Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Monitors

TCL to Offer IJP OLED Monitors and Notebook Screens. Are Consumer OLED TVs Next?

With TCL’s joint venture with Sony to manufacturer Sony BRAVIA TVs on the horizon, we’re wondering whether TCL’s push to bring InkJet Printed OLED monitors to market may be a harbinger of things to come for consumer TVs.

TCL/CSOT IJP OLED Exhibit at CES 2025

According to TrendForce, a global market research and intelligence firm headquartered in Taipei, Taiwan, TCL CSOT, the display manufacturing arm of tech giant TCL, is aggressively promoting its IJP (Ink Jet Printed) OLED display technology as a means of entering the OLED monitor and notebook panel supply chain. The company’s existing Gen 5.5 IJP OLED production line has already reached volume production and has successfully commercialized OLED display panels for the medical industry, while validation programs for branded monitor and notebook products are currently underway. The company’s progress could potentially challenge the long-standing dominance of Korean panel makers LG Display and Samsung Display in the OLED industry.

TCL purchased the IJP OLED patents and actual manufacturing equipment from Japanese firm JOLED in 2023, after previously investing in that company. TCL CSOT moved the equipment to China in order to build its Gen 5.5 IJP OLED plant which became operational in late 2024.

TrendForce reports that TCL CSOT is initially testing market demand with a 27-inch UHD (Ultra High Definition) IJP OLED monitor produced on its Gen 5.5 line, targeting the professional monitor segment.

According to TrendForce, IJP OLED offers superior power efficiency in high-end business and creator-focused displays when compared with existing QD-OLED and WOLED technologies, making it increasingly attractive to brand vendors. The IJP method of manufacturing OLED screens also offers dramatically lower manufacturing costs, which could allow TCL to undercut its competition and gain market share quickly.

tcl-csot-inkjet-oled-900px
TrendForce predicts a substantial increase in OLED market share in monitor and notebook/laptop screens, thanks to a recent push toward IJP OLED by TCL CSOT. Chart copyright TrendForce – all rights reserved. Used with permission.

Monitor brands from China, Taiwan, and South Korea are reportedly evaluating IJP OLED panels to use in their computer monitors, and TCL CSOT is expected to begin mass production of IJP OLED monitor panels in the third quarter of 2026.

The OLED monitor panel market is currently dominated by Samsung Display and LG Display. Current costs associated with OLED screen manufacturing compared to the more common LCD-based panels has limited OLED’s penetration within the computer monitor market to approximately 3% in 2026. However, according to TrendForce with TCL CSOT investing heavily in its upcoming Gen 8.6 OLED fabrication plant, TrendForce expects OLED monitor penetration to double to 6.2% of the market by the end of this decade, and continue expanding thereafter.

Meanwhile, according to TrendForce, the manufacture of OLED screens for notebooks/laptops is becoming increasingly diversified. In addition to Samsung Display, TCL CSOT, BOE, and Visionox have all committed resources to Gen 8.6 OLED notebook panel production. As a result, adoption of OLED screens in laptops and notebook computers is expected to accelerate rapidly, with penetration projected to reach 22.4% by 2030.

Inkjet Printing vs. Vacuum Evaporation – Which is Better?

IJP OLED uses large scale inkjet printers with soluble organic materials to print red, green and blue sub-pixels directly onto a substrate or “motherglass.” This promises lower production costs and far less material waste compared to the traditional vacuum evaporation methods used for W-OLED and QD-OLED panel manufacturing. Also, since IJP creates individual red, green and blue subpixels, the process avoids the need for color filters used on W-OLED displays and the need for Quantum Dot layers on QD-OLED displays. But current IJP OLED manufacturing facilities are limited in panel size and the current production IJP panels themselves are limited in overall brightness, which has kept the tech out of the consumer television business… for now.

tcl-csot-inkjet-oled-900px
TCL touts the benefits of IJP OLED over traditional OLED displays.

The wildcard in this whole market is TCL CSOT’s Gen 8.6 OLED plant in Guangzhou, China, which is scheduled to begin production of IJP OLED panels in the third or fourth quarter of 2026. The new plant is expected to have the capability of manufacturing IJP OLED screens in much larger screen sizes than the current Gen 5.5 production line.

While initial production of the new plant will concentrate on smaller IJP OLED screens for the notebook and monitor market, the company could potentially begin churning out consumer TV-sized OLED screens in 65 and 77-inch screen sizes as early as next year (2027). Whether they actually pursue this path will depend on how things go with the smaller screen business and whether they can ramp up production and yield quickly enough to be able to reach competitive pricing on these larger screens after recovering the substantial R&D investment required in order to build the plant.

