LG is cheaper per inch than Samsung for 75‑inch 4K TVs. As of May 2026, the lowest tracked price is the LG 75UT7590P at $768.76 — just $10.25 per inch. Samsung’s only 75‑inch 4K listing, a premium Neo QLED bundled with a soundbar, costs $2,319.99 or $30.93 per inch. That’s a $20.68‑per‑inch difference. If pure price‑per‑inch is your goal, LG wins overwhelmingly.
The Short Answer
LG wins the 75‑inch 4K price‑per‑inch battle. The cheapest tracked option, the LG 75UT7590P, costs $10.25 per inch ($768.76 ÷ 75). Samsung’s only 75‑inch 4K listing — the Neo QLED QN75QN90FAFXZA — comes bundled with a 3.1.2‑channel Dolby Atmos soundbar and runs $30.93 per inch ($2,319.99 ÷ 75). Even LG’s second 75‑inch model, the QNED85T, lands at $12.23/inch — still less than half of Samsung’s $30.93.
Price Per Inch Breakdown
Every dollar amount comes directly from our live tracking database for May 4, 2026. No MSRP, no historical data — only in‑stock prices at the time of writing.
- LG 75UT7590P (Newegg): $768.76 / 75" → $10.25/inch
The entry‑level LED for anyone who cares about raw cost per inch. - LG 75QNED85TUA (Newegg): $917.26 / 75" → $12.23/inch
Stepping up to QNED technology still keeps inches affordable; it’s $1.98/inch more than the UT7590, or 19% higher ((12.23−10.25)/10.25). - Samsung QN75QN90FAFXZA (Newegg): $2,319.99 / 75" → $30.93/inch
The only Samsung 75‑inch 4K listing in our data. The price includes the HW‑QS700F 3.1.2ch Dolby Atmos soundbar — this is not a TV‑only box.
Same Capacity, Same Tier?
No. The three products share the same 75‑inch screen size, but they sit in completely different technology tiers.
- The LG 75UT7590P is an entry‑level LED (no HDR or advanced backlighting listed in the retailer data).
- The LG 75QNED85TUA uses LG’s QNED branding, typically a quantum‑dot LED with NanoCell for wider color.
- The Samsung QN75QN90FAFXZA is a Neo QLED, a premium backlight technology, and the only one of the three that arrives with a separate soundbar.
A pure “apples‑to‑apples” comparison doesn’t exist right now — Samsung offers no bare 75‑inch 4K model in our May 2026 tracking, so the cheapest per‑inch comparison always pulls in a soundbar bundle. That inflates the Samsung price, but it’s the reality buyers face at the moment.
What the Extra Cost Buys You
The extra money you pay for Samsung shifts from screen inches to two identifiable extras:
- Soundbar inclusion: The Samsung listing ties the TV to the HW‑QS700F 3.1.2‑channel Dolby Atmos soundbar. None of the LG listings include a soundbar. The price difference between Samsung and the cheapest LG is $1,551.23 ($2,319.99 − $768.76). That $1,551 isn’t buying more picture size — it’s buying a different picture technology and a full audio upgrade.
- Display technology: Samsung’s QN75QN90FAFXZA is labeled Neo QLED in the listing. The UT7590 is a basic LED; the QNED85T is QNED (quantum dot + NanoCell). Neither LG carries a “Neo” backlight designation. Without reviewer data, we can’t quantify how much better the Neo QLED looks, but the model name alone signals a higher‑spec panel.
No other specs (HDMI 2.1, VRR, peak brightness) appear in the listings. If you need concrete performance comparisons, you’ll have to consult third‑party reviews — price‑per‑inch tracking won’t help you there.
When Each Makes Sense
- Choose the LG 75UT7590P if you prioritize the lowest price per inch. At $10.25/inch, it’s the cheapest 75‑inch 4K TV tracked between the two brands, period. You’ll sacrifice premium picture tech and a bundled soundbar, but you keep $1,551.23 in your pocket.
- Choose the Samsung QN75QN90FAFXZA if Neo QLED picture quality plus a 3.1.2 Dolby Atmos soundbar are worth $30.93/inch to you. The bundled audio alone carries a standalone retail value that we haven’t subtracted, but pure cost‑per‑screen‑inch here is the highest in the comparison.
Verdict
LG is the cheaper‑per‑inch choice for 75‑inch 4K TVs at $10.25/inch, with a second LG option at $12.23/inch still far below Samsung’s $30.93/inch. The Samsung model is a bundled premium Neo QLED, not a direct equivalent. Prices reflect May 4, 2026 Newegg listings only — no Amazon or other retailer listings for these specific models appeared in our data. Re‑check the numbers when you’re ready to buy; cost‑per‑inch changes as retailers adjust pricing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the LG 75UT7590P a good 75‑inch 4K TV?
We track price, not picture quality. The UT7590P is the cheapest 75‑inch 4K TV from LG at $10.25/inch, making it the clear budget winner in this face‑off. For performance judgments — black levels, motion handling, HDR impact — you’ll need to look at independent reviews. The listing shows only “4K UHD Smart TV,” so we’re not making any claims about backlight type, brightness, or color gamut.
Why is Samsung’s 75‑inch 4K TV so much more expensive than LG’s?
Two reasons show up in the data. Second, the Samsung price always includes the HW‑QS700F 3.1.2‑channel Dolby Atmos soundbar. The TV‑plus‑soundbar bundle pushes the total cost to $2,319.99, creating a $1,551.23 gap over the cheapest LG.
Does the Samsung price include a soundbar?
Yes. The Newegg listing for the QN75QN90FAFXZA explicitly packages the TV with a Samsung HW‑QS700F 3.1.2ch Dolby Atmos soundbar and subwoofer. You’re not buying a standalone TV in this case. If Samsung ever lists a bare 75‑inch 4K TV in our tracking, the per‑inch comparison would tighten.
Are there any other 75‑inch Samsung 4K TVs available in 2026?
Our live database for May 4, 2026 shows only one Samsung 75‑inch 4K listing — the QN75QN90FAFXZA bundle on Newegg. No other Samsung 75‑inch 4K models (bare or bundled) crossed our feeds. If they exist on other retailers, they weren’t in stock or tracked on this date.
Which 75‑inch 4K TV has the best picture quality — Samsung or LG?
Price‑per‑inch data doesn’t answer that question. The Samsung Neo QLED badge suggests a higher‑quality panel than a basic LED or QNED, but we have no reviewer‑provided test results, nor do the listings include brightness or contrast measurements. Buyers who value picture above all should pair our cost‑per‑inch numbers with a dedicated picture‑quality review before deciding.