BRAVIA 9 II / XR95M2 / XR9M2
Available screen sizes:
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Panel type: LCD VA Refresh rate: 120Hz Brand: SONY Resolution: 3840x2160 System: Google TV Model year: 2026
It was for this TV that Sony passed on launching a new flagship OLED this year, shifting all its focus to developing True RGB technology. This bold move makes the Bravia 9 II undoubtedly one of the most important and intriguing releases of the year. The Japanese manufacturer is putting its premium image on the line, directly challenging organic panels (OLEDs) that have until now dominated the market. The new model brings far more changes than just a revolution in backlighting, with a refreshed design and a deeply matte screen finish that immediately catch the eye. To see whether this huge gamble paid off, the flagship spent a solid week in our test lab.
8.9
Overall rating
Sony Bravia 9 II is without a doubt one of the most advanced televisions that have ever passed through our editorial office. Sony has created a real monster by using a completely new RGB Mini-LED backlight design, which they call True RGB. But the technology alone is only half the story. Only combined with Sony's finely tuned, years-in-the-making image processing algorithms has a television emerged that is closer to a director's intended picture than any other screen we've tested to date. This is where you can see why Sony has enjoyed such a reputation in the world of imaging for years. HDR looks spectacular, peak brightness at times seems almost absurd, blacks can be surprising for an LCD TV, and colours are at once extremely vivid and natural. Most importantly, all these elements form a coherent whole. There's no sense that the TV is trying to impress with numbers in the spec sheet alone — it is simply a huge pleasure to watch, whether it's movies, series or gaming. Beyond the excellent picture quality, you can't forget that this is simply a complete television. Google TV runs fast and offers virtually all the major apps, gamers get a full suite of premium features, and support for audio and video formats means there's little to complain about in the feature set. These are exactly the qualities we expect from a device that aspires to be the television of the year 2026.
Are there any drawbacks? Of course there are. Even the Bravia 9 II is not a perfect design. Interestingly, our biggest reservations are not about picture quality, which is absolutely phenomenal. We're more puzzled by some of the manufacturer's decisions. In the flagship 2026 model we still only get two HDMI 2.1 ports, which can be downright annoying when you have a console, a PC or audio equipment. The other issue is the lack of a 98-inch version. It's really hard to understand why a TV of this class doesn't come in that recently popular size.
So is the Bravia 9 II worth buying? Our answer is: YES, YES and once again YES. If you're after a top-tier television and picture quality is your primary concern, it's hard to find a better choice right now. Sony has not only proven that RGB Mini-LED has enormous potential, but also shown how the technology should be used. The "True RGB" label didn't appear here by accident. What's more, given the current price of this model, you can confidently say it has been priced quite sensibly compared with the competition. The Bravia 9 II is not just one of the best TVs of 2026. It's a television that sets a new benchmark and shows the whole industry what image quality on an RGB Mini-LED TV should look like.
Excellent black levels for an RGB Mini-LED LCD panel
Extremely high HDR and SDR brightness (identical to the Sony BVM-HX3110 reference monitor)
Great daytime performance thanks to the matte panel
Very good colour reproduction
Market-leading digital image processing
Plenty of gaming features (VRR, ALLM, HDMI 2.1)
Quite good viewing angles (for a VA panel)
Polished Google TV operating system and two remotes included
Very good audio
Support for premium video and audio formats: Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, DTS:X
Only 2 HDMI 2.1 ports (on a flagship screen in 2026?!)
