First showcased at the CES 2025 trade show in January, the 136-inch Hisense television featuring true Micro-LED technology has just gone on sale in the USA. The model designated as Hisense 136MX is priced at 100,000 dollars and is available exclusively through specialised dealers. Micro-LED is a self-emissive technology, similar to OLED, but without the use of an LCD panel. Each diode acts as an individual subpixel, allowing for extremely high brightness, perfect blacks, and very high contrast.
In comparison – a 4K Micro-LED television consists of 24.88 million subpixels (3840 × 2160 × 3), divided into red, green, and blue diodes. However, the scale of technology for such a solution still translates into very high production costs.
10,000 nits and full HDR
According to declarations from Hisense, the 136MX offers:
up to 10,000 nits peak brightness,
95% coverage of the BT.2020 colour space,
native contrast of 1,000,000:1.
The specification also includes:
refresh rate of 120 Hz,
support for VRR,
formats Dolby Vision and HDR10+,
3 HDMI 2.1 ports,
Filmmaker Mode,
Vidaa OS system.
This is a set of features that places the television in the absolute top league – both in terms of image quality and compatibility with modern signal sources.
Not cheap – but cheaper than the competition
Although the amount of $100,000 sounds extreme, Hisense has relatively aggressively priced its 136-inch Micro-LED compared to competitors:
Samsung – 110” Micro-LED for around $155,000,
Samsung – 89” Micro-LED for around $100,000,
TCL – 163” Micro-LED for around $110,000,
LG – 136” Micro-LED for even $300,000.
In this context, the Hisense 136MX stands out as one of the “cheapest” Micro-LED TVs in such a large size – although it is still a strictly luxury product.
Micro-LED still a long way from the mass market
The Micro-LED technology has been heralded for years as the successor to OLEDs. However, eight years after the launch of Samsung The Wall, the industry still hasn’t managed to significantly reduce production costs.
As of now, Micro-LED remains the domain of ultra-expensive premium installations – luxury home cinemas, residences, and commercial applications. Hisense 136MX, however, shows that manufacturers are slowly approaching more “affordable” price levels in this segment.
Katarzyna Petru













