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[Solved] Best OLED TV Deals During Cyber Monday 2025?

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Hello, I'm planning to get an OLED TV this Cyber Monday 2025? Where can I find best deals online?


14 Answers
9

Here is the best selling OLED TV deals at Amazon, you can take a look:

https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/search?Ntt=OLED+TV&BI=8941&KBID=10361&SID=12345&DFF=d50


4

You can get up to $1200 off on Samsung S90F OLED TV: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/search?Ntt=SAMSUNG+65+Inch+Processor+Upscaling+Xcelerator&BI=8941&KBID=10361&SID=12345&DFF=d50


3

Bump - same question here


2

Totally agree with the points about tracking the specific behavior of different manufacturers. Tbh, I've become pretty cautious after monitoring these market cycles for the last five or six years. In my experience, the market basically splits into two camps: the brands that flood the market with 'deals' that are just their standard holiday price, and the more conservative ones that actually do a single, meaningful cut on Cyber Monday. When I was researchng for my current setup, I spent weeks looking at panel supply data and price floors. I noticed that the 'premium' players in the market almost never drop below a certain threshold because they want to protect their brand image. I ended up ignoring the biggest percentage-off stickers and went with a manufacturer that has a reputation for better internal processing and quality control. Honestly, even if you save an extra 100 or 200 bucks on a flashier deal, you might regret it if the panel uniformity isn't there. For me, the market research showed that paying a slight premium for a brand with a tighter manufacturing tolerance pays off over three or four years of heavy use.


0

Hey, I was in basically your exact spot last year.

I ended up grabbing a 65" LG C3 on **Cyber Monday** instead of Black Friday. Price dropped another ~$100 vs BF and Best Buy threw in a gift card, so in my case Cyber Monday was slightly better. I paid just under $1,600 before tax, and I’m still super happy with it for PS5 (120Hz, low input lag, HDR looks great, no complaints).

From what I’ve seen the pattern is:
- **BF vs Cyber Monday**: usually *very* similar, but Cyber Monday sometimes has a better bundle (gift cards, streaming credits) or a tiny extra drop on the previous year’s C-series / A-series.
- **Best places**: I’d prioritize **Best Buy** and **Costco**. BB for open-box deals (I almost went that route) and Costco for the extra warranty + easy returns. Amazon is fine but less predictable with support.
- **Models to watch**: realistically, I’d expect 2024’s LG C4 / Sony A80L-equivalent to slide into your budget in 55" and maybe 65" if you catch a sale. Last year’s C3 / A80L should be easily in your range, possibly well under $1,500 by then.

Doorbusters: personally I don’t bother. The truly crazy prices are usually on stripped-down or weird models. The good OLEDs (C-, G-, A-series) tend to be available online all day, and I’d rather sit on my couch refreshing than stand in line at 5am.

Strategy that worked well for me:
1. Decide on **2–3 specific models** now (e.g., LG C-series, Sony A80/A90, Samsung S90C/S90D).
2. Track prices starting in **early November** using something like camelcamelcamel (for Amazon) + BB/Costco wishlists.
3. If you see your target price on BF, buy it *only if* they have a price protection/adjust policy through Cyber Monday (Best Buy did; I got a partial refund once).

If you want a simple plan: I’d aim for a 55" or 65" **LG C4 (or discounted C3)** from Best Buy or Costco and ignore doorbusters. It’ll tick all your boxes and should land squarely in, or just under, your budget by Cyber Monday 2025.

Hope this helps! Happy to compare specific models if you’ve got a shortlist.


0

Hey,

If you care about picture quality + gaming and want to be smart about Cyber Monday, I’d look at this a little more technically than just “wait for the lowest price.”

**1. Black Friday vs Cyber Monday**
From what I’ve tracked the last few years:
- Prices are usually **very similar**. Sometimes BF has the better *headline* deal, but Cyber Monday quietly matches it or is $50–$100 off.
- What *does* change is **stock**. High-demand models (LG C-series, Sony A80/A80L/A85-type sets) can sell out in certain sizes over the weekend. I’d be careful waiting too long if you see a good price on a model you actually want.

