Panasonic W70 Series 55W70BP 55"

The 4K Studio Color Engine with MEMC and HDR10+ support ensures smooth, high-contrast images on a 55-inch Direct LED panel, pairing HDMI 2.1 with G-Sync compatibility. Built-in Fire TV with Alexa voice control and AirPlay 2 turns it into a competent smart home hub, backed by a frameless design and four HDMI ports. This set suits budget-conscious buyers prioritizing integrated streaming and home control alongside casual gaming features like G-Sync and Auto Low Latency Mode.

Screen 55
Resolution 4K
Panel LED
Refresh 60 Hz
hdr HDR10+, HDR10, HLG
smart platform Fire TV
dolby vision false
dolby atmos false
Panasonic W70 Series 55W70BP 55" tv
56 Totaalscore
Ook beschikbaar in:

Over deze TV

The 4K Studio Color Engine with MEMC and HDR10+ support ensures smooth, high-contrast images on a 55-inch Direct LED panel, pairing HDMI 2.1 with G-Sync compatibility. Built-in Fire TV with Alexa voice control and AirPlay 2 turns it into a competent smart home hub, backed by a frameless design and four HDMI ports. This set suits budget-conscious buyers prioritizing integrated streaming and home control alongside casual gaming features like G-Sync and Auto Low Latency Mode.

  • Screen size 55
  • Resolution 4K
  • Panel type LED
  • Refresh rate 60
  • HDR HDR10+, HDR10, HLG
  • Smart platform Fire TV
  • HDMI version 2.1

The 30-Second Version

If you can snag the 55W70BP for around $300, it's a perfectly acceptable cheap 4K TV. At any other price, it's just a mediocre panel with terrible sound.

Overview

The Panasonic W70 Series 55W70BP is a confusing TV, not because of what it does, but because of how wildly its price swings from one store to the next. At around $298, it's a perfectly reasonable 4K TV with built-in Fire TV and surprisingly competent HDR. At $939, it's one of the worst values we've ever seen. The one thing you need to know is that this set is only worth your money if you score the absolute lowest street price. Otherwise, there are much better options for the same cash.

Performance

We were genuinely surprised by the HDR support here. HDR10+ and HLG on a budget panel isn't something you see every day, and our database pegs it in the top 84th percentile for HDR features in this class. That said, the rest of the picture quality is a letdown. The Direct LED backlight without local dimming means blacks are more gray than deep, and peak brightness is mediocre. MEMC motion smoothing is fine for sports, but it introduces that soap opera effect if you're not careful. And that 20W audio system? It's exactly as bad as people say—thin, hollow, and borderline useless for movies. Plan on a soundbar.

Performance Percentiles

Hdr 84
Audio 40.4
Smart 50.3
Gaming 64.6
Display 23.2
Connectivity 79.6
Social Proof 66.2
Picture Quality 36.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • HDR10+ and HLG support is rare at this price—when the price is low. 84th
  • Four HDMI ports beats many budget TVs. 80th
  • Fire TV built-in means no extra dongle or clutter. 66th
  • If you find it around $298, it's practically disposable.

Cons

  • Picture quality is mediocre; contrast and brightness are weak. 23th
  • Audio is hushed and tinny—budget a soundbar.
  • 60Hz panel is a dead end for smooth gaming, despite the HDMI 2.1 label.
  • Price gouging is real—some retailers list it near $1,000.

The Word on the Street

4.0/5 (1365 reviews)
👎 A lot of owners complain the built-in speakers sound hollow and distort easily.
🤔 Fire TV is handy but the homescreen ads grate on people after a while.
👍 Folks who paid rock-bottom prices call it a steal and a no-brainer for a secondary room.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

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

Picture Quality

Motion Tech MEMC
Processor 4K Studio Color Engine

HDR

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

Gaming

Refresh Rate 60 Hz
VRR G-Sync Compatible
ALLM Yes
Game Mode Yes

Smart TV

Platform Fire TV
Voice Assistant Alexa
Screen Mirroring AirPlay 2

Audio

Speaker Config 2
Wattage 20
Dolby Atmos No
Surround Sound Surround Sound
eARC No

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 4
HDMI Version 2.1
USB Ports 2
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi
Bluetooth Bluetooth
Ethernet Yes
Optical Audio No
VESA Mount 300mm x 300mm

