TechTvsSony A80K review: the mid-range OLED TV to buy?Sony’s mid-range OLED model, the XR-A80K, is a mainstream winner, but its competition is tough… so is it worth buying?When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.(Image credit: Future)T3 VerdictSony’s step-down OLED model in its range gets far more right than it does wrong, but the A80K needs brighter pictures and less bright sound to be the complete package really.Reasons to buy+Convincingly natural 4K HDR image quality+Thoughtful across-the-board specification+Your basic Sony pride of ownershipReasons to avoid-Lacks a little brightness-Sounds quite ‘hard’-Not short of competitionWhy you can trust T3Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you.Find out more about how we test.
TechTvsSony A80K review: the mid-range OLED TV to buy?Sony’s mid-range OLED model, the XR-A80K, is a mainstream winner, but its competition is tough… so is it worth buying?When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.(Image credit: Future)T3 VerdictSony’s step-down OLED model in its range gets far more right than it does wrong, but the A80K needs brighter pictures and less bright sound to be the complete package really.Reasons to buy+Convincingly natural 4K HDR image quality+Thoughtful across-the-board specification+Your basic Sony pride of ownershipReasons to avoid-Lacks a little brightness-Sounds quite ‘hard’-Not short of competitionWhy you can trust T3Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you.Find out more about how we test.
Sony’s mid-range OLED model, the XR-A80K, is a mainstream winner, but its competition is tough… so is it worth buying?
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Future)T3 VerdictSony’s step-down OLED model in its range gets far more right than it does wrong, but the A80K needs brighter pictures and less bright sound to be the complete package really.Reasons to buy+Convincingly natural 4K HDR image quality+Thoughtful across-the-board specification+Your basic Sony pride of ownershipReasons to avoid-Lacks a little brightness-Sounds quite ‘hard’-Not short of competition
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
T3 VerdictSony’s step-down OLED model in its range gets far more right than it does wrong, but the A80K needs brighter pictures and less bright sound to be the complete package really.Reasons to buy+Convincingly natural 4K HDR image quality+Thoughtful across-the-board specification+Your basic Sony pride of ownershipReasons to avoid-Lacks a little brightness-Sounds quite ‘hard’-Not short of competition
T3 VerdictSony’s step-down OLED model in its range gets far more right than it does wrong, but the A80K needs brighter pictures and less bright sound to be the complete package really.
T3 Verdict
Sony’s step-down OLED model in its range gets far more right than it does wrong, but the A80K needs brighter pictures and less bright sound to be the complete package really.
Reasons to buy+Convincingly natural 4K HDR image quality+Thoughtful across-the-board specification+Your basic Sony pride of ownershipReasons to avoid-Lacks a little brightness-Sounds quite ‘hard’-Not short of competition
Reasons to buy+Convincingly natural 4K HDR image quality+Thoughtful across-the-board specification+Your basic Sony pride of ownership
Convincingly natural 4K HDR image quality
Thoughtful across-the-board specification
Your basic Sony pride of ownership
Reasons to avoid-Lacks a little brightness-Sounds quite ‘hard’-Not short of competition
Lacks a little brightness
Sounds quite ‘hard’
Not short of competition
Why you can trust T3Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you.Find out more about how we test.
Why you can trust T3Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you.Find out more about how we test.
Flagship models are all well and good, butSony- like every other big TV brand - knows the real action is in the mainstream. Its A80K model on review here sits in the middle of its OLED TV range and, given how much more affordable it is than theA95K QD-OLED flagship, it surely represents Sony’s best shot at achieving significant OLED TV sales.
As long as it can outperform all those other similarly priced alternatives from all those other similarly high-profile brands, of course, because the competition is tough. So does the Sony A90K stand up to scrutiny?
Sony A80K: Price and availability
The Sony A80K is on sale now, and in the United Kingdom the 55-inch version we’re testing here costs £1599. It can also be had in a 65-inch size, going for £2099, or for the profoundly serious there’s a 77-inch version that will set you back £3499. In America, those prices translate to $1599, $1999 and $2999 respectively - once again, the USA has the UK beaten. In Australia, meanwhile, you’re looking at AU$3299, AU$4299 and AU$6999 equivalents.
You don’t need me to explain you’re spoiled for choice if you want a 55-inch 4K HDR television - take a look at ourbest TVs guide, or indeedbest OLED TVs guide- and you can spend plenty more or quite a lot less than Sony wants for the A80K. So, as ever, performance will dictate whether or not Sony’s being ambitious with its pricing or not.
Today’s best Sony XR-55A80K dealsNo price informationCheck AmazonWe check over 250 million products every day for the best prices
Today’s best Sony XR-55A80K dealsNo price informationCheck AmazonWe check over 250 million products every day for the best prices
Today’s best Sony XR-55A80K deals
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Sony A80K review: What’s new?
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
Like all of Sony’s 2022 OLED TVs, the A80K features the company’s Cognitive Processor XR and its associated technologies. In order to wring peak picture performance from its wide colour gamut panel, the processor boosts peak brightness and/or black depth on the fly. In between, the processing package can also deliver full DCI-P3 coverage - which means its colour palette is as wide and as accurate as the movie industry would ideally like it to be.
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
Dual-band wifi, Bluetooth 4.2, Chromecast built-in andAppleAirPlay take care of wireless connectivity, and there are aerial binding posts for the single RF and twin satellite TV tuners. Recording to HDD is possible using one of the pair of USB inputs.