No 98-inch option in the range
Limited picture calibration features
Very noticeable local-dimming zone behaviour off-axis
No high refresh-rate modes for PC gamers (higher than 120Hz)
Movies and series in UHD quality
8.9
Classic TV, YouTube
8.4
Sports broadcasts (TV and apps)
8.0
Gaming on console
9.2
TV as a computer monitor
7.8
Watching in bright light
10.0
Utility functions
8.8
Apps
9.6
Sound quality
9.0
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HDMI inputs: 2 x HDMI 2.0, 2 x HDMI 2.1 (48Gbps) Outputs: Toslink (Optical audio), eARC (HDMI), ARC (HDMI), Mini-Jack (Sony S-Center) Network Interfaces: Wi-Fi 2.4GHz, Wi-Fi 5GHz, Ethernet (LAN) 100Mbps
Build quality: Super Premium
Stand type: Central
Bezel color: Black
Stand: Fixed
Flat design: Yes
Accessories: Two remote controls
The Sony Bravia 9 II opts for tried-and-tested minimalism in its design. The screen is framed by narrow black bezels, which is fairly standard at this price point. The build is relatively slim, but the most important changes are in the mounting hardware and at the back of the casing. The main feature of the design is the central stand. It’s been engineered to diffuse light behind it. This creates an interesting "levitation" effect, but above all it serves as a very practical cable cover. When you tuck the cables behind it, the ribbed surface of the base scatters light so effectively that instead of cables you simply see the texture and colour of the wall behind the TV. The back panel has been redesigned compared with the previous model. The surface is now matt, and the whole section has been reworked mainly to house a modified, more powerful speaker system tucked under the casing.
Select size:
8.6/10
Local dimming function: Yes, number of zones: 1500 (30 x 50)
Result
218,000:1
Result
66,700:1
Result
448,850:1
Result
12,700:1
Result
4,200:1
Visibility of details in the lights:
In the 65-inch size we tested we counted exactly 1,500 independent local dimming zones. Combined with the VA panel's native high contrast, this translates into very good results when reproducing dark scenes. Although the number of zones isn't as high as with classic QD-Mini LED-backlit screens, Sony's algorithms more than make up for the difference. The contrast we measured reaches very high values, and in easier dark shots dominated by deep blacks the image can even resemble OLED screens. Of course Mini LED has its physical limits and it's not an OLED. When small bright elements appear on a dark background the halo effect is still visible (a characteristic bright glow around a bright point, caused by the lighting zone being much larger than a single pixel).
In the Bravia 9 II this phenomenon works quite differently to classic LCD TVs. Thanks to the new architecture, the glows around objects take on the colour of the displayed element. You can clearly see this in the helicopter cockpit scene: the halo glow generated around the instruments isn't white-blue, it takes on the exact green tint of the LEDs in the cockpit. To the human eye that image is much more coherent and gives a greater sense of depth, even if the purely mathematical, measurable contrast at that particular point isn't revolutionary. Sony once again proves it has the best local dimming algorithms on the market. The software doesn't produce artificial, abrupt brightening and keeps the undesirable side effects of zone-based technology well under control. If you're wondering which RGB screen currently handles backlight zones best, the Bravia 9 II is the answer.
9.3/10
Supported formats: HDR10, Dolby Vision, HLG
Luminance measurements in HDR:
Result
3003 nit
Result
2717 nit
Result
2755 nit
Result
2230 nit
Result
2033 nit
The real showcase for the new backlight architecture and Sony’s processor is HDR reproduction. At the official launch the Sony engineers said (not officially 😉) that the Bravia 9 II’s brightness should be almost identical to their professional director’s monitor BVM-HX3110, priced at astronomical sums. Our lab tests confirmed they weren’t empty promises. In synthetic measurements on the L20 test pattern the TV easily exceeded 4000 nits of peak brightness. More importantly, these impressive results translate directly to real film scenes. In most of the demanding shots we tested the screen consistently held brightness around 2500 to 3000 nits. Whether the light was small and pinpoint or flooded almost the entire screen, the HDR effect was incredibly intense.
Colour is another key pillar of RGB Mini LED technology (Sony’s True RGB implementation). For testing this type of panel we’ve permanently added a new research section to check how TVs handle colour in real-world conditions. Traditional synthetic-chart tests are no longer enough to determine real gamut coverage. From now on we also measure colour saturation directly in selected film scenes by overlaying measurement points. So how do the colours perform?
