the screen takes over the room, and a year-one panel fault is the most expensive thing that can go wrong - so we weighted what owners report over the spec sheet. Genuine Mini LED starts around 90,000 here; the 3.5 lakh flagships are a tax you can skip.

K
Kriti
Updated 15 June 2026
Best 75 Inch TV in India 2026
Disclosure: This page contains affiliate links - as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases, at no extra cost to you. Prices shown are approximate and were last updated on 15 June 2026; they are accurate as of that date and subject to change, and the price shown on Amazon.in at the time of purchase is the one that applies.

The quick answer

The Sony BRAVIA 2M2 K-75S25BM2 is the best 75-inch here for the reason that matters most on a panel this size: it pairs the cleanest upscaling and motion of any pick with the steadiest brand reliability, and at 75 inches a year-one fault is the expensive thing that can go wrong. At around ₹1,24,000 it’s also the priciest by a distance, it’s an edge-lit HDR10-only panel rather than the brighter Mini LEDs below it, and its 20W sound is the real weakness - so budget for a soundbar and plan to wall-mount it.

For most buyers the smarter money sits well under that, and 75 inches is a size where genuine Mini LED is finally affordable. The Vu Vibe packs an 88W soundbar, is the cheapest pick, and doubles as the value champion; the TCL 75Q6C QD-Mini LED is the best picture for the money; the Hisense 75U7Q is the brightest and most gaming-ready; the Philips 75MLED610 is the cheapest genuine Mini LED you can buy; and the TCL 75V6C is the budget big-screen pick with a 2-year warranty.

Quick comparison

Six picks side by side - the use case each one wins, the price, and a Buy button for the impatient.

  • 9.1 score
    Best overall

    Sony BRAVIA 2M2 K-75S25BM2 4K Google TV

    The best picture processing and the steadiest brand here - if your budget clears the Mini LED crowd.

    Read the review
    approx. ₹1,23,990
  • 8.6 score
    Best value and sound

    Vu Vibe 75VIBE-DV 4K QLED Google TV

    An 88W integrated soundbar and Dolby Vision QLED - the cheapest pick and the value champion.

    Read the review
    approx. ₹63,990
  • 8.5 score
    Best picture

    TCL 75Q6C 4K QD-Mini LED Google TV

    Real local-dimming HDR and Dolby Vision for ₹24,000 less than the Sony - if you'll add a soundbar.

    Read the review
    approx. ₹99,990
  • 8.3 score
    Best for gaming and bright rooms

    Hisense 75U7Q 4K QLED Mini-LED TV

    A 900-nit Mini LED with 240 zones, 144Hz and a real built-in subwoofer - the spec sheet of the list.

    Read the review
    approx. ₹99,999
  • 8.1 score
    Best Mini LED value

    Philips 75MLED610 4K QD-Mini LED Google TV

    The cheapest genuine Mini LED here - near-OLED blacks for around ₹90,000.

    Read the review
    approx. ₹89,999
  • 7.7 score
    Best big screen on a budget

    TCL 75V6C 4K LED Google TV

    A plain LED, but a 2-year warranty and the lowest running cost here - the most screen for the money.

    Read the review
    approx. ₹66,990

How we shortlisted

We started from the 75-inch TVs Indian buyers are actually shopping - around a dozen models with enough verified-purchase reviews to judge - read the recent reviews for each, and scored them on what holds up over time and what owners report in daily use rather than on the carton’s headline numbers. Anything that didn’t clear our bar was dropped, and two popular sets were dropped on purpose (more below).

What changes at 75 inches is that the field splits hard by price rather than by resolution - everything here is 4K, so that argument is over. The real question becomes “what’s behind the panel”: edge-lit, a quantum-dot QLED film, or a genuine Mini LED backlight with local dimming, and how many dimming zones it actually runs. At this size Mini LED is no longer flagship-only - there are three genuine Mini LED sets here, from around ₹90,000 - so a “QLED” badge on a 330-nit edge-lit panel and a Mini LED with real local dimming sit in different classes of contrast. That’s why our best-picture pick and our best-overall pick aren’t the same TV.

Two failure modes moved the rankings more than any spec. The first is panel reliability in year one, and at 75 inches the stakes are highest: a giant panel is the costliest thing to have fail, and the reviews carry dead boards, vertical lines, black patches and backlight problems across nearly every brand and price tier - which is why we weighted “buy it sold-and-shipped-by-Amazon and film the unboxing” as heavily as the spec sheet. The second is service, and here the reviews overturn the usual assumption: the premium badge isn’t automatically safer. TCL, Hisense and Vu all carry real after-sales complaints, while the steadier brand turned out to be Sony. So the six picks each cover a distinct buyer: the best processing and reliability, the best value and sound, the best picture, the best for gaming, the cheapest Mini LED, and the best budget big screen.

At a glance: 6 picks, what each one is good for

TV Panel / backlight HDR Sound Smart OS Price (approx.)
Sony BRAVIA 2M2 4K edge-lit LED, 60Hz HDR10 20W Google TV ₹1,23,990
Vu Vibe 4K QLED, 60Hz Dolby Vision 88W Google TV ₹63,990
TCL 75Q6C 4K QD-Mini LED, up to 144Hz Dolby Vision 40W Google TV ₹99,990
Hisense 75U7Q 4K Mini LED (240 zones), 144Hz Dolby Vision 40W (2.1, subwoofer) VIDAA ₹99,999
Philips 75MLED610 4K QD-Mini LED, 120Hz HSR Dolby Vision 36W Google TV ₹89,999
TCL 75V6C 4K LED, 60Hz HDR10 30W Google TV ₹66,990

The 6 picks, reviewed

1. Sony BRAVIA 2M2 K-75S25BM2 - best overall 75 inch TV

Best overall Kriti's score 9.1 /10
approx. ₹1,23,990

The Sony wins for the reasons that don’t fit on a price comparison. Its 4K Processor X1 with X-Reality PRO gives the cleanest upscaling and the most natural motion of any pick here - the picture owners describe simply as “quality as expected from Sony”, which on a 75-inch panel fed a lot of broadcast and OTT is the whole point. Around that sits the thing no QLED here matches: the steadiest reliability of the lot, where most installs are praised (often same-day, and named technicians come up again and again), and where Sony’s own technician diagnoses a fault honestly when one does occur. At this size, that matters more than any single spec - a giant panel is the most expensive thing in the room to have go wrong.

