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LG UltraFine 6K (32U990A) TB5 Display: Pre-Orders Open September 30

Pre-orders for LG's new UltraFine evo 6K display (model 32U990A) with Thunderbolt 5 support will begin on September 30, according to a major U.S. retailer listing.

LG UltraFine 6K Display TB5
LG first revealed the 32-inch display at CES 2025 in January, teasing its status as the first monitor to support Thunderbolt 5. At the time, LG only provided high-level specs, but left pricing, availability, and full technical details unconfirmed. We can now fill in some of those details.

The 32U990A features a 6,144 x 3,456 resolution Nano IPS Black panel with 224 pixels per inch. For comparison, the 32-inch Retina 6K display of Apple's Pro Display XDR outputs over 6,016 x 3,384 pixels, for a pixel density of 218 pixels per inch.

LG claims its display covers 99.5% of Adobe RGB and 98% of DCI-P3 color spaces. The Nano IPS Black technology also enables a 2,000:1 contrast ratio, which is double that of standard IPS panels. What may come as a disappointment to some is that the display has a 60Hz refresh rate.

Peak brightness reaches ~600 nits in HDR mode based on the VESA DisplayHDR 600 certification, while SDR brightness sits at 450 nits. In contrast, Apple's Pro Display XDR achieves 1,000 nits of sustained full-screen brightness and peaks at 1,600 nits (for HDR content), far exceeding the LG's 600 nit maximum.

The display's Thunderbolt 5 connectivity offers bandwidth up to 120Gbp/s in one direction, 80Gb/s bi-directional, and 96W power delivery. It's also capable of daisy-chaining another 6K display and includes DisplayPort 2.1 bandwidth support. There are five USB-C ports in total, alongside DisplayPort and HDMI inputs.

In terms of UltraFine displays past, perhaps the most obvious change is the XDR-esque design. The 32U990A adopts an almost borderless four-sided design with a minimalist L-shaped stand. The display offers full ergonomic adjustments including tilt, pivot, height adjustment, and 90-degree rotation in either direction for portrait mode. LG has also included TÜV Rheinland Eye Comfort certification for reduced blue light emission.

A listing on B&H's online store puts the price of the LG 32U990A at $1,999.99. For comparison, Apple's Pro Display XDR starts from $4,999 (not including Apple's Pro Stand, which adds another $999). The B&H listing also says preorders will begin on Tuesday, September 30 at 12:00 a.m. Eastern Time.

Now, LG has not independently confirmed this September date for the U.S. market, but the company's Canadian website says will preorders begin on October 10, suggesting regional variability. We've contacted LG for clarification and will update this article if we hear back.

Tags: LG, UltraFine

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Top Rated Comments

turbineseaplane Avatar
9 months ago

Unfortunate that it's capped at 60 Hz. Also, judging from their product page, it looks very cheap and plasticky.
Can you please point me to the 6K 120HZ displays?
Score: 21 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
9 months ago

If people want a reference monitor
Not.
Everyone.
Needs.
Or.
Wants.
That.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
digimc Avatar
9 months ago
This monitor looks good on paper, but I would stay as far away from LG as is humanly possible. I have mostly purchased my monitors from LG and the quality has evaporated over the last few years, while the price continues to climb.

I have had nothing but issues with their 45" OLED gaming monitor (45GX950A) has been nothing short of a disaster. My first had tinny white dots down the left side. When I contacted LG for a replacement I was told they do not replace monitors and I would have to ship it to one of their repair centers and that it would take 6-9 weeks for it to be fixed. What a complete joke.

My Gallery series LG OLED TV G3 cannot even produce a steady bluetooth signal so that I can listen to movies late at night without disturbing other people in the house. Nope way to complex a technology for LG to be able to figure out. Oddly when I watch my much older and smaller Sony LED TV the bluetooth signal is perfectly strong and nice and steady and has no drop outs.

To anyone thinking of dropping their hard earned money on this thing, I would get a rabbits foot first, and rub it plenty before you place your order, because unless you get lucky and get a perfect monitor, good luck dealing with LG's customer service people.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Enlightened Doggo Avatar
9 months ago
Hum, far too dim to setup on the coffee shop patio
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
9 months ago

That's not how HDR works though.
Some of us just want a good looking, physically large, 6k display, was my main point.

One with multiple inputs and a hub and just "table stakes flexibility".
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
9 months ago

If people want a reference monitor, they need to be able to at least match that.
Or (at least) buy one of those wonderful TVs you mentioned... because the other thing they wouldn't need is 6k.


Wait. 2000$ for a single backlit LCD monitor with 600nit peak brightness and 60hz in 2025?
So, one of the cheaper 6k displays on the market then?


Unfortunate that it's capped at 60 Hz.
So your GPU can do smooth 6k at 120Hz? A 6k display already has more than twice as many pixels to shift than a 4k display, going from 60Hz to 120Hz will double that again. 120Hz a huge bandwidth/GPU power tradeoff to make your windows drag around slightly more smoothly.

This is a general-purpose display with masses of "real estate" and a MacOS-friendly better-than-retina ~220ppi definition.

It's not a reference display for professional video producers - if that's what you need, buy a 4k UHD or 8k reference display (or an OLED TV if you are on a budget).

It's not a gaming display - if you want 120Hz then 4k is a better compromise between PPI and Hz.

Is it any good? I don't know - but spec-wise it's a tool for a particular job.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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