Samsung The Frame LS03FA 55"

★★★★★ 4.5 (344)

A matte, anti-reflection QLED panel and a customizable bezel transform this display into wall art, while the 120Hz refresh rate with VRR and ALLM support smooth gaming via HDMI 2.1. Its Art Mode and flush, slim-fit wall mount eliminate the black-screen void, making it a design-first centerpiece rather than just a television. This model is best for design-conscious homeowners who want a single display that prioritizes interior aesthetics without sacrificing modern gaming and smart home integration.

Screen 55
Resolution 3840x2160
Panel QLED
Refresh 120 Hz
HDR HDR10+, HDR10, HLG
smart platform Tizen
hdmi version 2.1
Samsung The Frame LS03FA 55" tv
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Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The Samsung Frame LS03FA is a 55-inch 4K QLED TV that doubles as a piece of wall art, and it nails that design brief better than anything else on the market. Picture quality is middle-of-the-road and audio is weak, but the matte display, included slim wall mount, and Art Mode make it the best choice for anyone who hates the look of a traditional TV. Just know you're paying a premium for the form factor, not the performance.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Gorgeous design that actually looks like a framed picture on the wall 93th
  • Matte display kills reflections and glare in bright rooms 85th
  • Art Mode is genuinely impressive and easy to use 82th
  • 120Hz panel with HDMI 2.1 makes it a sneaky good gaming TV 80th
  • Slim-fit wall mount included in the box

Cons

  • Edge-lit backlight means mediocre contrast and black levels
  • Picture quality falls behind similarly priced Mini-LED and OLED sets
  • Built-in speakers are thin and underwhelming
  • Some users report buggy behavior like flashing standby lights and Bluetooth drops
  • Price premium is all about the design, not the performance

What owners think

The Word on the Street

4.5/5 (344 reviews)
👍 Owners consistently rave about the stunning design and how Art Mode transforms the TV into a convincing picture frame.
👍 The matte display gets a lot of love for cutting glare and making the screen look more like canvas than glass.
👎 A handful of buyers report frustrating technical issues like a faulty remote, Bluetooth connection problems, and a randomly flashing standby light.

시간에 따라 사용자 평판이 어떻게 변했는가

독점

고객이 실제로 리뷰를 작성한 시점을 기준으로 합니다. 초기의 호평이 유지되었는지 확인할 수 있습니다.

8Q2 '26
만족 (4-5★)불만족 (1-2★)막대 높이 = 리뷰 수

날짜가 있는 고객 리뷰 8건을 기준으로 달력 분기별로 묶었습니다. 기간별 분석은 영어로 제공됩니다.

The proof

Performance

Let's talk numbers. The Frame's 120Hz native refresh rate and HDMI 2.1 support put it in the 75th percentile for gaming, which is solid. You'll get smooth motion with a PS5 or Xbox Series X, and features like FreeSync Premium and ALLM mean it switches into game mode automatically. Input lag is low enough that most people won't notice it. For a TV that's sold on its looks, the gaming chops are a pleasant surprise.

Where it stumbles is raw picture quality. The edge-lit panel can't deliver the deep blacks or high peak brightness you'd get from a Mini-LED or OLED. HDR content looks fine, but it won't pop the way it does on a set with better contrast. Our HDR score lands in the 84th percentile, which sounds impressive until you realize that's mostly about format support (HDR10+, HLG) rather than actual HDR performance. In a bright room, the matte finish does a great job of cutting glare, but in a dark room, blacks look more like a dark gray. The audio is also a weak spot, sitting in the 46th percentile. The built-in 2.0 channel speakers are fine for news and sitcoms, but you'll want a soundbar for movies.

Performance Percentiles

Hdr 84.8
Audio 45.9
Smart 79.5
Gaming 75.1
Display 78.7
Connectivity 93.1
Social Proof 82.3
Picture Quality 36.3

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 55"
Resolution 4K
Panel Type QLED
Backlight Edge LED
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Curved No

Picture Quality

Color Gamut Not Specified by Manufacturer
Motion Tech Dynamic refresh technology
Processor Samsung Vision AI

HDR

HDR Formats HDR10+, HDR10, HLG
Dolby Vision No
HDR10+ Yes
HLG Yes

Gaming

Refresh Rate 120 Hz
VRR VRR
ALLM Yes
Game Mode No

Smart TV

Platform Tizen
Voice Assistant Google Assistant, Alexa, Bixby
Screen Mirroring AirPlay

Audio

Speaker Config 2
Dolby Atmos No
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 139
Energy Star No
Annual Energy 264
Weight 16.6 kg / 36.6 lbs

vs Competition

The Frame's most direct competitor is probably the LG C5 OLED. The C5 will give you perfect blacks, better viewing angles, and superior overall picture quality. But it's also a glossy black slab when it's off, and it doesn't have anything like Art Mode. If picture quality is your top priority, the LG wins hands down. The Sony BRAVIA 9 is another step up in brightness and processing, but again, it's a traditional TV design.

On the budget side, the TCL QM8K and Hisense U8QG both offer Mini-LED backlights with far better contrast and brightness than The Frame, often for less money. They're the smarter buy if you just want the best picture per dollar. The Roku Pro Series is also worth a look if you prefer Roku's simpler smart platform over Tizen. None of these look like a piece of art on your wall, though. That's The Frame's whole thing, and for the right person, that's enough.