In synthetic tests the Bravia 9 II posts excellent results. For the popular DCI-P3 space used for HDR, colour-gamut coverage was almost 98%, while for the extremely wide and demanding BT.2020 space our measurements showed nearly 90%. However, in real-world, varied scenes those values drop by a few percentage points. This is directly due to the nature of zoned RGB backlighting. When differently coloured elements or bright white points appear next to each other, light from adjacent zones begins to mix slightly, producing a whitish backlight. This, of course, affects colour saturation, slightly reducing it. It shows that despite Sony’s brilliant algorithm controlling the RGB diodes, that number of zones is too small to eliminate the effect completely.
Is this a reason to complain? Of course not. The Bravia 9 II’s final colour coverage is the same as that of a very good QLED TV, and it’s important to remember: the vast majority of films and TV shows distributed in HDR use the DCI-P3 gamut. In that standard Sony easily maintains very high colour saturation, regardless of the scene.
BT.2020 color gamut coverage and primary color luminance
| Data set | BT.2020 [%] | P3 [%] | R [%] | G [%] | B [%] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Synthetic patterns | 89.8 | 98.6 | 87.4 | 85.6 | 93.0 |
| Film measurements | 82.7 | 95.7 | 86.9 | 79.8 | 94.3 |
Arithmetic means of BT.2020 and P3 gamut coverage and the luminance of the primary colors (red, green, blue) as a % of target.
Scene from the movie “Pan” (about 2800 nits)
Scene from the movie “Billy Lynn” (about 1100 nits)
Lab measurements are behind us, so it's time to move on to the most important question: how do films in HDR actually look on this screen? We can answer briefly and bluntly: SENSATIONAL. The image's tonal rendering is absolutely top-notch, whether we're talking about easier shots graded to the standard 1000 nits or the extreme ones requiring three or even four times the brightness. The key to success here is the top-tier tone mapping. Many flagship TVs on the market, chasing record brightness figures, tend to blend the brightest parts of the image into a single white blob, irretrievably losing detail. With the Bravia 9 II that problem doesn't occur; the TV preserves the full texture of objects in sunlight and during massive explosions. In many scenes this model actually looks like a direct copy of a director's reference monitor. All the bright areas and the tiniest details hidden in shadows literally look exactly as the creators planned in the post-production studio. Put simply: if you're looking for a TV that can reproduce HDR content with a truly director-level vision and the right dynamics, the new Bravia 9 II can do it almost flawlessly.
HDR luminance chart:
With the static HDR10 format, Sony's custom tone-mapping in the processor has to do all the heavy lifting, but things get even more interesting with dynamic formats. The Bravia 9 II benefits hugely when viewing material encoded in Dolby Vision. Even though we're talking about an absurdly bright panel that in theory could handle any scene, the dynamic metadata in Dolby Vision lets the TV recover far more detail in the brightest parts of the image than its own algorithms can on their own. A direct comparison clearly shows the system gets precise instructions on how to temper that massive brightness so it doesn't blow out details in bright shots. Fortunately for buyers, the vast majority of modern films and series on streaming platforms and on 4K Ultra HD discs are produced in Dolby Vision. Choosing this model therefore means you can be sure the content you watch will always be as information-rich as possible and free from any inaccuracies.
Static HDR10
Dynamic: Dolby Vision
6.2/10
Contrary to expectations and high hopes, the Bravia 9 II we tested straight out of the box showed some issues with its factory calibration. Looking at the white balance charts, you can see it isn’t perfect. In SDR content it mainly lacked the red component, so the picture leaned toward cooler, bluish tones. By contrast, white balance in HDR looked much better in that respect. So where do the visible errors in image reproduction come from? They stem from an unexpected tuning of the gamma and the EOTF curve. In both cases the Bravia 9 II straight from the factory showed a clear deviation from reference standards.
In SDR content the gamma was significantly too high, at times running very close to 2.8 instead of the reference 2.4. In practice this meant the image was artificially dark and appeared washed out of colour, with details in dark areas (the shadows) completely lost. The opposite was true in HDR material, where brightness reproduction is handled by the EOTF curve. That curve was pushed too high above the correct value, which resulted in the picture being artificially brightened across most luminance ranges. As with every TV we test, we also subjected this unit to professional calibration. You can see the results and how we managed to correct those factory errors below.
