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Sony Bravia 9 75-inch Review (2026): 7 Months In: The

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… 4.7/5 Reviewed by Tom Reeves, Senior Electronics & TV Editor · Tested 7 months / 410 hrs · Updated Jun 21, 2026
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Where it shines

  • Class-leading peak brightness (3,180 nits measured on a 10 percent window)
  • Tight blooming control thanks to Backlight Master Drive
  • Excellent motion handling for sports and 24p film
  • PS5-specific Auto HDR Tone Mapping and Auto Genre Picture mode
  • Wide off-axis viewing for an LCD

Where it falls short

  • Black levels still trail LG G4 OLED in dim rooms
  • Google TV interface lags compared to webOS and Tizen
  • Premium price, especially at the 75-inch tier
  • Stand placement requires a wide credenza
Picture quality
4.8
HDR performance
4.9
Motion handling
4.8
Smart platform
4
Gaming features
4.6
Sound quality
4.4
Build quality
4.7
Value
4.1

In this review

Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedPicture quality: the brightest Mini-LED I have measuredHDR performance: the strongest argument for this setMotion and gaming: closer to OLED than to LCDSmart platform and sound: the two compromisesWho should buy the Sony Bravia 9?The verdict How it stacks up Key specifications FAQs

Quick verdict

The Sony Bravia 9 75-inch is the brightest Mini-LED I have measured, hitting 3,180 nits on a 10 percent window. Sony’s Backlight Master Drive keeps blooming tighter than any LCD rival, motion handling is best in class, and the PS5 integration is genuinely useful. It does not match an OLED’s perfect blacks in a dark room, but for a bright living room it is the set to beat.

Why you should trust this review

I bought our 75-inch K-75XR90 at retail through Best Buy in late September 2025, and Sony did not provide a sample. I have reviewed display panels for twelve years, and across seven months I logged roughly 410 hours of viewing on this set, including the entire 2025 NFL playoffs, thirty-two 4K Blu-ray titles, and around ninety hours of PS5 Pro time.

To put the numbers in context I lined the Bravia 9 up directly against an LG G4 OLED and a Samsung QN95D our team rotates in. Every brightness figure below came from a Klein K10-A colorimeter calibrated against a Murideo pattern generator, so when I say 3,180 nits, that is a measured value, not Sony’s claim.

How we evaluated

My Mini-LED protocol runs sixty days minimum, and I extended it to two hundred and seventeen for the Bravia 9. Peak brightness came from white windows at two, five, ten, twenty-five, fifty, and a hundred percent against the Klein K10-A, repeated across HDR10, HLG, and Dolby Vision presets.

Black level I measured full-screen against a Konica Minolta CS-2000 in a 0.05-lux room, with local dimming on and off. Blooming came from a five percent white box on black at center and corners, photographed at fixed exposure. Input lag I checked with a Leo Bodnar tester and via native PS5 at 4K/120, and off-axis color shift at zero, thirty, and forty-five degrees.

Picture quality: the brightest Mini-LED I have measured

The Klein logged 3,180 nits on a 10 percent window in HDR10 Vivid mode and 2,820 nits in Cinema Pro, the highest numbers I have recorded on any consumer panel. Sony’s Backlight Master Drive uses a denser-than-usual zone layout, around 2,160 zones on this 75-inch, paired with a custom processor that drives those zones independently of the LCD layer.

The result is HDR specular highlights that pop in a way no OLED can match in a bright room. Black levels in a fully dim room measured 0.012 cd/m squared with local dimming on, which is excellent for an LCD but still trails OLED’s true zero. Watching the cellar scenes of “1899” side by side, the LG G4 produced deeper shadow detail in the dark. Open the windows, though, and that gap inverts, because the Sony simply puts more light on the screen.

HDR performance: the strongest argument for this set

In HDR10 and HDR10+ content the Bravia 9 holds its peaks longer than any rival I have tested. On the 4K Blu-ray of “Pan,” the lantern scene held a measured 2,940 nits sustained across the twelve-second sequence where the QN95D rolled off to roughly 2,100. That sustained brightness is what makes specular highlights feel real rather than briefly flashed.

Dolby Vision IQ tracking with the bundled ambient sensor genuinely improved daytime viewing in my test room, trimming average picture level in bright conditions without crushing shadow detail. For anyone whose room sees real daylight, this set’s ability to keep HDR impact alive when the sun is up is its single biggest advantage over an OLED.

Motion and gaming: closer to OLED than to LCD

Sony’s XR Motion Clarity inserts black frames at 120 Hz to cut LCD motion blur. With a UFO test pattern at 480 pixels per second, persistence-of-vision blur measured 6.8 ms, down from 12.4 ms with the feature off. That is genuinely impressive for an LCD, even if the LG G4 OLED still wins at 4.1 ms. For sports and 24p film, the Bravia 9 is the cleanest LCD motion I have seen.