It runs Google TV with the full Play Store, carries four HDMI ports (HDMI 2.1, one eARC) - the most of any pick - and adds AirPlay 2 and Apple HomeKit, which no other set here does. For an Apple household, or anyone who just wants the safe long-term buy at this size, it’s the obvious choice.

The catches are real and worth knowing before you spend ₹1,24,000. The sound is the weak link: 20W with little bass, and more than one owner who loved the picture said the audio needed a soundbar - one noting his decade-old Sony Bravia hit harder on the low end. The louder gripe is the install - owners report Sony’s technicians steering them toward wall-mounting and pushing a paid flexible stand priced above the online rate, and the angriest reviews are exactly that friction, plus the occasional defective unit (panel lines, a set that wouldn’t power on) where Amazon and Sony passed the claim back and forth before replacing it. And for the money it’s an edge-lit, HDR10-only panel with no Dolby Vision or local dimming, which is why - on picture depth alone - the Mini LEDs below undercut it. None of that undoes the processing-and-reliability advantage, but it’s why this is a premium pick, not a value one.

Key specifications

Resolution
4K Ultra HD (3840x2160)
Panel
Edge-lit LED, 60Hz native
Processor
4K Processor X1, 4K X-Reality PRO, Motionflow XR 100
HDR
HDR10, HLG (no Dolby Vision)
Sound
20W, 2ch, Dolby Atmos / Dolby Audio
OS
Google TV (Play Store)
Ports
4 HDMI (HDMI 2.1, 1 eARC), 2 USB
Extras
AirPlay 2, Apple HomeKit, Alexa, Chromecast built-in
Energy
3 Star (295.37 kWh/year)
Warranty
1 year (including remote)
Made in India

Pros

  • Picture owners single out as the standout - 'quality as expected from Sony', with the cleanest upscaling and motion here
  • Four HDMI ports (HDMI 2.1, one eARC) - the most of any pick - plus AirPlay 2, Apple HomeKit and Alexa
  • The steadiest brand here - most installs are praised, often same-day with a named technician, and Sony's own technician diagnoses a fault honestly
  • Smooth Google TV with the full Play Store; owners call the interface easy and responsive
  • Made in India, with a 3-star energy rating (about 295 kWh/year) that keeps a 75-inch panel's running cost saner than the thirstier Mini LEDs

Cons

  • The loudest gripe is the install: owners report Sony steering them to wall-mount and pushing a paid flexible stand priced above the online rate
  • Sound is weak for the price - 20W with little bass; one owner noted his decade-old Sony Bravia had punchier low end
  • Edge-lit and HDR10-only - no Dolby Vision and no local dimming, so the Mini LEDs below out-contrast it
  • Some units arrived defective (panel lines, won't-power-on), with Amazon and Sony passing the claim back and forth before replacing
  • By far the priciest here, and the street price has crept up from the listed figure for some buyers

Who should buy this

Someone whose budget reaches past the Mini LED crowd and who wants the best picture processing and the steadiest brand reliability of any 75-inch here. On a panel this big a year-one fault is the real risk, so if you value clean upscaling and motion, run an Apple household (AirPlay 2, HomeKit), or simply want a set you won't be calling service about, it's the safe long-term buy - just budget for a soundbar and plan for wall-mounting.

Skip if

Skip if your budget tops out below the roughly ₹90,000 Mini LEDs, or you want real HDR contrast and big built-in sound - it's an edge-lit, HDR10-only panel with 20W audio and an install Sony steers toward paid wall-mounting. The TCL 75Q6C's Mini LED and the Vu Vibe's 88W soundbar both do more for far less.

Ready to buy?

Sony BRAVIA 2M2 K-75S25BM2 4K Google TV

2. Vu Vibe 75VIBE-DV - best value, best sound

Best value and sound Kriti's score 8.6 /10
approx. ₹63,990

The Vu Vibe is the most TV-for-money on this page, and it’s the pick if you watch a lot of film but won’t buy a soundbar. The headline is the sound: an 88W integrated soundbar where the rest of this class sits at 20 to 40W, and owners rate it “top notch”, one describing a “feel like theatre” with the Dolby effect. It backs that with a Dolby Vision QLED panel at 400 nits and a proper gaming kit - HDMI 2.1, VRR, ALLM and a Game Dashboard - and it has the cleanest review profile of anything we read here; one owner notes its interface is “faster than my Sony Bravia”. It’s also the cheapest pick and the lowest to run, with a 4-star energy rating that earns its keep on a panel this size.

For ₹63,990 that’s a lot of capability, and as a films-and-sport machine for a busy living room it’s hard to beat - which is why, at 75 inches, it doubles as the value pick, not just the sound one.

What keeps it just behind the picture sets is brand behaviour and the panel. The table stand isn’t reliably in the box, and owners report Vu expecting you to pay for the install or collect the stand from a service centre - several were charged ₹400 to ₹450 for the “free” fitting. It’s an edge/direct-lit 60Hz panel without local dimming - a VA panel whose colour washes out from an angle, one owner notes - a couple felt the 88W sound was “not up to the mark” against a real soundbar, and one flagged OS lag (2GB RAM is the floor at this size). Vu’s after-sales is the gamble: praised by some owners, called “worst service” by others when a claim goes wrong, on a 1-year warranty. Go in knowing the stand isn’t included, buy it sold-and-shipped-by-Amazon, and it’s the value-and-sound champion.

