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500Hz OLED Monitors Are Here — Can You Actually See the Difference?

Quick answer: 500Hz QD-OLED monitors are now widely available from MSI, Asus and Samsung, and they deliver genuinely excellent motion clarity. But the jump from, say, 280Hz to 500Hz is far subtler than the leap from 60Hz to 144Hz, and you only see the benefit if your GPU can push frame rates that high. Check what your screen is actually running at with the refresh rate test.

Why 500Hz suddenly became normal

Just a couple of years ago a 240Hz OLED felt excessive. In 2026, 500Hz has become the competitive battleground, with 27-inch 1440p QD-OLED panels quoting response times around 0.03ms. Several of these monitors look nearly identical on paper because they share similar panels, so the real differences come down to features, connectivity and OLED protection rather than raw speed.

The diminishing-returns reality

Motion clarity keeps improving with refresh rate, but the perceived gain shrinks each time you double it. Independent testers point out that the gap between 500Hz and the newer 540Hz modes is minimal, and that unless you regularly play above roughly 280 frames per second, the money is better spent elsewhere. For most players, a 500Hz panel is a "nice to have," not a night-and-day upgrade.

Your GPU has to feed it

A 500Hz monitor only shows 500 distinct frames if your game actually runs at 500 FPS. Below that, the extra refreshes simply repeat, which is the classic distinction between refresh rate and frame rate we cover in refresh rate vs FPS. Competitive titles like CS2 and Valorant can hit those numbers on strong hardware; most other games will not. That is why esports players are the natural audience for these panels.

Before you buy

Confirm your current refresh rate and whether it is even being applied — a surprising number of high-refresh monitors run at 60Hz out of the box because of a cable or driver setting. Run the refresh rate test, and if the number is lower than expected, that is a fixable configuration issue rather than a reason to upgrade.