Sony A95L (XR-65A95L)
What Hi-Fi UK|January 2024
Sony's second-generation QD-OLED TV is very special indeed
Sony A95L (XR-65A95L)

4K TV £3699 (65in) whf.cm/SonyA95L

Very few TVs have been trailed as heavily as the Sony A95L. Revealed and demoed way back in March, then made available to us for an afternoon of testing at Sony’s UK HQ in August, it has taken until now for the A95L to make it into shops and into our test room.

It’s not as if Sony really needed to try that hard to build excitement, either: the A95L is the successor to the A95K, arguably the best TV of last year if you don’t take price into account. One of the two first QD-OLED TVs launched, it trumped its Samsung S95B rival by deploying its brightness-boosting, vibrancy-adding Quantum Dots in a more considered fashion – and by offering a far superior sound system to boot.

The promise of second-generation QD-OLED panels is an even brighter and more efficient performance; but we were just as excited to find out how the team at Sony could refine the performance further with an extra year of experience with the new panel technology.

As you might expect, the Sony A95L is a very expensive TV, coming in at £3699. Of course, what matters is how much it costs against current rivals – and it’s bad news here: the A95L is priced significantly higher than the LG G3 and Samsung S95C – and that’s before you take into account the significant discounts that are regularly being offered on those models, which have now been available for a few months.

Will the A95L come down in price? Almost certainly, but Sony doesn’t go nearly as aggressive on discounting as its South Korean rivals, so it seems unlikely that you’ll ever be able to buy the A95L for less than the equivalent G3 or S95C.

This story is from the January 2024 edition of What Hi-Fi UK.

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This story is from the January 2024 edition of What Hi-Fi UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.