Key specifications

Resolution
4K QLED (3840x2160)
HDR
Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG
Panel
400 nits, Direct LED (no local dimming), 60Hz, MEMC
Sound
88W integrated soundbar, Dolby Atmos
Gaming
HDMI 2.1, VRR, ALLM, Game Dashboard
OS
Google TV, 2GB RAM / 16GB storage, 1.5GHz VuOn processor
Ports
3 HDMI, 2 USB, optical out
Extras
AirPlay, Chromecast
Energy
4 Star (270 kWh/year)
Warranty
1 year

Pros

  • Standout sound - an 88W integrated soundbar owners rate 'top notch', one describing a theatre-like feel from the built-in audio alone
  • Dolby Vision QLED at 400 nits - genuine HDR at the lowest price on this page
  • Properly gaming-ready: HDMI 2.1, VRR, ALLM and a Game Dashboard, plus an optical out for a future soundbar
  • The cleanest review profile of any pick - 'value for money' is the dominant verdict, and one owner says its UI is faster than his Sony Bravia
  • The best energy rating here (4-star, about 270 kWh/year), which matters on a 75-inch panel that runs for hours

Cons

  • The table stand isn't reliably in the box - owners report Vu withholding it unless you pay for installation, or expecting you to collect it from a service centre
  • Installation isn't the 'free' it's billed as - owners report being charged ₹400 to ₹450 on the day
  • Edge/direct-lit 60Hz panel without local dimming - a VA panel whose colour washes out from an angle, one owner notes
  • A couple of owners felt the 88W sound was 'not up to the mark' versus a real soundbar, and one flagged OS lag (2GB RAM is the floor at this size)
  • Vu's after-sales is a gamble - praised by some, called 'worst service' by others when a claim goes wrong; only a 1-year warranty

Who should buy this

Anyone who wants the most TV-for-money at 75 inches and doesn't want to buy a separate soundbar - the 88W output and Dolby Vision QLED do the heavy lifting, the gaming features are a bonus for a console, and it's the cheapest and lowest-running-cost pick here. As an everyday films, sport and OTT machine for a large living room it's hard to beat, as long as you go in knowing the stand isn't bundled and budget for the install.

Skip if

Skip if you want the deepest HDR contrast or a hands-off, no-surprises install - it's an edge-lit 60Hz panel without local dimming, the table stand isn't reliably in the box, and Vu's service is a lottery. The TCL or Hisense Mini LED is the bigger picture upgrade if you'll add your own sound.

Ready to buy?

Vu Vibe 75VIBE-DV 4K QLED Google TV

3. TCL 75Q6C QD-Mini LED - best picture, best for home cinema

Best picture Kriti's score 8.5 /10
approx. ₹99,990

If a 75-inch TV is for watching films, this is the best picture on the page. The 75Q6C is a QD-Mini LED, which means bright highlights and deep shadows can share a frame without the whole panel washing grey - the exact thing the edge-lit Sony can’t do. Owners feel it: one says it “holds its own against even high-end models from brands like LG and Sony”, another that it’s bright enough to suit a sunlit living room, and a third sums it up as roughly 80 percent of an OLED’s look at 40 percent of the cost. It carries the full premium HDR stack - Dolby Vision IQ and HDR10+ - plus a proper gaming kit (up to 144Hz, AMD FreeSync Premium, Game Master) on four HDMI, with 3GB/32GB and a 2-year warranty.

One number to keep honest, though: the dimming. TCL markets the Precise Dimming series at “512-plus zones”, but a careful owner counted about 242 zones on the 65-inch version, and fewer on the 55-inch. That’s still real local dimming, and still a class above edge-lit, but not the figure on the box - so judge it on the contrast you actually see, not the zone count you’re quoted.

What keeps it third, not first, is the run of fault reports and the service behind them. Across the reviews this set carries the heaviest cluster of QC problems of any pick - dead or no-signal units, a vertical line appearing within days, and black patches developing around the eight-to-nine-month mark on some panels - and TCL’s after-sales is the documented weak spot, with complaints closed without a visit and slow panel claims even under the 2-year warranty. The sound doesn’t help its case: 40W on paper, but owners call it unbalanced - “too much bass or too much vocal” - with the equaliser locked, so a soundbar is the standing advice. Buy it sold-and-shipped-by-Amazon, film the unboxing, budget for a soundbar and a wall bracket (one owner was quoted ₹6,000 for the mount), and it’s the picture champion of the list.

Key specifications

Resolution
4K Ultra HD (3840x2160)
Backlight
QD-Mini LED with local dimming
HDR
Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+, HLG
Processor
AiPQ Pro, 3GB RAM / 32GB storage
Gaming
up to 144Hz, AMD FreeSync Premium, Game Master
Sound
40W, Dolby Atmos
OS
Google TV (Play Store)
Ports
4 HDMI (HDMI 2.1), 1 USB
Energy
2 Star (380 kWh/year)
Warranty
2 years
Made in India

Pros

  • The best HDR picture here - QD-Mini LED local dimming owners say 'holds its own against high-end LG and Sony', and stays bright even at low brightness
  • The full premium HDR stack: Dolby Vision IQ and HDR10+, where the Sony skips Dolby Vision
  • Gaming-ready: up to 144Hz, AMD FreeSync Premium and a Game Master mode on four HDMI (HDMI 2.1)
  • 2-year warranty and 3GB/32GB storage - more headroom than the budget QLEDs
  • One owner's summary: roughly 80 percent of an OLED's look at 40 percent of the cost

Cons

  • The heaviest run of fault reports of any pick - dead or no-signal units, a vertical line within days, and black patches developing around the eight-to-nine-month mark on some panels
  • TCL's after-sales is the documented weak spot - complaints closed without a visit and slow panel claims, even under the 2-year warranty
  • Sound is unbalanced - 40W on paper, but owners report 'too much bass or too much vocal' with the equaliser locked; plan on a soundbar
  • Fewer dimming zones than the badge implies - one owner measured about 242 zones on the 65-inch version, not the 512-plus the series advertises
  • No wall mount in the box - installers have quoted anywhere from ₹500 to ₹6,000, so buy a bracket beforehand

Who should buy this

The movies-and-gaming buyer who wants the best HDR picture on this page without paying Sony money. The QD-Mini LED's local dimming, Dolby Vision IQ and up-to-144Hz gaming make it the home-cinema pick - bright, contrasty and feature-complete on Google TV. Best for someone who'll pair it with a soundbar, buys it sold-and-shipped-by-Amazon, films the unboxing, and values picture and gaming over a fuss-free service record.

