OLED Burn-In vs Dead Pixels: How to Check a New OLED Monitor in 2026
Quick answer: OLED monitors are far more affordable in 2026, but they carry different risks than LCD — mainly image retention and long-term burn-in rather than backlight bleed. Modern panels fight this with pixel-shifting and refresh routines. Always check a new OLED for dead and stuck pixels the day it arrives with the dead pixel test.
Dead and stuck pixels on OLED
The check is the same as any panel: fill the screen with solid black, white, red, green and blue and look for dots that don't match. A dead pixel stays black on every color; a stuck pixel glows one color, most visibly against black. Do this within your return window, because that is when a faulty unit is easiest to exchange.
What about burn-in?
Burn-in — a permanent ghost of static content — is the OLED-specific worry, but manufacturers now build in defenses. Techniques like pixel orbiting (subtly shifting the image) and periodic pixel-refresh cycles substantially reduce the risk for normal mixed use. The bigger near-term nuisance is temporary image retention, a faint ghost that fades on its own, which is normal and not a defect.
The uniformity and coating angle
Newer QD-OLED panels have shifted to RGB stripe subpixel layouts for clearer text, and different models use glossy or matte coatings that change how they handle ambient light. On a used or open-box OLED, view solid colors and static desktop elements to spot any early retention or uniformity issues before you commit.
Run the full check
Start with the dead pixel test, then work through backlight, uniformity, refresh rate and motion using our complete guide on testing a new monitor. Five minutes on day one saves a lot of regret.