A 32-inch TV is the right size for a bedroom, kitchen, RV, or small living space. Sony makes a few 32-inch sets, and Sony-class alternatives fill the gap where Sony does not directly compete. Here are the five 32-inch TVs I would buy in 2026.

TVResolutionBest For
Sony Bravia 3 32 Inch1080p HDSony brand quality
Sony KDL-32W600D720p HDBudget Sony
Samsung TU3010 32 Inch720p HDBedroom alternative
TCL 32S3581080p HDRoku TV pick
Hisense 32H4030F1720p HDKitchen TV

Sony Bravia 3 32 Inch

The Sony Bravia 3 is the 32-inch I would buy first if you want the Sony picture processing. 1080p resolution, X-Reality Pro upscaling, and Google TV onboard. Picture quality holds up next to larger sets, especially for streaming and cable content.

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Sony KDL-32W600D

The KDL-32W600D is an older Sony model that still shows up in retail and refurbished stocks. 720p resolution, basic smart features, and lower price. Picture quality is good for the size, and the build is solid. Best for bedroom or guest room use.

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Samsung TU3010 32 Inch

For a Sony-class alternative, the Samsung TU3010 is a 32-inch with 720p resolution, Tizen OS, and a clean dial. Samsungโ€™s processing is different from Sonyโ€™s but holds up well at 32 inches. Often available at a meaningfully lower price than the Sony.

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TCL 32S358

For Roku-platform fans, the TCL 32S358 is the 32-inch I keep recommending. 1080p resolution, Roku TV onboard, and the Roku interface is the smoothest small-TV experience around. Picture is good for the size, and the price is right.

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Hisense 32H4030F1

For a kitchen TV under 200 dollars, the Hisense 32H4030F1 is the right pick. 720p, basic smart features, decent picture for the size. Build is acceptable for the price, and the speakers are fine for kitchen ambient watching.

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What Matters Most

Resolution at 32 inches is less important than people think. 1080p is plenty, and 720p is acceptable. Smart TV platform matters more for daily use, with Roku and Google TV being the smoothest. Picture quality at the size matters most. Look for HDR support even if it is only HDR10, since contrast and color rendering are better. Input lag matters for gaming, but most 32-inch TVs are not gaming targets.

My Setup

I have a 32-inch Sony in my kitchen for morning news and a 32-inch TCL in the guest bedroom for streaming. Both connect to wifi, but the Roku-based TCL is the one I reach for first because the interface is faster. Sound is fine for both, but a small soundbar would help in larger rooms.

Common Mistakes

The biggest mistake is buying a 32-inch TV for a main living room. Step up to 50 or 65 inches for a primary set. The second mistake is buying based on resolution alone. A 720p set with good processing beats a 1080p set with bad processing at this size. The third is ignoring the smart platform and getting stuck with a slow built-in OS.

Final Recommendation

For most 32-inch buyers, the Sony Bravia 3 is the one I would buy if Sony brand and processing matter. For value with a smooth interface, the TCL 32S358 with Roku TV is the right pick. For kitchen or RV use, the Hisense or Samsung TU3010 are the budget options. Pick the size for the room, then the platform for the daily experience.

Frequently asked questions

Does a 32-inch TV need 4K?+

Not really. At normal viewing distances, the difference between 1080p and 4K on a 32-inch screen is hard to see. Spending the budget on better contrast or HDR will pay off more than resolution at this size.

Are smart TV features worth it on a small TV?+

Yes for streaming convenience, but if the TV's built-in apps are sluggish, an external streaming device like a Roku or Chromecast does the job better. Smart TV is a nice-to-have, not a deciding factor at 32 inches.

Independent video for additional perspective on 5 Best Sony 32 Inch TVS of 2026.

Third-party YouTube content. Watch on YouTube.
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Author

David Lin

Smartwatches, Wearables & Smart Garden Editor

David Lin reviews smartwatches, fitness trackers, smart garden devices, and emerging home technology at The Tested Hub. With a background in electrical engineering and years of hands-on wearable testing, David brings an engineer's eye to how accurately these gadgets measure heart rate, GPS, soil moisture, and everything in between. He focuses on real-world performance so readers know what holds up beyond the spec sheet.