Skip if

Skip if you can't add a soundbar or you need a brand whose service desk reliably answers - the 40W audio is unbalanced and TCL's after-sales draws the heaviest service complaints here. The Hisense 75U7Q is a brighter Mini LED with better built-in sound for the same money if you can live with VIDAA, and the Vu Vibe builds in an 88W soundbar for far less.

Ready to buy?

TCL 75Q6C 4K QD-Mini LED Google TV

4. Hisense 75U7Q Mini LED - best for gaming and bright rooms

Best for gaming and bright rooms Kriti's score 8.3 /10
approx. ₹99,999

The Hisense U7Q is the spec sheet of the list, and it earns its slot on brightness and gaming. It’s a Mini LED with 240 local-dimming zones and a 900-nit peak - the brightest, most contrasty panel here - run for fast motion at 144Hz, with two of its HDMI 2.1 ports going up to 165Hz, plus VRR and ALLM. One owner who already runs a Sony Bravia 75-inch rates this Hisense at about 95 out of 100 against it, and a laptop user confirms the high refresh is genuinely visible. For a console gamer or anyone watching in a sunlit room, nothing else here gets this bright or this fast.

It’s also the rare set at this size whose sound you might not need to replace: a 2.1-channel 40W setup with an actual built-in subwoofer, which several owners say does the job without a separate soundbar. Add Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+ Adaptive and a 2-year warranty, and on paper it out-features the TCL for the same money.

The reasons it sits below the TCL are the OS and the service. It runs VIDAA, not Google TV, which means no Google Cast and a thinner app store - owners specifically miss Spotify and AirtelXstream, and casting from a phone or headset isn’t there. More serious is Hisense’s after-sales, which draws the most pointed complaints of any brand here: dead-on-arrival panels, dead remotes and weeks-long replacement runarounds, sometimes only resolved after the Amazon return window had already closed. The review base is also the smallest and most size-pooled here, so the long-term picture is the least settled - and a couple of owners found the panel so bright out of the box it was hard on the eyes until they turned it down. Buy it sold-and-shipped-by-Amazon so an early fault is Amazon’s problem, not the service desk’s, and it’s the brightest, most gaming-ready set on the page.

Key specifications

Resolution
4K Ultra HD (3840x2160)
Backlight
Mini LED, 240 local-dimming zones
Brightness
900 nits peak
HDR
Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+ Adaptive, HLG
Gaming
144Hz (165Hz on 2 ports), VRR, ALLM, Game Mode Pro
Sound
2.1ch 40W with built-in subwoofer, Dolby Atmos
OS
VIDAA U (8 years of updates)
Ports
4 HDMI (2 HDMI 2.1, 1 eARC), 2 USB (1 USB 3.0)
Colour
Quantum Dot (QLED colour)
Warranty
2 years
Made in India

Pros

  • The brightest, most contrasty panel here - a 900-nit Mini LED with 240 local-dimming zones one Sony owner rates about 95 out of 100 against his Bravia
  • The most gaming-ready set: 144Hz (165Hz on two ports), VRR, ALLM and a Game Mode Pro, with one owner confirming the high refresh on a laptop
  • A 2.1ch 40W speaker set with a built-in subwoofer that several owners say needs no separate soundbar - rare at this size
  • Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+ Adaptive and Quantum Dot colour, with a 2-year warranty
  • VIDAA boots fast - some owners rate it cleaner and lighter than Google TV

Cons

  • Runs VIDAA, not Google TV - no Google Cast, and owners report missing apps such as Spotify and AirtelXstream
  • Hisense after-sales is the weakest link - owners report dead-on-arrival panels, dead remotes and weeks-long replacement runarounds, sometimes after the Amazon return window has closed
  • The smallest, partly size-pooled review base here, so the long-term picture is the least settled
  • A couple of owners report the Mini LED is so bright out of the box it's hard on the eyes until you turn it down
  • One owner disputed the high refresh rate while another confirmed 144Hz on a laptop - read the panel spec as listed

Who should buy this

The gamer or bright-room viewer who wants the most capable panel on this page - 900 nits, 240 dimming zones and 144/165Hz make it the brightest, fastest set here, and the built-in subwoofer means you may not need a soundbar. Best for someone who games on a console or PC, watches in a sunlit room, and is happy on VIDAA rather than Google TV - and who buys it sold-and-shipped-by-Amazon so an early fault is Amazon's problem to fix, not Hisense's service desk.

Skip if

Skip if you lean on casting or niche apps, or you want a brand whose service you can count on - VIDAA has no Google Cast and misses some apps, and Hisense's after-sales draws the most pointed complaints here on a thin review base. The TCL 75Q6C is the better-supported Mini LED on Google TV if those matter more than raw brightness.

Ready to buy?

Hisense 75U7Q 4K QLED Mini-LED TV

5. Philips 75MLED610 QD-Mini LED - best Mini LED for the money

Best Mini LED value Kriti's score 8.1 /10
approx. ₹89,999

The Philips MLED610 does one thing that matters a lot at 75 inches: it makes Mini LED affordable. At around ₹90,000 it’s the cheapest genuine Mini LED here, undercutting the TCL and Hisense by about ₹10,000, and owners single out exactly the right thing - “the blacks are deep and inky, almost like an OLED”, with local dimming that works and 120Hz HSR motion one owner found smooth on action. It carries Dolby Vision and HDR10+, a 500-nit panel, and a Google TV interface owners call snappy; more than one calls it a flagship killer for the price.

If your room is dim and you watch a lot of HDR film, that contrast is a real step up from any edge-lit QLED on this page - and you’re paying noticeably less than for the other Mini LEDs to get it.