Power & Size

Energy Star No
Annual Energy 207
Weight 10.5 kg / 23.2 lbs

Value & Pricing

The price spread on this model is insane, from $298 to $939 across vendors. If you find it under $350, it's a solid casual TV for a bedroom or kitchen. At $500 or more, you're entering territory where a Hisense U7 or TCL QM7K absolutely demolishes it in picture and build quality. The $298 deal makes this a maybe; everything else makes it a hard pass.

vs Competition

Stacked against the TCL QM7K or Hisense U7, the Panasonic gets outclassed in every picture metric that matters—brightness, contrast, local dimming, refresh rate. Those sets also cost more, but their price hikes are justified. The Sony BRAVIA 5 offers superior processing and color accuracy for a bit more money. This Panasonic only makes sense if you truly cannot spend a dime over $300. In that case, it's this or a used screen, and the Panasonic wins.

Spec Panasonic W70 Series 55W70BP 55" Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 Hisense U8QG Mini-LED 100" Class U8 Series MiniLED LG C5 Series OLED55C5PUA Samsung QN85D QN85D TCL QM8K Series 75QM8K
Screen Size 55 85 100 55 75 75
Resolution 4K 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 4K
Panel Type LED QLED Mini-LED QLED OLED Neo QLED MiniLED
Refresh Rate 60 120 165 144 120 144
Hdr HDR10+, HDR10, HLG HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG), Dolby Vision Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10 HDR10, HDR10+, HLG Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+, HLG
Smart Platform Fire TV Google TV Google TV webOS Tizen Google TV
Dolby Vision false true true true false 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
Panasonic W70 Series 55W70BP 55" 8440.450.364.623.279.666.236.9
Sony BRAVIA 9 K85XR90 Compare 76.197.192.778.892.89498.179.7
Hisense U8QG Mini-LED 100" Class U8 Series MiniLED Compare 98.698.39695.4977689.399.4
LG C5 Series OLED55C5PUA Compare 8699.965.799.989.392.698.188.5
Samsung QN85D QN85D Compare 8489.470.378.890.989.898.179.7
TCL QM8K Series 75QM8K Compare 99.593.991.393.835.89498.199.7

Common Questions

Q: Is the HDMI 2.1 port full bandwidth?

Nope. This is a 60Hz panel, so the 2.1 label is mostly about eARC for soundbars and maybe VRR at 60Hz. Don't expect 4K120 gaming here.

Q: Can I use this for gaming?

Casually, sure. ALLM and G-Sync Compatible work at 60Hz, so input lag is okay. But competitive gamers will hate the 60fps cap. A 120Hz TCL will run circles around it.

Q: How intrusive are the Fire TV ads?

Pretty intrusive. You'll see sponsored rows on the home screen. It's not a dealbreaker at a low price, but plenty of buyers find it annoying enough to plug in a Roku instead.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a bright, punchy HDR picture, smooth 120Hz gaming, or any kind of built-in audio that doesn't sound like a laptop speaker, skip this immediately. The TCL QM7K or Hisense U7 are the real budget champs. This Panasonic is only for the absolute tightest budgets where $300 is the hard ceiling, and even then you should know what you're giving up.

Verdict

Only buy the 55W70BP if you see it for $350 or less from a reputable seller. At that price, it's an acceptable, no-frills 4K TV with a decent smart platform. Any higher, and you're paying a premium for a panel that's out of its depth. The TCL QM7K is our go-to budget hero for anyone with even a little more wiggle room.

Usage Scores

Overall (55.6)Budget (56)Gaming (49.6)Movies (36.3)Sports (44.6)Outdoor (33.3)Portable (37)Corporate (46.3)Streaming (53)Smart Home (53)

Vergelijkbare producten