Panasonic Panasonic TH-86EQ2W 85.6" 4K Digital Signage Review
The Panasonic TH-86EQ2W is a reliable digital signage workhorse with a great picture, but it's a terrible choice for a home theater. Here's who should actually buy it.
The 30-Second Version
This Panasonic is a reliable, bright billboard for your office lobby, not a TV for your living room. Buy it if you need a display that works all day, skip it if you want to watch movies.
Overview
This Panasonic TH-86EQ2W is a workhorse, not a showhorse. The one thing you need to know is that it's built to be on for 18 hours a day, seven days a week, in a conference room or lobby, and it will do that job without complaint. It's a massive 85.6-inch 4K panel with a picture quality score that lands in the top tier of our database. But everything else about it screams 'commercial signage,' not 'home theater.' It's a tool, not an entertainment device.
Performance
The picture quality is genuinely impressive, ranking among the best on the market for this category. The 500-nit brightness and IPS panel deliver a clear, consistent image that's easy to see from any angle in a bright room. That's the surprise. The disappointment is everything else. The 8ms response time and 60Hz refresh rate are middle of the pack, the audio is underwhelming, and it has no smart features or HDR support. It's a one-trick pony, but that one trick is strong.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Picture quality is a standout, with excellent brightness and color. 94th
- Built for brutal commercial duty—18/7 operation means it won't quit. 79th
- Supports portrait and landscape mounting for flexible installation.
- The 85.6-inch size at 4K resolution is perfect for large room presentations.
Cons
- Audio is a weak spot. The 20W speakers are barely adequate. 12th
- No smart features or HDR support. You'll need external sources for everything. 18th
- It's a literal heavyweight at over 50kg, so mounting is a serious project. 20th
- Gaming performance is about average, but that's not really its job anyway. 27th
Specifications
Full Specifications
Display
| Size | 85.6" |
| Resolution | 3840 (4K UHD) |
| Panel Type | IPS |
| Aspect Ratio | 16:9 |
Picture Quality
| Brightness | 500 nits |
| Contrast Ratio | 1200:1 |
| Color Gamut | 1.07 Billion Colors (8-Bit+FRC) |
HDR
| Dolby Vision | No |
| HDR10+ | No |
| HLG | No |
Gaming
| Refresh Rate | 60 Hz |
| Response Time | 8 |
Audio
| Wattage | 20 |
| Dolby Atmos | No |
Connectivity
| HDMI Ports | 3 |
| USB Ports | 1 |
| Ethernet | Yes |
| VESA Mount | 600x400 |
Power & Size
| Weight | 50.7 kg / 111.8 lbs |
Value & Pricing
Prices swing wildly from $6470 to $8879 across vendors. That's a $2409 spread, so shop hard. If you can snag it near the low end, it's a solid value for a reliable commercial display. At the high end, you're paying a premium for the Panasonic name and durability that competing big-screen TVs might not offer.
vs Competition
For a similar size, the Sony BRAVIA 5 98" is a smarter, brighter home theater TV, but it's not built for 18/7 duty. The LG OLED evo G5 will deliver vastly better contrast and HDR for a stunning image, but it's a different technology aimed at consumers. If your need is pure, reliable signage in a bright room, this Panasonic has a purpose. If you want a flashy TV for a boardroom that also does Netflix, look at the Sony or LG.
Common Questions
Q: Can I use this as a giant TV for my home?
You could, but you'd be disappointed. It has no smart features, weak speakers, and no HDR. You'd need to plug in an external box for everything, and the picture is tuned for brightness, not cinematic contrast. Get a proper big-screen TV instead.
Q: What does '18/7 operation' mean?
It's designed to be powered on for 18 hours a day, 7 days a week, without wearing out. Typical consumer TVs aren't built for that kind of constant use. This is for airports, classrooms, or offices where the screen is always on.
Q: Is it good for gaming?
It's about average. The 60Hz refresh and 8ms response time are fine for casual gaming, but it's not a gaming monitor. If gaming is your primary use, there are much better (and cheaper) large-format displays out there.
Who Should Skip This
If you're looking for a stunning home theater TV with smart apps, great sound, and HDR movies, this isn't it. Go get an LG OLED or a Sony BRAVIA instead. This panel is for putting a PowerPoint slide on a wall for 12 hours straight.
Verdict
We recommend this only if your use case is exactly what it's designed for: a high-brightness, always-on digital signage display in a corporate or education setting. It's overkill and underwhelming for a home, and it's not the best choice for a media-heavy conference room. But for running schedules, announcements, or simple presentations in a lobby all day long, it's a dependable pick.