The reasons it sits mid-table are sound, software and the safety net. The audio is the weakest here - one owner is blunt that “you won’t hear any beats even in Dolby” - so a soundbar isn’t optional. The OS is the bigger worry: several owners report glitches every few minutes on streaming apps, slow boots, and one unit switching itself off, so the experience isn’t as settled as the picture. It carries only a 1-year warranty, Philips after-sales draws complaints (a screen line at two months, a paid-remote surprise), and it ships with 2GB RAM and three HDMI ports - less headroom than the TCL. On a small, partly size-pooled review base - the strongest local-dimming praise came from a 65-inch owner - treat the picture as proven and the software as the gamble.

Key specifications

Resolution
4K Ultra HD (3840x2160)
Backlight
QD-Mini LED with local dimming
HDR
Dolby Vision, HDR10+
Brightness
500 nits
Contrast
3000:1
Motion
120Hz HSR
Sound
36W, Dolby Atmos
OS
Google TV, 2GB RAM / 32GB storage
Ports
3 HDMI, 2 USB, optical out
Warranty
1 year
Made in India

Pros

  • The cheapest genuine Mini LED at 75 inches - local dimming and Dolby Vision for around ₹10,000 less than the TCL or Hisense
  • Owners single out the contrast - 'deep and inky, almost like an OLED' - with smooth 120Hz HSR motion
  • Dolby Vision and HDR10+, the dynamic HDR formats the Sony skips
  • Google TV with 32GB storage and an optical out
  • Made in India, with a competitive street price for a Mini LED panel this size

Cons

  • The OS is the weak point - owners report glitches every few minutes on streaming apps, slow boots, and one unit powering off on its own
  • Sound is the weakest here - one owner is blunt that 'you won't hear any beats even in Dolby'; budget a soundbar
  • Only a 1-year warranty, and Philips after-sales draws complaints - a screen line at two months and a paid-remote surprise among them
  • A small, partly size-pooled review base - the strongest local-dimming praise came from a 65-inch owner, so the 75-inch picture is less settled
  • 2GB RAM and three HDMI ports - less headroom than the TCL's 3GB and four ports

Who should buy this

The buyer who wants genuine Mini LED contrast and Dolby Vision for the least money and will pair it with a soundbar. At around ₹90,000 it undercuts the other Mini LEDs here and delivers near-OLED blacks - the value pick for a dim-room home cinema, best for someone who watches mostly streaming and films, doesn't mind tuning the settings, and accepts a 1-year warranty.

Skip if

Skip if you want a hands-off, glitch-free interface or a longer safety net - owners report periodic OS hiccups, the sound is poor, and it carries only a 1-year warranty. The TCL 75Q6C is the steadier, longer-warrantied Mini LED if the extra ₹10,000 is on the table, and the Hisense is brighter.

Ready to buy?

Philips 75MLED610 4K QD-Mini LED Google TV

6. TCL 75V6C - best big screen on a budget

Best big screen on a budget Kriti's score 7.7 /10
approx. ₹66,990

The 75V6C is the budget floor of this list done honestly: it doesn’t pretend to be more than a good big LED. There’s no QLED badge and no Mini LED here - it’s a plain HVA LED panel at 330 nits - but for around ₹67,000 it gives you the biggest screen with a 2-year warranty and the best energy rating of any pick (4-star, 268 kWh a year), which is real money saved on a panel that runs for hours. Owners are happy with the picture for the price - “crisp”, “vibrant”, bright enough for a normal room - and several say the built-in sound is good enough to skip a soundbar for everyday viewing. It runs the same Google TV with the full Play Store and wears a metallic bezel-less design owners say looks dearer than it is.

For a second TV, a bright everyday living-room set, or anyone who just wants the most screen with a safety net, it’s a sensible buy - on the strength of the warranty and the running cost as much as the panel.

Two things hold it back. First, it’s a basic LED: HDR10 only, no Dolby Vision, no local dimming, so films and HDR look flat next to the Mini LEDs, and a couple of owners wanted better contrast. Second, the same logistics tail as the rest - install delays and no-shows recur, a few units arrived defective (a backlight failure within a week, dead-on-arrival sets), the wall-mount bracket is a paid extra, and the entry-level 2GB RAM brings occasional lag and a Google account that signs out on restart for some. And here’s the honest catch: the Vu Vibe sits about ₹3,000 below it with a genuine Dolby Vision QLED and an 88W soundbar, so the V6C really only makes sense when the 2-year warranty and lower bills are exactly what you’re buying. Get it sold-and-shipped-by-Amazon so an early fault is an easy swap.

Key specifications

Resolution
4K Ultra HD (3840x2160)
Panel
LED (HVA), 60Hz, Micro Dimming
Brightness
330 nits
HDR
HDR10
Sound
30W, Dolby Atmos, DTS-X
OS
Google TV, 2GB RAM / 16GB storage
Ports
3 HDMI, 2 USB
Energy
4 Star (268 kWh/year)
Warranty
2 years
Made in India

Pros

  • A 2-year warranty and the best energy rating here (4-star, 268 kWh/year) - the lowest running cost on a 75-inch panel
  • Owners are satisfied with the picture for the price - 'crisp', 'vibrant', bright enough for a normal room
  • Built-in sound owners find good enough to skip a soundbar for everyday viewing
  • A smooth Google TV interface most owners find responsive, with the full Play Store
  • A metallic bezel-less design owners say looks more expensive than it is

Cons

  • A plain LED panel, not QLED or Mini LED - contrast and black levels are basic, and a couple of owners want better
  • Install delays and no-shows recur, and a few units arrived defective (a backlight failure within a week, dead-on-arrival units)
  • 30W sound and 2GB RAM are entry-level - fine for OTT, with occasional lag and a Google account that signs out on restart for some
  • The wall-mount bracket is a paid extra (around ₹499 to ₹600), not in the box
  • Only HDR10 (no Dolby Vision) and 60Hz - it's a big bright screen, not a cinema panel

Who should buy this

The buyer who mainly wants the biggest screen for the least money, with a safety net - a 2-year warranty and the lowest running cost here, on Google TV, for under ₹70,000. Best for everyday TV, news, OTT and casual viewing in a normal living room, for someone who values cover and bills over cinema-grade contrast and buys it sold-and-shipped-by-Amazon so an early fault is an easy replacement.