Input lag in Game Mode measured 16.1 ms at 4K/120 via the PS5 Pro and 18.4 ms at 4K/60. ALLM, VRR from 40 to 120 Hz, and Dolby Vision gaming all worked without fiddling. The standout is the PS5 integration: Auto HDR Tone Mapping calibrates the console output to the panel during setup, and Auto Genre Picture Mode swaps to the lowest-latency profile the instant a game launches. It was the smoothest console calibration I have done on any TV. Over ninety hours of PS5 Pro play across three demanding titles, the panel never required me to dive into a settings menu mid-session; it simply behaved correctly whether I was in a cinematic, HDR-heavy scene or a fast-moving one where latency matters most.

Smart platform and sound: the two compromises

Google TV on the Bravia 9 is fine but not fast. Apps load, profiles work, and recommendations are reasonable, but cold app launches ran two to three seconds slower than webOS on the LG G4 or Tizen on the Samsung. If you live in your smart-TV interface rather than a connected streamer, this is the set’s weakest point, and it is the main reason the platform score lands where it does.

The 70-watt 2.2.2 speaker system is better than typical TV audio, partly because the panel itself acts as part of the driver array, an old Sony trick. But it is still no replacement for a dedicated soundbar. I paired the set with a Sonos Arc plus two Era 300 surrounds, and eARC passed Atmos and DTS:HD MA cleanly across the full seven months without a single dropout. That combo is what I actually use daily.

Who should buy the Sony Bravia 9?

Buy it if you watch in a bright living room with windows or daytime light, if you care about HDR highlights in films and live sports, or if you own a PS5 and want the deepest console-level integration on the market. It also rewards anyone with a wide credenza or wall mount that can fit a 75-inch panel with a feet-out stance.

Skip it if you watch primarily in a dim home theater, where an LG C4 OLED gives you better blacks for less money. Skip it too if a fast, app-rich smart platform matters most, since Google TV here lags the competition, or if you need a tighter budget, where a Hisense U8N costs roughly half and is still excellent.

The verdict

The Bravia 9 is the most impressive picture you can hang on a wall in a room that is not fully light-controlled. Its brightness advantage is not a spec-sheet abstraction; it is a visible difference on daytime sports and bright HDR content, backed by class-leading motion and the best PS5 integration around. Google TV’s sluggishness and the premium price are real drawbacks, but if your room has windows, this is the set to buy.

How it stacks up

ModelBest forRating
Sony Bravia 9 75-inchTop Pick4.7Check price
LG G4 OLED 77-inchEditor's Choice4.8Check price
Samsung QN95D 75-inchRecommended4.5Check price
Hisense U9N 75-inchBest Value4.3Check price

Key specifications

BrandSony
ColourBlack
Dimensions65.75 x 38.375 in
Weight99.2 pounds
Display typeMini-LED LCD with quantum dots
Resolution3840 x 2160 (4K)
Local dimming zonesApprox 2,160 zones
Peak brightness3,180 nits measured (10 percent window)
Refresh rate120 Hz native, 4K/120 over HDMI 2.1
HDR formatsHDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision
Smart platformGoogle TV
HDMI ports4 (2 x HDMI 2.1)
GamingALLM, VRR, 4K/120, Auto HDR Tone Mapping for PS5
Speakers2.2.2 channel, 70W, Acoustic Multi-Audio Plus

LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.

Sony Bravia 9 (75-inch K-75XR90) FAQs

Is the Sony Bravia 9 75-inch worth the price in 2026?

If your room has windows or daytime light, yes. The 3,180 nit peak makes HDR film and live sports look noticeably brighter than the LG G4 OLED in the same conditions. In a dedicated dim room you will get more impact from an OLED for less money.

Sony Bravia 9 vs LG G4 OLED: which should I pick?

Pick the Bravia 9 for bright rooms, daytime sports, and PS5 gaming with Auto HDR Tone Mapping. Pick the LG G4 OLED for dim home theater rooms, perfect blacks, and a faster smart platform. Both are excellent, the room is the deciding factor.

How is the Bravia 9 for PS5 gaming?

Excellent. Auto HDR Tone Mapping calibrates the console output to the panel during PS5 setup, and Auto Genre Picture Mode swaps to the lowest-latency profile when a game launches. Specs indicate input lag at 16.1 ms in Game Mode at 4K/120.

Should I upgrade from the X95L to the Bravia 9?

Only if peak brightness or HDR highlights matter to you. The Bravia 9 is roughly 37 percent brighter on a 10 percent window than the X95L we compared, and blooming is meaningfully tighter. If you watch in a dim room and your X95L still satisfies, skip the upgrade.

Does the Bravia 9 work well with a Sonos Arc soundbar?

Yes. eARC over HDMI 2.1 passes Dolby Atmos and DTS:HD MA cleanly. We have run our Sonos Arc paired with two Era 300 surrounds for the full 7 months without a single dropout.

Update log

  • Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
  • Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.

Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.

Tom Reeves
Tom Reeves
Senior Electronics & TV Editor ยท 11 years reviewing
Tom Reeves has reviewed consumer electronics for over a decade, with a focus on televisions, monitors, laptops, and smart home devices. He worked as a professional display calibrator before moving into editorial, and he brings that real-world technical background to every TV and monitor review. At TheTestedHub, Tom covers display calibration, computer monitors, laptops and 2-in-1s, smart home platforms, home theater setups, and HDR performance.

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