**2. Retailers (from a “safety / warranty” POV)**
I’d prioritize:
- **Costco** – often slightly higher price than the lowest, but 2-year warranty + their return policy is huge for OLED (burn-in anxiety, panel lottery, etc.).
- **Best Buy** – good for open-box and they sometimes add extra warranty promos. Also easier returns if you get banding or bad uniformity.
- **Amazon** – fine, but **make sure** it’s shipped and sold by Amazon or the manufacturer; be careful with 3rd-party sellers for expensive OLEDs.
- **Direct from LG/Sony/Samsung** – occasionally bundle freebies (soundbars / gift cards), but raw price isn’t always the best.

**3. Models likely to be heavily discounted** (55–65" sweet spot)
You might want to keep an eye on:
- **LG C4 (or C3 if still around)** – C-series is usually the best “safe bet.” 120Hz, HDMI 2.1, low input lag, very solid HDR. Last year’s C-series is almost always the best value on Cyber Monday.
- **LG G3/G4** – if these follow the G2/G3 pattern, expect big discounts on the G3 once G4 is fully out. I’d only stretch for G-series if you actually care about the extra brightness and wall-mount design.
- **Sony A80L/A80D-ish equivalents** – fantastic for movies. Input lag is a bit higher than LG but still fine for PS5. Sony’s processing is still king for upscaling and motion, IMO.
- **Samsung S90C/S90D, maybe S95C** – QD-OLED gets you better color volume and highlights. Just be careful to verify they support **4K120, VRR, ALLM** on the ports you need.

**4. Gaming-specific must-checks**
Whatever you target, double-check specs before buying:
- **HDMI 2.1 on at least 2 ports** (PS5 + future stuff).
- **Input lag** under ~15ms at 4K60 (most gaming-focused OLEDs are around 5–10ms).
- **VRR + ALLM** support. Don’t assume; verify in reviews or RTINGS.
- Proper **HDR formats**: if you stream a lot of Dolby Vision content, Sony/LG have the edge; Samsung pushes HDR10+ instead.

**5. Doorbusters vs all-day online deals**
Honestly, the “doorbuster” stuff is usually low-spec or weird model variants. With OLEDs, the *real* good sets are:
- Often **limited-quantity**, but also **online**.
- Sometimes show as “member price” (Costco/Sam’s) or “cart price” (Amazon/Best Buy).
I’d avoid camping out just for a TV. Set up **price alerts** (e.g., on Slickdeals, Google Shopping, or camelcamelcamel for Amazon) starting early November and watch for price history.

**6. Strategy I’d use in your shoes**
- **Now → Oct**: Decide your “short list”: e.g. LG C4 55/65, LG G3 if cheap, Sony A80L-ish, Samsung S90C/S90D.
- **Early Nov**: Track their prices daily, write down the lowest pre-BF.
- **BF weekend**: If you see a **trusted retailer** with a price that’s ~$300–$400 off current norm and it’s in your budget, I’d seriously consider buying then rather than waiting for Cyber Monday.
- If you wait for Cyber Monday, make sure there’s still stock and no “mystery” model numbers (like store-specific variants with cut corners).

FWIW, with your budget, a **65" LG C-series** or **55" G-series** on a strong sale is very realistic. Just don’t chase the absolute lowest number at the expense of warranty/returns… that’s where people regret OLED purchases.

Hope this helps! Let me know what models you’re leaning toward and I can help you sanity-check specs before you buy.


0

Hey, so I was in a similar spot last year, but I kind of went “DIY mode” on the whole upgrade instead of just focusing on the sale price.

Story first: I grabbed a 65" LG C3 around Cyber Monday, but instead of paying Best Buy for delivery + wall mount + calibration, I did everything myself. Between doing my own mount, calibration, and cable management, I saved like $300–$400 that I could put into a slightly better model and still stay near budget.

So from a DIY angle for Cyber Monday 2025:

- **Skip pro mounting if you’re even mildly handy.** A decent full‑motion mount is ~$60–$100 on Amazon, vs $150–$250+ installed. Just make sure to hit studs, use a stud finder, and *don’t* cheap out on the mount’s weight rating.
- **Do basic DIY calibration.** Use YouTube + built‑in test patterns or something like RTINGS’ recommended settings. It’s not “reference grade,” but it gets you 90% there for free vs $200+ pro calibration.
- **Self‑service shopping strategy.** I’d track prices yourself with tools like camelcamelcamel (Amazon) and set alerts at Best Buy / Costco rather than relying on “doorbuster” hype. Actual good OLED deals usually run all day online.