Skip if

Skip if picture quality is the point - it's a basic LED with HDR10 only and no local dimming, so films and HDR look flat next to the Mini LEDs. For about ₹3,000 less the Vu Vibe gives you a genuine Dolby Vision QLED and an 88W soundbar; step up to it unless the 2-year warranty and lower bills are exactly what you're buying.

Ready to buy?

TCL 75V6C 4K LED Google TV

The features explained, in plain English

A 75-inch TV listing is a wall of badges, and at this size more of them actually decide whether you’ll be happy. Here are the four that matter.

4K is the floor, not the feature. Every TV worth buying at 75 inches is 4K Ultra HD (3840x2160), so “4K” on the box tells you almost nothing - it’s the price of entry, not a differentiator. At this size the resolution argument is fully over; spend your attention on the backlight, the HDR and the interface instead.

The backlight is the picture - edge-lit LED, QLED and Mini LED aren’t the same thing. This is the spec that separates the field at 75 inches. An edge-lit LED set lights the whole panel from the rim, so it can’t make one corner bright and another dark - dark scenes go grey. QLED adds a quantum-dot colour film on top of that, widening the colour range but adding no contrast on its own. A Mini LED backlight is the real upgrade: many small LEDs grouped into local-dimming zones, so highlights pop and shadows stay black in the same frame. The number of dimming zones is what matters, not the “Mini LED” badge - which is why an owner counting about 242 zones on a 65-inch TCL, or the Hisense’s listed 240, is a more useful number than the “512-plus” on a carton. If you want to go deeper on backlights, HDR and dimming zones before you commit, our smart TV buying guide works through the panel tech in full.

HDR10, HDR10+ and Dolby Vision aren’t interchangeable. All three are HDR, but they behave differently. HDR10 is static - one setting for the whole film. HDR10+ and Dolby Vision are dynamic, adjusting scene by scene for more natural highlights and shadows. Dolby Vision (on the Vu Vibe, Philips, TCL and Hisense here) is the most widely used premium format on Netflix and Prime; the Sony and the budget TCL 75V6C skip it for HDR10. The format only does real work if the panel is bright enough - and ideally has the local dimming - to use it, which is why you read it alongside the backlight, not on its own.

Refresh rate and the OS decide the rest. A 60Hz panel is fine for OTT and broadcast; 120Hz and 144Hz matter mainly for gaming and fast sport, and some printed “144Hz” figures mix the real panel refresh with motion-smoothing, so read them as listed. The software matters just as much: Google TV (Sony, Vu, Philips, both TCLs) runs the full Play Store, casts from a phone, and isn’t tied to one account; VIDAA (Hisense) is fast but has a thinner app store, no Google Cast and misses some apps. Read the RAM too - 2GB is the floor at this size and the sets that have it are where the occasional lag reports cluster, while 3GB (the TCL 75Q6C) gives more headroom.

Complete buying guide

How much should you actually spend on a 75 inch TV in India?

There are three honest tiers at this size. Below about ₹60,000 you’re into the riskiest budget-brand territory, where the panels and the service records are the weakest and the year-one failure reports pile up - the cheapest 75-inch QLEDs look like a bargain until a dead panel meets an unreachable service desk (the VW 75 Pro, below, is the cautionary tale). The value tier is ₹60,000 to ₹75,000, and it’s where a lot of people should shop: the genuine Dolby Vision QLED (the Vu Vibe) and the long-warranty budget LED (the TCL 75V6C) both live here. From ₹90,000 to ₹1,00,000 you reach genuine Mini LED - the Philips, the TCL 75Q6C and the Hisense - whose local dimming is a visible step beyond anything edge-lit, and that’s the sweet spot if picture is your priority. Above ₹1,00,000 you’re into Sony territory at around ₹1,24,000, paying for processing, motion handling and after-sales rather than a bigger spec sheet. The ₹1,40,000 Sony BRAVIA 3 and the ₹3,57,000 BRAVIA 9 exist, but for almost everyone they’re a tax you can skip; the 2M2 covers the premium case.

Specs that matter, and specs that don’t

The four that shape your daily experience are the backlight type and number of dimming zones, the HDR format and panel brightness (nits), the smart OS and the RAM behind it, and the number of HDMI ports (look for HDMI 2.1 and an eARC port if you’ll add a soundbar or game on a console). The ones that don’t earn their hype: the QLED badge on its own (a colour bonus, not a contrast upgrade - and sometimes slapped on a no-dimming direct-lit panel), printed “144Hz” figures that may be motion-smoothing rather than a true panel refresh, and the MRP-versus-discount theatre - a ₹2,99,990 “MRP” slashed to ₹99,990 just means the MRP was fiction, so judge the street price on its own. Sound wattage is worth a glance if you won’t add a soundbar - it ranges from an honest 20W on the Sony to the Vu Vibe’s 88W - but no slim TV body has space for real bass, so for serious viewing, budget for a soundbar regardless.

Service network reality check

This is where the reviews overturn the conventional wisdom, so weight it heavily if you’re outside a metro. The assumption that a premium badge buys you better service doesn’t hold here: TCL, Hisense and Vu all carry real after-sales complaints - unanswered calls, slow panel claims, replacement runarounds that outlast the Amazon return window, and the occasional “warranty void if you don’t install through us” coercion. The steadier brand turned out to be Sony, whose faults at least get diagnosed honestly by the company’s own technician, though even Sony’s owners flag the paid-stand-and-wall-mount friction. Among the smallest brands the picture is worse still, which is why the protection that actually works reliably matters more than the badge: Amazon’s own. On a panel this large and this heavy, an early fault you can return to Amazon is the difference between a swap and a standoff.

