Prepared by an editor who compares PS5 display behavior, HDMI input support, and desk setup friction across current retail monitors.

Quick Picks

The shortlist below stays focused on what changes the PS5 experience first: screen size, console ceiling, and how much the monitor asks from your desk.

Model Screen / resolution Refresh claim PS5 output fit Useful feature Main trade-off
LG 27GP850-B 27-inch, 2560 x 1440 165Hz 1440p / 120Hz Easy desk fit, strong all-around speed No HDMI 2.1, basic HDR
Gigabyte M27Q X 27-inch, 2560 x 1440 240Hz 1440p / 120Hz KVM for shared PS5 and PC setups 240Hz headroom goes unused on PS5-only setups
Samsung Odyssey G50A LS27AG502NNXZA 27-inch, 2560 x 1440 165Hz 1440p / 120Hz Contrast-forward presentation Less universal than the cleaner IPS-style alternatives
ASUS TUF Gaming VG27AQL1A 27-inch, 2560 x 1440 170Hz 1440p / 120Hz Motion tuning for long solo sessions More about feel than effortless simplicity
LG 48GQ900-B.AUS 48-inch, 3840 x 2160 138Hz claim 4K / 120Hz HDMI 2.1, OLED scale Big space demand and more care

Selection Criteria

The list favors monitors that avoid everyday annoyances first. That means 27-inch 1440p screens outrank spec-sheet heroes when they keep setup ordinary and still hit PS5’s 120Hz ceiling cleanly.

Refresh numbers above 120Hz matter only when a PC joins the setup. PS5 ignores DisplayPort, so HDMI support matters more than bragging rights on the box. HDR branding got less weight because real ownership depends on panel behavior, stand quality, and how much menu work the monitor demands after the box comes off the table.

1. LG 27GP850-B: Best Overall

The LG 27GP850-B is the cleanest all-around PS5 pick because 27-inch 1440p keeps the picture sharp without making the desk feel crowded. It gives you enough speed for fast motion and enough resolution for crisp HUDs, menus, and text without asking for a calibration project.

Best for: competitive PS5 players, mixed PS5 and PC desks, and anyone who wants a monitor that disappears into the setup. The catch is simple, it is not a 4K screen and it does not chase cinematic contrast. If your room sits farther back or you want a display that acts like a small TV, the LG 48GQ900-B.AUS is the bigger play.

This is the monitor that saves time later. It does not force a new furniture plan, and that matters more than a few extra refresh frames that PS5 never reaches.

2. Gigabyte M27Q X: Best Value Pick

The Gigabyte M27Q X stands out because it brings 240Hz headroom and KVM utility into the same 27-inch, 1440p package. That KVM angle matters when a laptop or desktop shares the desk with the console, because one screen handles more switching without turning the area into a cable nest.

Best for: value shoppers who run PS5 plus another device. The catch is that 240Hz does nothing for PS5 alone, so pure console buyers pay for extra ceiling they never use. If the setup stays console-only, the LG 27GP850-B is easier to justify and easier to own.

This is the smarter buy when the monitor serves a desk, not just a console. The moment a second source enters the picture, the M27Q X starts earning its keep.

3. Samsung Odyssey G50A LS27AG502NNXZA: Best Specialized Pick

The Samsung Odyssey G50A LS27AG502NNXZA fits players who want a more contrast-heavy, punchier console picture on a normal 27-inch desk. It suits darker rooms and story-driven games where the image should feel less flat and more atmospheric.

Best for: buyers who want a specialized look instead of a neutral all-rounder. The catch is that this kind of panel tuning asks more from room lighting and viewing angle discipline than the cleaner, brighter alternatives. It also gives up some universal appeal if you want a monitor that handles everything from fast shooters to office work with zero fuss.

This model makes sense when image character matters more than the simplest ownership path. If you want the safest all-purpose choice, the LG 27GP850-B stays ahead.

4. ASUS TUF Gaming VG27AQL1A: Best Runner-Up Pick

The ASUS TUF Gaming VG27AQL1A earns its spot with motion tuning and a more immersive 27-inch presentation that suits racing games and long solo sessions. It leans into the feeling of being wrapped in the game rather than chasing the cleanest bare-bones desk setup.

