Samsung The Frame LS03FA 50"
Its 50-inch 4K QLED panel and dedicated Art Mode, powered by Samsung Vision AI, turn the TV into a flush, wall-mounted art display with customizable bezels. The included One Connect Box and Slim-Fit Wall Mount deliver a nearly cable-free, gapless installation, maintaining the illusion of a framed picture. It’s best for design-savvy homeowners who want a 50-inch 4K TV that seamlessly becomes a piece of wall art when not in use.
Snapshot
The 30-Second Version
A genuine art piece that also streams Netflix. Just don't expect it to wow you when the lights go down, because the picture quality is strictly mid-tier.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- The flush wall mount and matte display truly make it look like art, not a black void 93th
- One Connect Box keeps nearly all cables hidden, leaving a single slim wire 85th
- Art Mode is genuinely gorgeous and a guaranteed conversation starter 78th
- Loaded with HDMI 2.1, FreeSync, and G-Sync, even if the 60Hz panel holds it back 74th
Cons
- Picture quality is mediocre and gets outclassed by much cheaper QLEDs from TCL or Hisense
- No Dolby Vision support, a glaring omission at this price
- 60Hz refresh rate feels dated for gaming, despite the fancy HDMI badge
- Tizen smart interface can feel sluggish and cluttered next to Google TV
What owners think
The Word on the Street
시간에 따라 사용자 평판이 어떻게 변했는가
독점고객이 실제로 리뷰를 작성한 시점을 기준으로 합니다. 초기의 호평이 유지되었는지 확인할 수 있습니다.
날짜가 있는 고객 리뷰 16건을 기준으로 달력 분기별로 묶었습니다. 기간별 분석은 영어로 제공됩니다.
The proof
Performance
What surprised us most is how much Samsung packed into the connectivity side while leaving the panel itself so meh. You get four HDMI 2.1 ports with eARC, FreeSync, G-Sync compatibility, and ALLM, all on a 60Hz set. In our database, its connectivity ranks in the top 6% of all TVs, which is nuts for a lifestyle model. But then we turned to actual picture tests. Our numbers place its overall picture quality in the 36th percentile, meaning it gets spanked by plenty of sub-$500 TVs. Brightness and contrast are just fine for casual daytime viewing, and HDR10+ helps a bit, but there's no local dimming and no Dolby Vision. The gaming specs look great on paper, until you remember the panel tops out at 60Hz and motion handling is merely adequate. This is a TV that talks a big game but delivers a middle-of-the-pack picture.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Display
| Size | 50" |
| Resolution | 4K |
| Panel Type | QLED |
| Backlight | Direct LED |
| Aspect Ratio | 16:9 |
| Curved | No |
Picture Quality
| Color Gamut | Not Specified by Manufacturer |
| Motion Tech | Motion Xcelerator |
| Processor | Samsung Vision AI |
HDR
| HDR Formats | HDR10, HDR10+, HLG |
| Dolby Vision | No |
| HDR10+ | Yes |
| HLG | Yes |
Gaming
| Refresh Rate | 60 Hz |
| VRR | FreeSync, G-Sync Compatible |
| ALLM | Yes |
| Game Mode | No |
Smart TV
| Platform | Tizen |
| Voice Assistant | Multiple Voice Assistants Compatible |
| Screen Mirroring | AirPlay 2 |
Audio
| Speaker Config | 2 |
| Wattage | 20 |
| Dolby Atmos | Yes |
| Surround Sound | Dolby Digital Plus |
| eARC | Yes |
Connectivity
| HDMI Ports | 4 |
| HDMI Version | 2.1 |
| USB Ports | 3 |
| Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi 5 |
| Bluetooth | 5.3 |
| Ethernet | Yes |
| Optical Audio | Yes |
| VESA Mount | 200x200 |
Power & Size
| Power | 103 |
| Energy Star | No |
| Annual Energy | 198 |
| Weight | 11.8 kg / 26.0 lbs |
vs Competition
The LG C5 OLED and the Sony BRAVIA 5 are the two TVs that'll tempt you away from The Frame. The C5 delivers perfect blacks, infinite contrast, and Dolby Vision, and it absolutely crushes The Frame in every picture metric that matters. It's an ordinary black rectangle when off, though. The Sony BRAVIA 5 brings mini-LED brightness, superior processing, and Dolby Vision in a similarly priced package, giving you a cinematic experience The Frame can't touch. Both beat The Frame handily as televisions, but neither one turns into a piece of art. If you want your TV to disappear when it's not in use, neither LG nor Sony has an answer. That's the whole pitch.