When to buy, and when to wait

If you can wait, do. 75-inch 4K prices swing ₹8,000 to ₹20,000 during the Great Indian Festival on Amazon and Big Billion Days on Flipkart, usually around September and October, with smaller dips around Republic Day in January - the bigger the panel, the bigger the rupee swing. Outside those windows prices drift but rarely fall hard. Set a price alert on the model you want and let the sale come to you rather than paying sticker price in between - and check whether a newer model year has arrived, because the outgoing one often sees its sharpest discount just as the replacement lands.

What we don’t recommend, and why

Two popular 75-inch sets we screened are easy to find on any “best of” list, and we’re leaving them off on purpose.

The VW 75 Pro Series is the cheapest 75-inch we found, at around ₹55,000, and on the spec sheet it looks like a steal - QLED, Full Array Local Dimming, a 48W 2.1 subwoofer setup, an 18-month warranty. The reviews tell a different story. Verified owners report panels going dead between two and twelve months, paired with a customer-care number more than one buyer describes as fake or never answered and emails that go nowhere - the single worst outcome there is, a dead panel during warranty with no one to honour it. None of the marquee features - the local dimming, the subwoofer, the warranty - is actually borne out in owner feedback; the warranty is undermined by the very people trying to claim it. At this size a dead panel you can’t get serviced is the worst money you can spend - the Vu Vibe is the budget Dolby Vision QLED to buy instead.

The Philips 8100 Series is the more tempting trap. At around ₹75,000 it’s a popular, big-brand set with a recognisable name and a “QLED” badge - but read the panel line and it’s a direct-lit LED with no local dimming at all, so the badge is doing more work than the picture. Owners don’t actually complain about the picture (it’s bright, and they like it), but the reviews carry a worrying QC-and-service tail: screen lines appearing around two months, a motherboard failing at three, paid-remote surprises, and Philips after-sales that several owners couldn’t reach. It’s not a bad TV - it’s a fairly-priced one wearing a label it doesn’t earn, and at ₹75,000 you do better with the Vu Vibe’s genuine Dolby Vision QLED for less, or by stretching to a real Mini LED.

Frequently asked questions

Which is the best 75 inch TV in India in 2026?

The best 75-inch outright is the Sony BRAVIA 2M2 K-75S25BM2 - it has the cleanest picture processing here and the steadiest brand reliability, which matters most on a panel this big where a year-one fault is the costly risk. But at around ₹1,24,000 it sits well above the rest, it's edge-lit and HDR10-only, and it needs a soundbar. For most buyers the smarter money is ₹64,000 to ₹1,00,000: the Vu Vibe is the best sound (an 88W built-in soundbar) and the value champion, the TCL 75Q6C is the best picture (real Mini LED and Dolby Vision), the Hisense 75U7Q is the brightest and most gaming-ready, the Philips 75MLED610 is the cheapest genuine Mini LED, and the TCL 75V6C is the budget big-screen pick with a 2-year warranty. Match the pick to what you care about most - picture, sound, gaming, value or price.

Is a 75 inch TV too big for an Indian living room?

It's a size for genuinely large rooms, not average ones. A 75-inch 4K TV looks right from a viewing distance of about 2.8 to 3.8 metres, roughly 9.5 to 12.5 feet, which matches the sofa-to-wall gap in a big hall or a dedicated home-theatre room. If your seating is closer than about 9 feet, a 65-inch sits easier on the eyes and you won't feel pinned to the wall; squeezing a 75-inch into a compact room 'to future-proof' tends to overwhelm it and force you too close. Because it's 4K you can sit toward the closer end of that range without seeing pixels, but measure your room before you fall for the size.

How far should you sit from a 75 inch 4K TV?

Roughly 2.8 to 3.8 metres - about 9.5 to 12.5 feet. Because it's a 4K panel you can sit toward the closer end without seeing pixel structure, which you couldn't on an older Full HD set. Closer than about 9 feet and a 75-inch starts to dominate your field of view and you'll be turning your head to follow the action; further than about 13 feet and even a 75-inch begins to feel ordinary. If your room forces you under 9 feet, a 65-inch is the more comfortable size for the same money or less.

Is Mini LED worth it on a 75 inch TV?

At 75 inches it's the upgrade most worth considering, and it's affordable here - there are three genuine Mini LED sets on this list: the Philips 75MLED610 at around ₹90,000, and the TCL 75Q6C and Hisense 75U7Q at around ₹1,00,000. A Mini LED backlight splits the screen into local-dimming zones, so bright highlights and dark scenes can sit side by side without the whole panel washing grey - something an edge-lit set, including the ₹1,24,000 Sony here, physically can't do. The catch is that the number of dimming zones matters more than the 'Mini LED' badge: one TCL owner measured about 242 zones on the 65-inch, not the 512-plus the series advertises, and the Hisense lists 240. If you mostly watch daytime TV and OTT a good QLED is plenty; if you watch films and sport in a dim room, Mini LED is the real step up.

What is the difference between QLED and Mini LED at 75 inches?

QLED is a colour technology - a quantum-dot film that widens the colour range. It adds no brightness or contrast on its own, so a QLED badge tells you about colour, not picture depth. Mini LED is a backlight technology - many small LEDs grouped into local-dimming zones, which gives far better contrast and HDR than an edge-lit panel; the two are often combined as 'QD-Mini LED'. At 75 inches the choice on this list is between value QLEDs (the Vu Vibe), genuine QD-Mini LED sets (the Philips, TCL and Hisense) that cost more but show visibly deeper blacks, and a plain LED (the TCL 75V6C). One trap to watch: a TV can wear a 'QLED' badge on a basic direct-lit panel with no dimming at all, so read the backlight line, not just the badge.

Which 75 inch TV has the best sound?

