Hisense L9H Review (2026): The Best Value 100-Inch Laser TV

Hisense L9H Laser TV

9.2 / 10

VERDICT

This is the "shut up and take my money" option for big screens. While other brands make you buy the projector and screen separately, Hisense includes a high-end ALR screen in the box. With 3000 Lumens brightness and Dolby Vision support (which Samsung lacks), it is arguably the best turnkey cinema solution on the market.

The Big Picture

A laser projector without a special screen looks washed out in daylight. Hisense solves this by bundling a massive 100-inch or 120-inch Ambient Light Rejecting (ALR) screen with the L9H. This screen blocks ceiling lights while reflecting the projector's light back to your eyes, allowing you to watch sports in a bright living room without closing the curtains.

🌈 TriChroma Laser Engine

The Tech: Like the Samsung LSP9T, it uses three separate lasers (RGB).
The Performance: It achieves 107% of the BT.2020 color space. The reds are deeper and the greens are more vibrant than any standard LED TV. Combined with Dolby Vision HDR, the picture quality is breathtakingly cinematic.

☀️ 3000 Lumens Brightness

It cuts through the light.
Daytime Viewing: With 3000 ANSI Lumens, it is brighter than most competitors. While a dedicated OLED is still better for dark blacks, the L9H is bright enough to replace your main living room TV for daily news and cartoons.

The Pros

  • All-in-One: ALR Screen included (huge value).
  • Dolby Vision: Supports the most popular HDR format (Samsung does not).
  • Long Life: 25,000+ hour laser lifespan (lasts for decades).
  • Excellent built-in 40W speakers.

The Cons

  • Installation: Assembling the 100-inch screen is a 2-person job and takes time.
  • VIDAA OS: The smart interface is fast but lacks some apps compared to Google TV.
  • Slight "laser speckle" (glittery effect) visible on solid bright colors.

🤔 Should you buy it?

YES if you want the biggest screen possible for the best price, without worrying about buying extra accessories.

NO if you don't have a large empty wall space (the fixed screen is permanent, unlike a roll-up screen).


See the showdown: Hisense L9H vs. Samsung The Premiere LSP9T

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