Lesson learned for me: if you’re comfortable DIY’ing everything around the TV (mount, setup, calibration), you can stretch your budget into a nicer panel (like a C-series over a B-series, or closer to G/Sony A-series) without needing some insane once-a-year doorbuster. Cyber Monday becomes more about *total package cost* than just the sticker price.

Hope this helps!


0

If you’re budget-focused, I’d 100% target last year’s mid/high tier (LG C4/Sony A80L equivalents) at warehouse clubs: Costco/Sam’s often beat Amazon/Best Buy once you factor in extended warranty + easy returns. Cyber Monday vs Black Friday is usually within $50–$100, so I’d watch price history with something like Keepa now, set alerts, then buy as soon as a 55–65" OLED hits ~30–35% off MSRP and includes gift cards/points—those stack into real savings. Skip in-store doorbusters; they’re usually limited units or stripped-down models, while the “real” OLED deals are live online all day.


0

Hey, one angle I don’t see mentioned yet is **where you live** and even your climate, because it really does change the Cyber Monday OLED game.

**1. Region = price + model availability**
- In the US, LG C-series and Samsung S90C/S90D tend to hit your $900–$1,500 range at big-box (Best Buy, Costco, Walmart) and Amazon.
- In EU/UK, timing’s weirder: OLED drops often hit **a bit earlier** (Singles Day / mid‑Nov) and sometimes don’t get much cheaper on Cyber Monday. Check local chains (Currys, MediaMarkt, Fnac, etc.) because they run region‑specific promos the US never sees.
- If you’re in Canada/Australia, I’d definitely watch **local e-tailers** and manufacturer sites—LG/Sony run country‑specific cashback or gift card promos that quietly beat Amazon.

**2. Climate & delivery**
- Very cold climates: I personally avoid in‑store pickup below freezing. Panels don’t *love* sitting in a freezing car; I prefer home delivery, unbox after it’s been inside a few hours.
- Super humid / coastal areas: I’d lean Costco/Sam’s or a local dealer with stronger warranty + easier returns. I’m in a humid coastal city and my LG C2 from Costco’s been perfect, but I’m happy knowing their warranty + concierge is there.

**3. Strategy by region**
- US suburbs: Cyber Monday online + curbside pickup works well. Use price‑tracking (Keepa, etc.) and stack card promos.
- Smaller markets / rural: Order **earlier** (Black Friday weekend) so stock doesn’t vanish or shipping dates slip to mid‑December.

So yeah: same models everyone’s mentioning (LG C-series, Sony A80L successor, Samsung S90C/D), but tweak your plan based on **country, climate, and how good local stores are with warranties/returns**. That’s what’s kept me happy and stress‑free with my last few OLEDs.

Hope this helps!


0

Hey, one angle I don’t see mentioned yet is **where you live** and even your climate, because it really does change the Cyber Monday OLED game.

**1. Region = price + model availability**
- In the US, LG C-series and Samsung S90C/S90D tend to hit your $900–$1,500 range at big-box (Best Buy, Costco, Walmart) and Amazon.
- In EU/UK, timing’s weirder: OLED drops often hit **a bit earlier** (Singles Day / mid‑Nov) and sometimes don’t get much cheaper on Cyber Monday. Check local chains (Currys, MediaMarkt, Fnac, etc.) because they run region‑specific promos the US never sees.
- If you’re in Canada/Australia, I’d definitely watch **local e-tailers** and manufacturer sites—LG/Sony run country‑specific cashback or gift card promos that quietly beat Amazon.

**2. Climate & delivery**
- Very cold climates: I personally avoid in‑store pickup below freezing. Panels don’t *love* sitting in a freezing car; I prefer home delivery, unbox after it’s been inside a few hours.
- Super humid / coastal areas: I’d lean Costco/Sam’s or a local dealer with stronger warranty + easier returns. I’m in a humid coastal city and my LG C2 from Costco’s been perfect, but I’m happy knowing their warranty + concierge is there.