Sony A80K review: Performance
(Image credit: Sony)
(Image credit: Sony)
Sure enough, the A80K’s ability with and breadth of colour stands out. The palette it paints from is extensive and nuanced, and manages to be both vibrant and naturalistic at the same time. Black tones are predictably deep, carry plenty of variation in them, and contribute to a sensation of quite wide contrasts even though the A80K is far from the brightest screen around.
The whites it generates are just as poised, and just as detailed, as all the other tones it creates - but there’s a mild-but-definite shortage of punch to them. In a brightly lit room the Sony can look a little dim, no two ways about it - even with HDR content.
Picture noise is minimal, and on-screen motion can be finessed until it’s deeply satisfactory even when watching the dreaded televised sport. The A80K has no problem handling tight and/or complex patterns, and can draw even very fine lines smoothly. Viewing angles, as you’d expect, are very wide indeed - and a lack of specific screen treatment, reflections or glare don’t intrude.
And unless you feed in some properly low-resolution content, the Sony is a very capable upscaler too. Certainly off-air broadcasts at 1080p standard look calm and convincing - detail levels stay remarkably high, and the same smooth motion-control is in evidence too. Even down at 720p the A80K stays unflustered - which makes it one of the more forgiving OLED TVs out there at this sort of money.
As a monitor for gamers, the A80K has input lag plenty low enough for all but the most demanding (who will probably have a dedicated monitor anyway). That’s in ‘Game’ mode, anyway, which sharpens response times with only a mild coarsening of the overall picture as a trade-off. Motion stays solid, and lighting (despite the lack of outright brightness) looks a treat too.
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
However, the Acoustic Surface Audio+ system continues to fascinate more than it does satisfy.
The Sony creates quite a broad, spacious sound, and because the screen itself is delivering sound there’s quite a nice unity between images and audio.
But tonally it’s on the thin and zizzy side, with little low-frequency substance despite the pair of little subwoofers and the 20 watts of power that drive them.
Sony has fitted a connection to the A80K to allow it to be used as the centre channel in a surround-sound system, but in all honesty that’s the last thing you should do. Instead, I think you should consider one of thebest soundbars.
Sony A80K review: Design & usability
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
Sensibly, the XR-A80K has been designed to look like a big TV screen, with minimal bezels and very slim feet that can adjust through a few different positions (‘standard’, ‘narrow’ and ‘soundbar’). No one wants anything more from their television, do they?
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
No matter the way you decide to control the TV, though, you’ll be in charge of some fairly in-depth set-up menus and a nice, if over-confident, version of Google TV. The selection of apps on the home page is very decent, and if you have a Google account it’s easy enough to customise the interface to best suit you.
It’s easy enough to get a workable picture out of the panel, too, and Sony gives a good amount of fine-tuning to those who prefer a deep dive into set-up menus. Turning off the chime that sounds with every button-press is much further into the sub-menus than it really should be, mind you…
Sony A80K review: Verdict
(Image credit: Sony)
(Image credit: Sony)
The Sony A80K has plenty going for it. Mostly the quality of its 4K HDR images, sure, but also its build, finish and basic pride of ownership - anyone who decides on A80K ownership won’t be disappointed. But it can be bettered in a couple of areas, most notably brightness, which means it’s far from a default choice in a bustling OLED marketplace.
Also consider
At the risk of labouring the point, then, the A80K is in a tough scrap. Anyone who fancies a TV of this sort of size, at this sort of money, owes it to themselves to check outSamsung’s QN85B Neo QLED(because it’s a beautifully slim device with beautifully bright image quality), for example. And having done so, get an eyeful of theLG C2as well - it’s ideal for gamers, serves up nice, bright images and saves a few quid over the Sony at the same time…
Today’s best Sony XR-55A80K, Samsung QN85B and LG C2 OLED dealsSamsung QN85B$977.95$857.95ViewSee all pricesLG OLED48C2$1,499.99$914.95ViewSee all pricesWe check over 250 million products every day for the best prices
Today’s best Sony XR-55A80K, Samsung QN85B and LG C2 OLED dealsSamsung QN85B$977.95$857.95ViewSee all pricesLG OLED48C2$1,499.99$914.95ViewSee all pricesWe check over 250 million products every day for the best prices
Today’s best Sony XR-55A80K, Samsung QN85B and LG C2 OLED dealsSamsung QN85B$977.95$857.95ViewSee all pricesLG OLED48C2$1,499.99$914.95ViewSee all pricesWe check over 250 million products every day for the best prices
Today’s best Sony XR-55A80K, Samsung QN85B and LG C2 OLED deals
Samsung QN85B$977.95$857.95ViewSee all pricesLG OLED48C2$1,499.99$914.95ViewSee all prices
Samsung QN85B$977.95$857.95ViewSee all prices
Samsung QN85B$977.95$857.95ViewSee all prices
Samsung QN85B
Samsung QN85B
$977.95$857.95View
$977.95$857.95
$857.95
See all prices
LG OLED48C2$1,499.99$914.95ViewSee all prices
LG OLED48C2$1,499.99$914.95ViewSee all prices
LG OLED48C2
LG OLED48C2
$1,499.99$914.95View
$1,499.99$914.95
$914.95
See all prices
We check over 250 million products every day for the best prices
We check over 250 million products every day for the best prices
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