Best for: players who spend more time in single-player campaigns, racers, and cinematic action titles. The catch is that its strengths sit in the experience, not the lowest-friction ownership. If you want the easiest flat-out utility pick, the LG 27GP850-B handles that job with fewer questions.

This is the monitor for someone who values session feel over pure convenience. It gives the action more personality, but it does not beat the simpler all-rounder on day-to-day ease.

5. LG 48GQ900-B.AUS: Best Premium Pick

The LG 48GQ900-B.AUS is the premium choice because 48-inch 4K plus HDMI 2.1 turns PS5 into a centerpiece instead of a side display. It gives open-world games and cinematic titles the scale that smaller monitors leave behind.

Best for: couch-style play, deep desks, and buyers who want the biggest visual statement in this group. The catch is the real one, physical size and upkeep. This screen needs room, cleaner cable routing, and more care around static HUDs because OLED ownership asks more than the IPS models above.

That trade-off is worth it only when you want the room to orbit the screen. If your desk is ordinary, the 27-inch LG 27GP850-B is far easier to live with every day.

Who Should Look Elsewhere

Skip this roundup if the screen sits across the room, if you want movie-night HDR first, or if your desk is too shallow for a large panel to sit comfortably. A monitor works best when the console and the seat sit close enough for the screen to stay readable without turning head movement into work.

Also skip the high-refresh chase if PS5 is the only source. A 240Hz badge sounds bigger than it is here, because the console stops at 120Hz. The value disappears the moment the screen never sees another device.

The Hidden Trade-Off

The real choice is not 1440p versus 4K. It is simplicity versus spectacle. The 27-inch models keep the desk normal, switch on with less drama, and fit more rooms without a furniture rethink.

Most guides push the highest refresh number. That is wrong for PS5 because the console caps at 120Hz. Extra refresh matters only when a PC joins the setup, which is why the Gigabyte M27Q X makes more sense for mixed use than for console-only play.

The 48-inch LG 48GQ900-B.AUS gives up that simplicity and buys scale instead. That is the right trade only when the room, seat distance, and cable management all cooperate.

What Matters Most for Best Monitors for PS5 in 2026

The best PS5 monitor gets out of the way. It starts cleanly, stays readable, and does not force a new habit around every session. Resolution and size come before headline refresh, because a monitor that feels easy to own gets used more and argued with less.

Best-fit scenario: You sit at a desk, want sharp HUD text, and care more about zero hassle than the loudest spec sheet. That points straight to the LG 27GP850-B.

A simple decision order keeps the buy sane:

  • Measure desk depth first.
  • Decide whether PS5 is the only source.
  • Choose 27-inch 1440p for desk-first play.
  • Choose 48-inch 4K only if the screen sits at real viewing distance.
  • Treat HDMI 2.1 as a requirement for 4K/120, not as a universal upgrade.
  • Ignore refresh numbers above 120Hz unless another device shares the monitor.

That last point matters more than most shoppers realize. A monitor with DisplayPort-heavy marketing still needs HDMI to matter here, and PS5 never rewards spec inflation that lives outside the console’s output ceiling.

What Changes Over Time

The first week is about image quality. The first year is about whether the monitor stays easy to live with. Data past year 3 is thin, so the honest focus stays on current ownership burden, not long-haul failure rates.

The 27-inch IPS-style picks age the easiest because they keep the desk simple and stay broad on the resale market. The Gigabyte M27Q X holds extra value only if the KVM and higher refresh serve another device. If PS5 remains the only source, those extras turn into dead weight.

OLED asks for more discipline than the other picks, especially when menus, HUDs, and static interface elements sit on screen for long sessions. The LG 48GQ900-B.AUS pays off when you want that scale, but it does not disappear into the room the way the 27-inch models do.

How It Fails

The first failure point is buying for the wrong ceiling. A 240Hz monitor does not make PS5 faster than 120Hz, and that mistake burns budget without changing the console experience.

The second failure point is size. A 48-inch screen on a shallow desk turns premium into awkward. The display ends up too close, cable routing gets messy, and the setup starts owning the room.

