LG C3 OLED: everything you need to know

Someone with long brown hair sat in front of an LG C3 OLED TV displaying the home screen against a blue wall



(Image credit: LG)

The LG C3 OLED TV made its debut appearance at CES 2023, following a long line of incredible C Series OLED screens we’ve always recommended over the years. 

The LG C3 sits in the middle of LG’s 2023 OLED lineup – not quite as affordable as the B3, nor as advanced as the G3, but occupying a sweet spot of compromise in the middle. Despite other offerings from LG this year, including the wireless M3 OLED, and heady competition in the form of the Samsung S95C (which we rate as the best TV we saw at the show), C Series screens always do well with reviewers and consumers alike – and the LG C3 OLED is one to watch this year.

But what’s different about the LG C3 OLED compared to other C Series screens, and is it worth buying over its older LG C2 predecessor? We’ve put together a guide filled with everything we know about the LG C3 OLED screen.

LG C3 OLED: price and release date

The LG C3 OLED doesn’t have a confirmed price yet, though you can expect it to cleave close to the C2’s launch price, especially given how similar the hardware for both sets is. Here are last year’s LG C2’s RRPs at launch:

  • 42-inch: $1,399 / £1,399 (around AU$2,000)
  • 48-inch: $1,499 / £1,399 (around AU$2,200)
  • 55-inch: $1,799 / £1,999 (around AU$2,600)
  • 65-inch: $2,499 / £2,799 (around AU$3,600)
  • 77-inch: $3,499 / £3,699 (around AU$5,100)
  • 83-inch: $5,499 / £4,799 (around AU$8,000)

We can expect this same range of screen sizes to be available in the C3, as well as a similar March-April release date, though not all sizes may launch simultaneously.

LG C3 OLED: design and features – what’s new?

The LG C3 OLED isn’t a significant evolution over previous models. It features the same OLED Evo panel as the C2, with its brightness-boosting capabilities in sizes of 55 inches and up (brightness is lower in the smaller sizes). But there is an upgraded Alpha9 Gen6 chip, which is LG’s latest and greatest image processor, and should be able to push the panel that little bit harder. 

As ever, this is a 4K HDR TV with a 120Hz panel, support for Dolby Vision IQ, and Dolby Atmos compatibility – and you can expect a crisp resolution and capable upscaling alongside a full suite of premium formats. A new composite fiber construction also reduces the weight of this year’s C Series screen.

A new algorithm helps distinguish between the picture’s foreground and background, seemingly helping to ramp up the brightness in important places. Regardless, the deep blacks and incredible contrast in self-emissive OLED displays should be suitably jaw-dropping here.

The speaker system hasn’t seen a meaningful upgrade; this is still a 3.1.2 channel speaker with 40W output. Despite LG’s claims that the C3 can offer “virtual 9.1.2 surround sound (opens in new tab)” through its AI Sound Pro feature, we’re somewhat sceptical of this. By the looks of it, you’ll still need one of the best soundbars if you want to get top-quality sound out of this TV – but the LG C2 sounded better than expected when used in its AI mode, so we’re sure the C3 will be ‘decent’, at least.

Some changes to the smart platform include a sleek new homepage and improved user profiles to allow for more customization. When you set up the TV, you’re guided through a custom picture preset to ensure the default settings work for your tastes, which is a nice touch.

The C3 features four HDMI 2.1 ports, including one that supports eARC (enhanced audio return channel) and two-way soundbar communication. These high-spec ports are great for gaming with next-gen consoles, while the screen boasts sub-10ms input lag and a negligible response time. 

What’s new this time is a feature called Quick Media Switching VRR, so far unique to LG OLED TVs (though it’s part of the HDMI spec), which LG says “can eliminate the momentary ‘black screen’ that sometimes occurs when switching between content played from different source devices connected via the TV’s HDMI 2.1a compliant ports.” So if you tend to jump between Netflix and your PS5 pretty often, this should make for a more seamless experience. It will be especially welcome for Apple TV 4K users, because this set-top can use the feature to change its framerate.

The LG C3 OLED TV displaying a colorful, abstract print on a green background

(Image credit: Future)

LG C3 OLED: What we think so far

The LG C3 OLED is likely to be a bestseller, like the C1 and C2 TVs that came before it. There’s not much change in this year’s model, though, and older models will likely see a price cut as the C3 releases to market. With that in mind, there’s not much reason to upgrade – we didn’t see any of our predictions for a new C3 model come to fruition. Although an improved webOS experience, upgraded lighting algorithms, and fast media switching may be enough to nudge some towards the latest iteration of the C Series OLED, but probably not if you have the C2 or C1.

The C3 is still the obvious, all-round choice from LG’s OLED TV range – neither too expensive nor too compromised by its price point. But we’ll have more thoughts on this in our review later in the year. With a new QD-OLED screen coming from Samsung, it’s possible that more significant leaps made by other TV makers could dim the C3’s spotlight in the year to come – the race to be the best OLED TV of 2023 will be an interesting one!

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Henry is a freelance technology journalist. Before going freelance, he spent more than three years at TechRadar reporting on TVs, projectors and smart speakers as the website’s Home Cinema Editor – and has been interviewed live on both BBC World News and Channel News Asia, discussing the future of transport and 4K resolution televisions respectively. As a graduate of English Literature and persistent theatre enthusiast, he’ll usually be found forcing Shakespeare puns into his technology articles, which he thinks is what the Bard would have wanted. Bylines also include Edge, T3, and Little White Lies.

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