Spec Samsung The Frame LS03FA 55" Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 LG OLED evo AI 4K G5 Series OLED97G5WUA TCL QM7K Series 98QM7K Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG Roku Plus Series 75R6C7
Screen Size 55 85 97 97.5 75 75
Resolution 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 4K 4K 3840x2160
Panel Type QLED MiniLED OLED QLED MiniLED QLED
Refresh Rate 120 120 120 144 165 60
Hdr HDR10+, HDR10, HLG HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG), Dolby Vision HDR10, Dolby Vision, 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 false 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 HdrAudioSmartGamingDisplayConnectivitySocial ProofPicture Quality
Samsung The Frame LS03FA 55" 84.845.979.575.178.793.182.336.3
Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 Compare 76.396.892.37982.193.198.579.2
LG OLED evo AI 4K G5 Series OLED97G5WUA Compare 97.399.980.388.498.783.877.596.3
TCL QM7K Series 98QM7K Compare 91.681.597.493.752.683.898.597.7
Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG Compare 91.693.995.895.43696.894.898.4
Roku Plus Series 75R6C7 Compare 76.381.599.75787.689.299.536.3

Price

Value & Pricing

Pricing on The Frame is all over the map depending on where you look. We've seen it listed anywhere from $859 to a frankly absurd $30,050 across different vendors, so shop carefully. The sweet spot seems to be around the lower end of that range, where the design premium starts to make more sense. At $859, you're getting a unique TV that doubles as wall art. At $3,000, you're getting fleeced. For context, a Hisense U8QG Mini-LED will absolutely demolish The Frame in picture quality for similar or less money, but it'll also look like a regular black rectangle on your wall. You're paying for the form factor here, and whether that's worth it depends entirely on how much you hate the look of a normal TV.

Read more

Overview

Samsung's The Frame has carved out a weird and wonderful niche. It's a 4K QLED TV that's designed to look like a piece of art hanging on your wall, and for a lot of people, that's the entire selling point. The 55-inch LS03FA model we're looking at here continues that tradition with a matte display, a slim profile, and Samsung's Art Mode that displays paintings or your own photos when you're not watching TV. If you're tired of the big black rectangle dominating your living room, this thing is basically catnip.

Under the hood, it's a capable set. You get a 120Hz panel, HDMI 2.1 with VRR and ALLM for gaming, and Samsung's Tizen smart platform. It's not going to win any brightness wars against a flagship OLED or a high-end Mini-LED, but it's not trying to. The Frame is for people who prioritize how their TV looks when it's off almost as much as how it looks when it's on. And on that front, it's in a league of its own.

But that design-first approach comes with trade-offs. The edge-lit LED backlight means picture quality, especially in dark rooms, can't keep up with similarly priced sets that use full-array local dimming. Our database puts its picture quality score in the 37th percentile, which is pretty mediocre for a TV in this price bracket. If you're a cinephile who watches in a pitch-black room, keep scrolling. But if you want a TV that disappears into your decor, read on.

Common Questions

Q: Does the Samsung Frame TV look like a real picture frame?

Yes, that's the whole point. The matte display, slim profile, and included wall mount make it sit nearly flush against the wall, and Art Mode displays paintings or photos with a customizable mat and bezel so it genuinely looks like framed art when you're not watching TV.

Q: Is the Samsung Frame good for gaming?

It's surprisingly capable. The 120Hz panel, HDMI 2.1, VRR, and ALLM support mean it handles PS5 and Xbox Series X gaming smoothly with low input lag, though the edge-lit backlight means dark game scenes won't look as rich as they would on an OLED.

Q: How is the picture quality on The Frame compared to a regular QLED?

It's a step down from Samsung's higher-end QLEDs. The edge-lit panel can't match the contrast or brightness of models with full-array local dimming, so blacks look more gray in a dark room, but the matte finish is excellent at reducing reflections in bright spaces.

Q: Do I need a subscription for Samsung Art Mode?

You don't need one to display your own photos, which is a nice perk. Samsung does offer an optional subscription for access to their full art library, but you can also buy individual pieces if you prefer.

Who Should Skip This

Skip The Frame if you're a home theater enthusiast who watches movies in a dark room. The edge-lit backlight just can't deliver the deep blacks and high contrast you'd get from an OLED like the LG C5 or a Mini-LED set like the Hisense U8QG. It's also not the right pick if you're on a tight budget and just want the best picture quality per dollar, the TCL QM8K or Roku Pro Series will give you more performance for less money. And if you're sensitive to tech quirks, the scattered reports of remote and Bluetooth issues might drive you nuts.

Verdict

The Samsung Frame LS03FA is a TV you buy with your eyes first, and I mean that literally. It's the best-looking television on the market when it's not being a television. The matte screen, the slim wall mount, and Art Mode combine to create something that genuinely blends into a well-designed room. If you've ever thought "I wish my TV didn't look like a TV," this is your answer.

But you have to go in with your eyes open about the compromises. The picture quality is fine, not great. Blacks are gray-ish in a dark room, and HDR doesn't have the punch you'd get from a Mini-LED or OLED. The built-in audio is weak, and a small but vocal group of owners have reported annoying reliability quirks like faulty remotes and flashing lights. If you're a movie buff or a serious gamer who values performance above all else, spend your money elsewhere. If you want a TV that disappears into your living room and still delivers a solid 4K experience, The Frame is in a class of its own.

Usage Scores

Overall (76.3)Budget (78.9)Gaming (68.8)Movies (57.8)Sports (65.6)Outdoor (48.5)Portable (54.4)Corporate (67.2)Streaming (76.7)Smart Home (79.2)

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