The third failure point is believing every HDR label. A badge on the box does not replace panel limits or weak brightness behavior. The screen still needs the right panel type and the right living space to look right.

The fourth failure point is source switching. A monitor with KVM or lots of input options helps only when a second device actually shows up. Otherwise, the extra menu steps add friction instead of removing it.

What We Didn’t Pick (and Why)

Dell G2724D stayed off the list because it is a strong baseline but does not bring the same hybrid-desk utility as the Gigabyte M27Q X. Alienware AW2724DM brings polish, but the value slips once the LG 27GP850-B enters the comparison.

MSI MAG 274QRF-QD E2 and Acer Nitro XV272U both sit in the crowded 27-inch 1440p lane, but neither brings a clearer ownership advantage than the picks above. Color tuning alone does not solve PS5 setup friction.

A TV like the LG C3 or Samsung S90C wins the living-room game, but that is a different decision. Those models own couch distance and movie-night scale, not the low-fuss monitor-first setup this roundup is built around.

How to Pick the Right Fit

Desk-first PS5

Pick the LG 27GP850-B. It gives the cleanest balance of sharpness, speed, and ordinary setup. If you want the simplest answer, stop here.

PS5 plus another device

Pick the Gigabyte M27Q X. KVM and 240Hz matter when a laptop or desktop shares the desk. If the console is the only source, the extra headroom loses its point.

Dark-room or atmosphere-first play

Pick the Samsung Odyssey G50A LS27AG502NNXZA. It suits players who want a more specialized image character and fewer all-purpose compromises.

Solo games and racing

Pick the ASUS TUF Gaming VG27AQL1A. It leans into immersion and motion tuning, which fits long campaigns and racing more than strict competitive play.

Big-screen centerpiece

Pick the LG 48GQ900-B.AUS. It is the premium route for buyers who want PS5 to feel bigger and more dramatic, and who accept the desk and care requirements that come with it.

A quick checklist makes the decision sharper:

  • Desk depth under 30 inches points to 27-inch models.
  • One source points to LG 27GP850-B.
  • Two sources point to Gigabyte M27Q X.
  • Bigger room and deeper seat point to LG 48GQ900-B.AUS.
  • Want the least maintenance? Stay with the 27-inch IPS-style picks.
  • Want spectacle first? Accept the OLED trade-off and size up.

Editor’s Final Word

LG 27GP850-B is the one to buy. It gives the best mix of PS5-ready sharpness, everyday ease, and low setup friction without pushing you into a bigger or fussier screen than the room needs.

The Gigabyte M27Q X is the smart runner-up for mixed PS5 and PC desks. The LG 48GQ900-B.AUS is the premium move when the room is ready for it, but it asks for more space and more care than most buyers want.

FAQ

Is 1440p enough for PS5 on a monitor?

Yes. 1440p hits the sweet spot for desk gaming because it keeps HUDs and text sharp without forcing the scale and desk depth that 4K often demands at close range.

Do I need HDMI 2.1 for PS5?

No, not for a 27-inch 1440p monitor. HDMI 2.1 matters when you want 4K/120, which is where the LG 48GQ900-B.AUS lives. For the other picks, HDMI 2.0 does the job.

Is 240Hz worth it for PS5?

No. PS5 tops out at 120Hz, so 240Hz only matters when a PC or laptop shares the monitor. That is why the Gigabyte M27Q X fits hybrid desks better than console-only setups.

Should I buy a 27-inch or 48-inch monitor for PS5?

Buy 27-inch for a normal desk and 48-inch only if you sit far enough back for the screen to feel like a centerpiece. The LG 27GP850-B suits most desks. The LG 48GQ900-B.AUS suits roomier setups.

Is OLED worth the extra upkeep for PS5?

Yes if you want the biggest visual punch and accept more care around static HUDs and long menu sessions. No if you want the easiest ownership path, because the IPS-style picks ask for less attention.

Which pick is easiest to live with every day?

The LG 27GP850-B. It gives the cleanest mix of size, speed, and setup simplicity, which is exactly what most PS5 monitor buyers want after the box is open.