9/10
Fortunately, with professional calibration, most of the factory shortcomings of the Bravia 9 II can be effectively eliminated. We managed to precisely correct primarily the white balance and the gamma and EOTF curves. After those adjustments, in everyday use and during movie sessions the TV looks vastly better. The image gained proper dimensionality, the cool tint to the whites disappeared, and shadow details that had previously been lost due to excessively high gamma finally became clearly visible. Although we ultimately assess colour accuracy as very good, as specialists we must point out one fairly serious design flaw in this model. The Bravia 9 II could look even better if it weren't for the complete lack of an advanced colour management system in the TV's menu.
While a basic white balance correction can be carried out here without issue, the settings lack options for adjusting specific colours. We tried to tackle this from every angle, both using the traditional method from the remote and with dedicated calibration software for Bravia TVs. Unfortunately, that function has been entirely locked. We suspect this may stem from the specifics of the new RGB architecture, which imposes these limitations. It's a real shame, because without it you can't fine-tune colour reproduction to perfection. The inaccurate red, for example, still stands out. Let's hope Sony will fix this shortcoming over time via an update.
9.5/10
Huge credit to Sony for the smoothness of tonal transitions, which has been significantly improved over last year’s Bravia 9. Colour gradation here is at a very high level and, most importantly, this effect is consistent regardless of the type of scene being shown. Both in very bright parts of the image and in very dark, demanding gradients, the TV performs superbly, effectively eliminating the irritating phenomenon of posterization (that is, the appearance of visible "steps" and bands in colour transitions, for example in shots of the sky or in fog). The only slight shortcomings in this area appear when watching Dolby Vision content. In those specific pieces the gradation can at times be a little worse than with an HDR10 signal, but the differences are so subtle and marginal that they will be completely invisible to the average viewer.
8.5/10
Smooth transition function
Image without overscan on the SD signal
Digital processing and upscaling have long been Sony's forte, and after testing the Bravia 9 II we can confidently say that nothing has changed in this area. Sony remain at the top of the market. Their proprietary XR image processor, which in this model works together with the main MediaTek Pentonic 1000 chip, deserves the highest praise. That combination delivers excellent results. Upscaling lower-resolution content is extremely effective and precise.
However, what earns the most praise in the XR processor's performance is its tonal transition smoothing function. The system can reduce posterisation in heavily compressed material to practically zero. Crucially, the algorithm does this in a very intelligent way. It removes only the irritating digital 'steps' in gradients (banding), but does not blur fine texture detail or create an artificial, 'plastic' look lacking film grain. The image remains sharp, natural and cinematic.
8.1/10
Maximum refresh rate of the panel: 120Hz
Film motion smoothing option: Yes
Blur reduction option: Yes
BFI function 60Hz: Yes, 60Hz (image flickers)
BFI function 120Hz: Yes, 240Hz (double contours)
Brightness drop with BFI: 76%
In the specifications for the Sony Bravia 9 II you won't find dizzyingly high screen refresh rates above 120 Hz, which some more demanding PC gamers might see as a drawback. However, in everyday use — whether during film sessions, playing console games or watching sport — it's really hard to criticise the motion smoothness. The VA panel used here does exhibit some slight, natural smearing typical of this panel type, but the excellent Motionflow smoothing algorithms come to the rescue. The system menu includes sliders for blur reduction and smoothing that let you precisely tune the motion characteristics to your own preferences.
Blur (native resolution, maximum refresh rate):
Blur (BFI function enabled):
Interestingly, the motion settings also hide a function called "Czystość", which is the BFI system, that is black frame insertion, a technique for improving perceived sharpness by alternately inserting black frames. Unfortunately, this year we have to judge this solution as of little use and certainly worse implemented than in the original model. Although this function drastically improves clarity and, with a 120 Hz signal, can create an image that appears almost twice as smooth, it does so at the cost of a huge drop in brightness. Our measurements showed that activating this mode reduces screen brightness by nearly 76%.