The Vu Vibe 75VIBE-DV, by a wide margin on paper - it carries an 88W integrated soundbar where most of this class runs 20 to 40W, and owners describe a genuine theatre feel from the built-in audio. The Hisense 75U7Q is the next-best built-in, with a 2.1ch 40W set and an actual subwoofer that several owners say needs no soundbar. After that it drops off: the TCL 75Q6C's 40W is unbalanced with a locked equaliser, and the premium Sony runs just 20W and clearly expects you to add a soundbar. Even 88W in a slim TV body has limits, and a couple of Vu owners felt it was overhyped, but if sound matters and you don't want a separate speaker, the Vibe and the Hisense are the two to look at.

Which is the best 75 inch TV for gaming?

The Hisense 75U7Q is the gaming-first pick - a 900-nit Mini LED panel at 144Hz (165Hz on two of its HDMI 2.1 ports) with VRR and ALLM, the brightest and fastest combination here, and one owner confirmed the high refresh on a laptop. The TCL 75Q6C also reaches up to 144Hz with AMD FreeSync Premium and adds Dolby Vision IQ on Google TV, so it's the better all-rounder if you want apps and casting alongside gaming. The Vu Vibe covers the gaming basics (HDMI 2.1, VRR, ALLM) at the lowest price. Note that some 'high-refresh' numbers on TVs mix the real panel refresh with motion-smoothing, so read them as listed rather than assuming true 144Hz everywhere.

Is the Sony 75 inch TV worth the extra money over a TCL or Hisense?

It depends on what you're buying. The Sony BRAVIA 2M2 earns its premium on two things the cheaper sets can't match: the cleanest 4K upscaling and motion of any pick, and the steadiest brand reliability - which carries real weight on a 75-inch panel where a year-one fault is the expensive failure. What you give up for the roughly ₹24,000 to ₹60,000 you spend over the TCL, Hisense or Vu is real HDR contrast: the Sony is edge-lit and HDR10-only, with no Dolby Vision and no local dimming, and just 20W of sound. So if processing, motion and after-sales matter to you more than raw HDR, it's worth it; if you mostly watch films and want the deepest picture, the Mini LEDs are the smarter spend and the Sony is the one to skip.

Do 75 inch TVs come with a wall mount or a table stand?

Not reliably, and it's the most common nasty surprise in the reviews. Most sets here include table-top legs but not a wall-mount bracket - that's a paid add-on, often ₹400 to ₹600 and sometimes far more (one TCL owner was quoted ₹6,000 for the mount). Some go further: Sony's installers steer buyers toward wall-mounting and a paid flexible stand, and several Vu owners report the table stand being withheld unless they pay for the install. Assume the wall bracket is extra, confirm exactly what's in the box on the listing, buy your own bracket beforehand if you can, and film the unboxing - on a 75-inch panel this big and heavy, a missing accessory or a cracked screen is far easier to prove on video.

How much should I spend on a 75 inch TV in India?

Three honest tiers. Below about ₹60,000 you're into the riskiest budget-brand territory, where panels and service records are weakest - tread carefully (the VW 75 Pro is the cautionary tale, see below). The value tier is ₹60,000 to ₹75,000, where the genuine Dolby Vision QLED (Vu Vibe) and the long-warranty budget LED (TCL 75V6C) sit. From ₹90,000 to ₹1,00,000 you reach genuine Mini LED - the Philips, TCL and Hisense - which is the real picture upgrade at this size. Above that you're into Sony territory (around ₹1,24,000), paying for processing and after-sales rather than a bigger spec sheet. The ₹1,40,000 Sony BRAVIA 3 and the ₹3,57,000 BRAVIA 9 exist, but for almost everyone they're a tax you can skip - the 2M2 covers the premium case.

Should I buy a 75 inch TV during a sale, and which sale?

Yes, if you can wait. 75-inch 4K prices swing ₹8,000 to ₹20,000 during the Great Indian Festival on Amazon and Big Billion Days on Flipkart, usually around September and October, with smaller dips around Republic Day in January - the bigger the panel, the bigger the rupee swing. Between those windows prices drift but rarely fall hard, and the outgoing model year often sees its sharpest discount just as the replacement lands. Set a price alert on the model you want, let the next event come to you, and always buy the listing sold and shipped by Amazon, not a third-party seller, so warranty and replacement stay simple on a set this expensive.

Is a 75 inch TV better than a 65 inch?

It's about your room, not which is 'better'. 75 inches suits a big hall or a dedicated home-theatre room with seating around 9.5 to 12.5 feet back - big enough to feel cinematic, but it overwhelms an average living room and forces you too close. Step down to 65 inches if your seating is around 8 to 10.5 feet or the wall is narrow, and you'll usually get a better panel for the same budget. One practical point at 75 inches: it's a heavy two-person set, the wall mount and wall need to take the weight, and a good 65-inch Mini LED often beats a cheaper, dimmer 75-inch on picture - don't trade quality for raw size if the budget is fixed.

The bottom line

The Sony BRAVIA 2M2 is the best 75-inch you can buy if your budget reaches it - the cleanest processing and the steadiest brand here, which counts double on a panel this size - as long as you add a soundbar and plan to wall-mount it. But at 75 inches the best picture is a different set: the TCL 75Q6C QD-Mini LED out-pictures the Sony on HDR for ₹24,000 less, and is the one to buy for films if you’ll pair it with a soundbar. For most people, the Vu Vibe is the sound-and-value champion and the cheapest pick, the Hisense 75U7Q is the brightest and most gaming-ready, the Philips 75MLED610 is the cheapest way into genuine Mini LED, and the TCL 75V6C is the budget big-screen pick with a 2-year safety net. Skip the VW 75 Pro and the Philips 8100, for the reasons above.

We’ll refresh this review after the Great Indian Festival sales this autumn, when prices move and any new 2026 Mini LED panels have enough owner reviews to judge honestly.

K

About the author

Kriti · Reviewer at kritireviews

Kriti researches and writes long-form reviews of home appliances and consumer electronics for an Indian audience. The focus is on what brochures leave out: how voltage instability and monsoon humidity affect real performance, how a brand's service network actually behaves in your city, and the gap between launch-day specs and what owners report later. No paid placements, no sponsored coverage, no free-sample-for-coverage deals.

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