**3. Strategy by region**
- US suburbs: Cyber Monday online + curbside pickup works well. Use price‑tracking (Keepa, etc.) and stack card promos.
- Smaller markets / rural: Order **earlier** (Black Friday weekend) so stock doesn’t vanish or shipping dates slip to mid‑December.

So yeah: same models everyone’s mentioning (LG C-series, Sony A80L successor, Samsung S90C/D), but tweak your plan based on **country, climate, and how good local stores are with warranties/returns**. That’s what’s kept me happy and stress‑free with my last few OLEDs.

Hope this helps!


0

Hey, love that you’re planning ahead for this!

Since others covered pricing/strategy, I’ll be the safety / reliability nerd here 😅. When you’re chasing Cyber Monday OLED deals, I’d *definitely* factor in:

1. **Burn-in risk & panel health**
For heavy gaming/HUDs, I’d lean LG C-series or Sony A80/A90 equivalents over super-cheap mystery brands. They have better pixel-refresh / logo dimming and better track records. Check if the model has:
- Logo luminance adjustment
- Screen shift / pixel refresher
- Strong burn-in warranty language (some cover it, some don’t!)

2. **Retailer safety / return policies**
I’d prioritize:
- **Costco / Sam’s** → longer return windows + extra warranty = fantastic peace of mind if you get banding or dead pixels.
- **Best Buy** → easier damage claims if the panel arrives cracked.
I personally avoid random third-party marketplace sellers on Amazon for big OLEDs… support can be a nightmare if something’s wrong.

3. **Extended protection, but only from trusted sources**
I think it’s worth considering an extended warranty on OLEDs *if* it’s from Costco, manufacturer, or a reputable plan. Skip sketchy add-ons from unknown sellers.

4. **Delivery & setup safety**
These panels are crazy thin and fragile. For a 65", I’d:
- Pay for **white-glove delivery** if it’s reasonably priced.
- Inspect for cracks / bright or dead pixels **before** you toss the box.
- If wall mounting, double-check stud placement and use a mount rated for that size/weight.

On Cyber Monday vs Black Friday: prices are usually very close, so I’d pick the day where the retailer you trust (Costco/BB/etc.) has the safer combo of price + warranty + delivery.

So yeah, chase the deal, but protect yourself on warranty, return window, and who you’re buying from. It makes a *huge* difference if something goes wrong.

Hope this helps!


0

Hey,

From a more “brand vs brand” angle, here’s how I’d look at Cyber Monday 2025, based on the last few years of watching OLED pricing:

**LG**
- LG C-series is usually the price/performance champ for your use case (movies + PS5).
- Historically, C2/C3 dropped hardest vs MSRP by Black Friday/Cyber Monday, and Cyber Monday was often *equal or like $50–$150 better* than BF on Amazon/Best Buy.
- G-series discounts are rarer but when they hit, they’re usually bundle-based (gift cards, install credits) rather than huge raw price cuts.

**Sony**
- Sony (A80L/A90L-type) tends to hold price longer. Awesome processing for movies, but you usually pay a few hundred more vs comparable LG.
- Their big drops often come slightly *after* the holidays, so on Cyber Monday you might see decent deals, just not the “wow” numbers like LG.

**Samsung OLED (S90C/S95C successors)**
- Samsung’s QD-OLEDs have been super aggressive lately. In 2024, S90C was often cheaper than LG C3 with brighter HDR.
- I’d definitely expect Samsung to chase LG on price again, especially on 55"/65".

**Retailer pattern (based on past years)**
- **Best Buy / Amazon**: biggest headline cuts on LG/Samsung, plus flash sales on Cyber Monday.
- **Costco**: not always the *lowest* sticker price, but when you factor in warranty + return policy, it’s a really solid overall value.
- **Direct from LG/Sony/Samsung**: sometimes give you gift cards, soundbars, or extended warranties instead of the absolute lowest price.

For your budget ($900–$1,500), I’d *predict*:
- 55" C4/S90D-type models in the $1,000–$1,200 range.
- 65" last-year models (C3/S90C/A80L) probably landing somewhere around $1,200–$1,500 if stock is still good.

Doorbusters are usually more about cheap LCDs. The “real” OLED deals are almost always online all day (or at least for a few hours), and price-matched across retailers, so I personally wouldn’t camp out.