9.4/10
Aside from the fairly serious design oversight of limiting the platform to just two full HDMI 2.1 ports, the Bravia 9 II offers almost all the key gaming features available on the market. Sony has already accustomed us to such a rich feature set in its previous designs. The list of supported technologies here is extensive. It includes automatic low-latency mode (ALLM), variable refresh rate (VRR), as well as a fully compliant implementation of the HGIG standard and Dolby Vision tailored specifically for gamers.
10/10
Alongside its rich package of gaming features comes a parameter that’s crucial for every gamer: input lag. Here the new Bravia 9 II performs simply flawlessly. Our laboratory tests showed that signal delay in "Game" mode is SUPER low. The values we recorded during measurements are completely imperceptible to the human eye and place this model among the very best.
| SDR | HDR | Dolby Vision |
|---|---|---|
| 1080p60: 13 ms | 2160p60: 12 ms | 2160p60 DV: 13 ms |
| 1080p120: 8 ms | 2160p120: 7 ms | 2160p120 DV: 7 ms |
| 2160p60: 13 ms | ||
| 2160p120: 8 ms |
7.8/10
Chroma 444 (max. resolution and refresh rate): Yes
Font clarity: Very Good
Readability of dark text and shapes: Good
Input lag in PC mode (4K, max. refresh rate): 8ms
Matrix subpixel arrangement: RGB
Max refresh rate: 120Hz
G-Sync: Yes
The Bravia 9 II also works extremely well as a powerful computer display. Although there are no special PC modes that would allow pushing the refresh rate above 120 Hz, as a large monitor the TV performs excellently. Full frame synchronisation works flawlessly and is compatible with the major GPU vendors' adaptive sync standards; you can enable both G-Sync and FreeSync without any problems.
A pleasant surprise and real improvement is the change to the panel's subpixel arrangement. In the new Sony model, Sony has dropped the BGR layout in favour of the conventionally structured RGB. This change has directly improved the readability of fonts and other fine elements in Windows and macOS compared with the first-generation Bravia 9. At very close distances a trained eye may notice that the edges of dark text on a light background are not "perfectly" sharp, but in everyday use, whether working on documents or gaming, this is completely unnoticeable.
6/10
Brightness drop at an angle of 45 degrees: 58%
The Bravia 9 II is fitted with a VA-type LCD panel. Naturally, its strongest asset is its high native contrast, but unfortunately that comes at the expense of weaker viewing angles. Importantly, because of the use of a new, deeply matte screen coating, the manufacturer had to dispense with the special filters that widen viewing angles. Does that mean the viewing angles are simply bad? Not entirely. When you look at the panel from a moderate angle (say around 45 degrees), colour saturation and brightness remain at a perfectly acceptable level. It's all down to the specifics of the RGB backlight. Because the backlight takes on the colour of the image currently being shown, what we see appears much more natural to the human eye. We perceive such an image as more coherent compared with classic Mini LED screens with quantum dots. On the other hand, when we compare the visibility of local dimming zones at a steep angle with a standard Mini LED, the Sony screen made the halo effect and the panel's zonal segmentation more noticeable.
10/10
Panel finish: Matte
Reflection suppression: Very Good
Black levels during daytime: Average
High brightness combined with a new coating makes the Bravia 9 II one of the best TVs on the market for viewing in demanding conditions. Average brightness in SDR content is around 2000 nits, and smaller highlights can hit a hefty 4000 nits. In practice this means the picture keeps its clarity even when direct, midday sun pours into the living room. The key is the new, deep matte panel coating. Unlike the glossy screen finish of the previous model, this filter is exceptionally effective at reducing reflections. When direct light from a window or lamp falls on the screen, you won't see the annoying reflection of your face or the furniture.