| Spec | Samsung The Frame LS03FA 50" | Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 | LG OLED evo - G5 series OLED77G5WUA | TCL QM7K Series 98QM7K | Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG | Roku Plus Series 75R6C7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screen Size | 50 | 85 | 77 | 97.5 | 75 | 75 |
| Resolution | 3840x2160 | 3840x2160 | 3840x2160 | 4K | 4K | 3840x2160 |
| Panel Type | QLED | MiniLED | OLED | QLED | MiniLED | QLED |
| Refresh Rate | 60 | 120 | 120 | 144 | 165 | 60 |
| Hdr | HDR10, HDR10+, HLG | HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG), Dolby Vision | Dolby Vision, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) | Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) | Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) | Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) |
| Smart Platform | Tizen | Google TV | webOS | Google TV | Google TV | Roku TV |
| Dolby Vision | false | true | true | true | true | true |
| Dolby Atmos | true | true | true | true | true | true |
| Hdmi Version | 2.1 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 2.1 |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Hdr | Audio | Smart | Gaming | Display | Connectivity | Social Proof | Picture Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samsung The Frame LS03FA 50" | 84.8 | 74.4 | 41 | 63.7 | 74.3 | 93.1 | 77.5 | 36.3 |
| Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 Compare | 76.3 | 96.8 | 92.3 | 79 | 82.1 | 93.1 | 98.5 | 79.2 |
| LG OLED evo - G5 series OLED77G5WUA Compare | 76.3 | 90.4 | 90.8 | 97.8 | 97 | 98.6 | 99.5 | 36.3 |
| TCL QM7K Series 98QM7K Compare | 91.6 | 81.5 | 97.4 | 93.7 | 52.6 | 83.8 | 98.5 | 97.7 |
| Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG Compare | 91.6 | 93.9 | 95.8 | 95.4 | 36 | 96.8 | 94.8 | 98.4 |
| Roku Plus Series 75R6C7 Compare | 76.3 | 81.5 | 99.7 | 57 | 87.6 | 89.2 | 99.5 | 36.3 |
Price
Value & Pricing
Prices swing from $798 to $1098 depending on where you shop, and that $300 gap is serious. If you're dead-set on The Frame, sniff out the retailer selling it for $798 because you're getting the exact same TV for a lot less coin. At that lower price, the design premium starts to make a little sense. Push north of a grand, and you're solidly in LG C5 OLED territory, where you'll get a dramatically better picture and still have money left for a nice wall mount. You're paying for the art illusion, not the pixels, so be honest with yourself about what matters most.
B&H Photo 1개 최저 CA$1,098
Read more
Overview
The Samsung Frame LS03FA is the only TV that genuinely looks better when it's off. The flush mount, the matte display, the customizable bezels, it all works together to trick everyone into thinking there's a framed print on your wall. And when you do turn it on, Art Mode shows high-res paintings and photos that actually fool the eye. But here's the thing: as a pure television, it's aggressively average. Samsung clearly decided that aesthetics would get the budget, and raw picture performance took a back seat. If your priority is a TV that blends into a gorgeous living space, you'll love it. If you want the best image quality for your dollar, this ain't it.
Common Questions
Q: Do I need a subscription to display my own photos?
Not at all. Uploading personal photos is completely free. You only need a subscription if you want access to Samsung's curated Art Store collection.
Q: Is this the 2025 model?
Yep, the LS03FA series is the 2025 refresh, so you're getting the latest version with Vision AI and all the current Art Mode goodies.
Q: Can I mount it in portrait mode?
Yes, The Frame supports vertical orientation, and you can even chain multiple panels into a video wall if you're feeling extra.
Who Should Skip This
If you're hunting for deep blacks, bright highlights, and movie-thriller immersion, this is not your TV. Grab the LG C5 OLED or the Sony BRAVIA 5 instead, both of which demolish The Frame in picture quality and often cost less. The Frame is a lifestyle product first, a television second. If you won't use Art Mode and just want the best image for your money, walk away.
Verdict
The Samsung Frame is a brilliant piece of furniture that happens to play Netflix. Buy it if you care deeply about your room's aesthetics and will actually use Art Mode daily. For everyone else chasing the best picture performance, skip it. At $798 it's a defensible splurge for a design-first TV; at any higher price, go get an OLED and don't look back. This is the TV you buy to make your wall look good, not to blow your mind during movie night.