The Bottom Line

TV enthusiasts (like yours truly) love OLED TV for its perfect black levels and outstanding contrast. But the latest flagship TVs from the major TV brands (except LG) all feature LCD display panels, with improved backlighting units that use Mini LED backlighting or RGB backlighting to create bright bold images with wide color gamut reproduction.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

While LG, Samsung and Sony continue to offer OLED TV models, the performance gap between LCD and OLED is definitely closing with each new model year as major manufacturers like Samsung and TCL pour billions of dollars into LCD display research, marketing and manufacturing. And with the inefficiencies inherent in current OLED panel manufacturing, it’s unclear how long the tech will be supported as OLED manufacturing costs remain high relative to LCD TV manufacturing.

The promise of cheaper OLED panels is something that could extend the life of the tech, and allow OLED TVs to compete with LCD TVs, even at budget-friendly price points.

With TCL and Sony entering a joint venture for TV manufacturing called BRAVIA, Inc., which is scheduled to begin its operations in April, 2027, and the new Gen 8.6 IJP OLED plant ramping up wide scale panel production at around the same time, we have to wonder whether things might just work out well for the future of OLED TV tech in general, and Sony/BRAVIA OLED TVs in particular.

BRAVIA 10, anyone?

The full report on TCL CSOT entering the notebook and monitor screen market with its IJP OLED screens is available directly from TrendForce on its Report Page,

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement

New Products

2026 Marshall Stanmore IV and Acton IV Wireless Speakers Front Black

New Products

2026 Marshall Acton IV and Stanmore IV add Auracast, LDAC, upgraded sound, tactile controls, and repairable parts to the brand’s Bluetooth home speaker lineup.

Secret Chord Analogue Vinyl Record Tracker Secret Chord Analogue Vinyl Record Tracker

New Products

Secret Chord Analogue Vinyl Record Tracker tracks stylus wear, record cleaning, cartridge hours, and vinyl playback history for serious collectors.

2026 Volumio Primo V3 Music Streamer with Tablet 2026 Volumio Primo V3 Music Streamer with Tablet

Music Streamers

Volumio’s third-generation Primo V3 adds a faster processing platform, ESS ES9039Q2M DAC, NOS mode, eight DAC filters, selectable RCA and XLR output levels, and...

Shanling M0 Pura Portable Music Player in-hand Shanling M0 Pura Portable Music Player in-hand

DAPs

Shanling M0 Pura packs hi-res playback, dual DACs, microSD storage, Bluetooth, and USB DAC support into a tiny $129 DAP.

Final DX10000 CL Collectors Edition Headphones Final DX10000 CL Collectors Edition Headphones

New Products

Can Final’s $8,499 DX10000 CL justify its True Diamond driver and closed-back flagship design, or is the price the real headline?

Nothing Ear (3a) Wireless Earbuds Colors Nothing Ear (3a) Wireless Earbuds Colors

New Products

Nothing’s latest $99 wireless earbuds add Audio Snapshot, call recording, LDAC, 45 dB ANC, and up to 42 hours of battery life, giving the...

You May Also Like

A/V Furniture & Accessories

Frustrated by the unreliability of cheap cables and the empty promises of expensive ones, the founder of CalebRated just launched his own value-oriented line...

Reviews

Samsung's flagship soundbar system is surprisingly affordable for what it offers, and it also has a leg up on the competition in its immersive...

Blu-ray, DVD & 4K Media Players

Kaleidescape's new media player supports 8K resolution, but what it's doing with 4K content has us more intrigued.

Articles

America turns 250 this Fourth of July. These 25 films confront the country’s myths, race, class, war, ambition, greed, and capacity for reinvention far...

News

It's that time of the year again. Time for a Battle Royale of the year's top TVs.

Audio Cables

What we know so far about the new HDMI 2.2 specifications and whether they really matter.

New Products

Focal has upped the ante with the flagship Bathys MG wireless headphones and that includes a $600 increase in price over the base model.

Floorstanding Speakers

The company’s latest Diamond D5 version of the 800 series speakers feature a host of new technologies and design refinements to cement the speaker’s...

Advertisement

ecoustics is a hi-fi and music magazine offering product reviews, podcasts, news and advice for aspiring audiophiles, home theater enthusiasts and headphone hipsters. Read more

Copyright © 1999-2026 ecoustics | Disclaimer: We may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.