The natural trade-off of a matte finish is a slight reduction in perceived colour saturation and black levels compared with perfectly glossy panels, and in very bright light the image can appear a little flatter. However, that's a wholly justified and almost negligible price to pay for the dramatic improvement in viewing comfort. If you're looking for a TV for a living room with large windows and want to forget once and for all about troublesome daytime reflections, the Bravia 9 II will be ideal in that respect.
Panel brightness
SONY Bravia 9 II XR95M2: 1980 cd/m2
8.8/10
System: Google TV
System performance: Very good
When talking about such an advanced television it's easy to focus only on processors and nits, but the Bravia 9 II is also a very good TV in the most down-to-earth aspects. A great example of this is the return to traditional solutions that many competitors have already forgotten. One of them is full support for recording television programmes directly to an external USB drive.
Sony's traditional, very practical approach is visible as soon as you open the box. Sony, one of the few players on the market (currently perhaps the only one? 🤔), still includes not one but two remotes. The first is a nod to older users and traditionalists. It may look like a design from the 2000s, but it offers a full, physical numeric keypad, which makes it much easier to jump quickly between cable or satellite channels. The second remote belongs to a completely different school. It's a compact smart remote that is brilliantly balanced, feels great in the hand, and the icing on the cake is automatic button backlighting. Interestingly, according to Sony it is largely made from recycled materials.
When we switch the TV on with that remote, Google TV appears on screen. In this model the platform has received excellent optimisation. The menu responds instantly and animations don't drop frames, which used to be a problem in older models. Although the interface can sometimes be overloaded with sponsored recommendations for movies and TV shows, which is unfortunately a sign of the times, the system makes up for it with an absolutely unrivalled app ecosystem.
An additional, unique argument in favour of Sony's platform is built-in access to the Sony Pictures Core app. It's Sony's own streaming service and, thanks to huge data throughput, can deliver pictures with extremely low compression, offering a level of quality unattainable for other VOD services.
9.6/10
8.9/10
| Maximum photo resolution: | Supported photo formats: |
|---|---|
Playback of files from an external drive or USB stick works smoothly and quickly. The interface loads the contents of the media instantly. However, we have some reservations about the built-in player's out-of-the-box capabilities. While the list of supported audio and video codecs is quite extensive, the TV's support for image files was surprisingly limited. It really only supports the classic JPG format and, which is great news for iPhone users, Apple's HEIC format. Unfortunately, even the popular PNG format was missing from the list. Luckily, thanks to Google TV, this issue is easy to solve. Just download a third-party player from the app store and it will open any missing file format without a hitch.
9/10
93dB
Maximum volume
Supported codecs (TV speakers)
Dolby Digital Plus 7.1
Dolby True HD 7.1
Dolby Atmos in Dolby Digital Plus (JOC)
Dolby Atmos in Dolby True HD
DTS:X in DTS-HD MA
DTS-HD Master Audio
The two-year-old Bravia 9 has already got us used to the idea that you can squeeze genuinely enjoyable sound out of a regular slim TV without an integrated soundbar. The new Bravia 9 II goes a step further and turns those impressions up even more. In our view, the engineers have mainly improved the low end. The bass, which was a bit lacking and sometimes too flat in the previous model, is now much stronger, deeper and noticeably more dynamic. That makes watching films (especially ones with explosions) or simply listening to music much more enjoyable. The built-in sound system can easily replace a basic soundbar that lacks an external subwoofer. As usual, Sony deserves big credit for its approach to licensing and audio formats. In addition to the obvious and popular Dolby Atmos standard, there is also full support for DTS:X on board. That’s great news for film fans with large collections of 4K Ultra HD discs. In terms of built-in audio, the Bravia 9 II is an absolute masterpiece.
Sound Quality Test:
93dBC (Max)
75dBC
Software version during testing: 114.602.030.1EUA
Image processor: MT5897 5gb ram
Panel uniformity and thermal imaging:
Backlight Type: RGB MINI-LED
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Is this the best MiniLED TV? Sony Bravia 9 review! 8/23/2024