If you tell us whether you lean more movie-nerd (Sony) or gaming-first (LG/Samsung), people can probably narrow it down to 1–2 specific models to watch by name.

Hope this helps!


0

Hey, long-time OLED addict here 🙋‍♂️ (been through LG B7 → C9 → C2, plus a Sony A80J at my parents’ place). Since others have covered pricing/retailer strategy, I’ll hit it from the *living-with-it-for-years* angle.

**1. What you care about now vs 3–5 years from now**
Right now you’re focused on price + specs (totally fair), but long-term, these matter more than the extra $100 you save on Cyber Monday:
- **HDMI 2.1 ports** – Don’t just look for “4K 120Hz”. Make sure you’ve got at least **2 full-bandwidth HDMI 2.1 ports** (eARC + PS5 + maybe a future console/PC). My old B7 only had limited options and it got annoying fast.
- **OS & updates** – LG’s webOS and Sony’s Google TV age differently. In my experience:
- LG: super snappy at first, slows *a bit* over years but still fine.
- Sony: Google TV is slower out of the box but gets better features with updates. Long term, I actually prefer it for apps.
If you hate sluggish menus in 3–4 years, that’ll bug you more than a tiny price difference.

**2. Burn-in / panel health in real life**
Everyone freaks out about burn-in. My take after years:
- Gaming + movies with mixed content? **You’re probably fine.** My C9 and C2 both look fantastic after tons of PS5/Xbox hours.
- Static HUD-heavy games (FIFA scoreboards, news channels, same game UI for 6+ hours daily) – that’s where I *do* see faint retention on my older B7. Not dramatic, but noticeable on test patterns.

Cyber Monday angle: if you can stretch to a slightly newer **EVO / MLA / QD-OLED** panel vs an older one, **do it**. Newer panels have better brightness *and* generally better burn-in mitigation. That’s a long-term win.

**3. Picture quality aging curve**
The funny thing with OLEDs is this: even a “last year” C-series will still look **insane** 5 years from now. What ages better, from what I’ve seen:
- Sony A-series: **best processing/filmic look**. Older Sony OLED at my parents’ place still looks super “cinematic” compared to my LGs.
- LG C-series/G-series: **gaming heaven**. LG nails game mode, low input lag, VRR, etc. That’s why my C2 is still my main setup.

So if you’re torn between a slightly cheaper 2024 LG C vs pricier Sony A…
- More gaming-heavy? **Go LG**.
- More movies/TV-first, lights down home theater vibe? **Sony A-series** ages beautifully.

**4. Where Cyber Monday specifically helps long-term**
From past years watching prices:
- Cyber Monday tends to be where you see **better deals on the higher tiers** (LG G-series, Sony A80/A90, Samsung S90C/S95C type sets), not just the stripped-down or weird store-only SKUs.
- If you can grab a **G-series or Sony A-series at a C-series price**, that’s a long-term win because:
- Better build quality / design (wall-mounting looks amazing for years).
- Often slightly better panels and heat management (good for longevity + brightness).

**5. Doorbusters vs living-with-the-TV reality**
Those “doorbuster” OLEDs are often:
- Gimped versions (fewer HDMI 2.1 ports, worse stand, cheaper remote).
- Lower brightness or older panels.

Tbh, I’d rather:
- Pay $100–$150 more on a **real C/G or A/S series** during a day-long online deal
- Get Costco/Best Buy with extended warranty (just in case panel issues show up in year 3)

That’s how you buy once and stay happy for 5–7 years instead of getting annoyed in 18 months.

**My personal strategy for you**
- Target: **LG C4 55/65 or Sony A80L/A80K, Samsung S90C/S95C** depending on what’s on clearance.
- Watch:
- How many HDMI 2.1 ports?
- Is it the actual mainline model (not a weird store variant)?
- Buy from: **Costco or Best Buy** for warranty, then Amazon as a price check.

If a G-series or Sony A90-type drops into your budget on Cyber Monday, that’s the “I’m gonna love this for years” move IMO.

Hope this helps! If you narrow down to 2–3 specific models closer to the date, post them and I’m happy to nitpick from a long-term owner perspective.


0

LG C5 OLED TV deals now live at Amazon. (Up to $1200 off !)


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