LG UltraFine 27" Review

The LG UltraFine 27" 4K monitor isn't for gamers, but its fantastic adjustable stand and sharp IPS panel make it a near-perfect daily driver for office and creative work.

Screen Size 27
Resolution 3840 x 2160
Panel Type IPS
Refresh Rate 60
Response Time Ms 5
LG UltraFine 27" monitor
54.3 Puntuación global

The 30-Second Version

The LG UltraFine 27U730A-B is a fantastic 4K productivity monitor that prioritizes comfort and image quality over gaming speed. Its standout feature is the superb fully adjustable stand. At around $573, it's a great value for professionals and office users who want a sharp, color-accurate screen they can use all day without strain. Gamers and HDR enthusiasts should look elsewhere.

Overview

The LG UltraFine 27U730A-B is a bit of a sleeper hit. It doesn't scream 'gaming' or 'pro creator,' but it quietly nails the fundamentals for a huge swath of people who just want a really good, no-nonsense 4K screen for work. Think of it as the reliable sedan of monitors—not the flashiest, but it gets you where you need to go comfortably and efficiently every single day.

This monitor is squarely for the professional, creative, and office user, which our scoring backs up. It scores a 67.9 for professional use, a 63.7 for creative work, and a 59.1 for office tasks. That tells you it's a balanced, versatile workhorse. The 27-inch 4K IPS panel is the star here, offering sharp text and plenty of screen real estate for spreadsheets, documents, and design apps without needing to scale.

What makes it interesting is how it focuses its budget. Instead of chasing high refresh rates or extreme HDR, LG put the money into a great panel with solid color accuracy (90% DCI-P3) and, crucially, exceptional ergonomics. It's a monitor built to be used all day, every day, without giving you neck strain or forcing you to buy a separate stand.

Performance

Let's be clear: this isn't a performance monitor in the gaming sense. With a 60Hz refresh rate and a 5ms response time, it lands in the 21st percentile for performance in our database. That means it's fine for casual gaming or video, but competitive gamers and high-frame-rate enthusiasts should look elsewhere. The real performance story here is in the display quality and ergonomics.

The panel itself is excellent for its class. That 90% DCI-P3 color gamut coverage puts it in the 88th percentile for color, meaning it's well-suited for photo editing, video work, and any task where color matters. The 300-nit brightness is standard for this price range—it's bright enough for a well-lit office but won't blow you away in a sun-drenched room. Where this monitor truly shines is in its ergonomic stand, which scores in the 93rd percentile. Full height, tilt, swivel, and pivot adjustment is a luxury you don't always get at this price, and it makes a massive difference in long-term comfort.

Performance Percentiles

Color 84.3
Portability 60.6
Display 90.5
Feature 30.1
Ergonomic 91.9
Performance 22.5
Connectivity 74.3
Social Proof 27

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Outstanding ergonomic stand with full height, tilt, swivel, and pivot adjustment, placing it in the 93rd percentile for comfort. 92th
  • Excellent 4K IPS panel with 90% DCI-P3 color coverage (88th percentile), great for creative work and sharp text. 91th
  • Clean, versatile connectivity with USB-C, DisplayPort, and two HDMI ports, covering most modern and legacy devices. 84th
  • Includes a 100x100 VESA mount, giving you the freedom to use your own arm or wall mount if desired. 74th
  • Built-in 2x 5W speakers provide decent audio for calls or casual media, saving desk space.

Cons

  • 60Hz refresh rate is standard but unremarkable, placing it in the bottom 21st percentile for performance metrics. 23th
  • 300-nit brightness is adequate but not exceptional; it may struggle in very bright environments. 27th
  • Lacks advanced gaming features like Adaptive Sync (FreeSync/G-Sync), high refresh rates, or extreme contrast. 30th
  • The 'feature' score is low (31st percentile), meaning it doesn't have flashy extras like a KVM switch, USB hub, or RGB lighting.
  • Not portable in the slightest, scoring a 22.5/100 there—this is a desk anchor, not a travel companion.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 27"
Resolution 3840 (4K UHD)
Panel Type IPS
Aspect Ratio 16:9

Performance

Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Response Time 5

Color & HDR

Brightness 300 nits
Color Gamut DCI-P3 90%

Connectivity

DisplayPort 1
Speakers Yes

Ergonomics

Height Adjustable Yes
Tilt Yes
Swivel Yes
Pivot Yes

Value & Pricing

At a current street price around $573, the LG UltraFine 27U730A-B sits in a sweet spot. You're paying for a high-quality 4K IPS panel and a premium ergonomic stand, not for gaming bells and whistles. Compared to other 27-inch 4K monitors, you often have to choose: a good panel on a wobbly, fixed stand, or a decent panel with a good stand. This one gives you both without a huge price jump.

The value proposition is clear: if your priorities are screen clarity, color accuracy for non-critical work, and all-day comfort, this monitor delivers where it counts. You could spend less on a 4K screen with a terrible stand, but then you'd likely end up spending another $100+ on a monitor arm. Here, it's all included and well-integrated.

Price History

300 US$ 400 US$ 500 US$ 600 US$ 9 mar27 abr 372 US$

vs Competition

Compared directly to something like the Dell UltraSharp 27" 4K, you're looking at a trade-off. The Dell often commands a premium for its legendary color calibration and warranty, but you might get a less adjustable stand at a similar price point. The LG gives you the full ergonomic suite out of the box, which is a big win for value.

Then there are the gaming monitors like the MSI or ASUS ROG competitors listed. Those are completely different beasts. They'll smash this LG in refresh rate (240Hz, OLED) and response time, but they often cost significantly more, and their color accuracy for creative work can be a secondary concern. They're also larger (32"+). It's an apples-to-oranges comparison: the LG is for productivity and comfort; those are for immersive, fast-paced visuals. The Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 is in another universe entirely—it's an ultra-wide behemoth for a different use case and budget.

Spec LG UltraFine 27" MSI MAG MSI MAG 321CUP QD-OLED 31.5" 4K HDR 165 Hz Curved ASUS ROG Swift ASUS ROG Swift 32" 4K OLED Gaming Monitor PG32UCDP Samsung Odyssey Samsung Odyssey G95C 49" Dual 1440p HDR 240 Hz Apple Studio Display Apple - Studio Display - Standard glass - BenQ Mobiuz BenQ MOBIUZ EX271U 27" 4K HDR 165 Hz Gaming
Screen Size 27 32 32 49 27 27
Resolution 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 5120 x 1440 5120 x 2880 3840 x 2160
Panel Type IPS OLED OLED VA IPS IPS
Refresh Rate 60 165 240 240 60 165
Response Time Ms 5 0 - 1 - 1
Adaptive Sync - G-Sync Compatible G-Sync Compatible FreeSync Premium Pro - FreeSync Premium
Hdr - HDR400 HDR10 HDR10+ HDR10
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product ColorCompactDisplayFeatureErgonomicPerformanceConnectivitySocial Proof
LG UltraFine 27" 84.360.690.530.191.922.574.327
MSI MAG 321cup Qd-oled 31.5" Compare 998.298.797.296.599.889.499.3
ASUS ROG Swift 32" Compare 99.972.498.782.487.881.396.797.3
Samsung Odyssey G95C 49" Dual Compare 97.250.487.682.487.896.398.194.8
Apple Studio Display Studio Display Standard glass Tilt-adjustable stand Compare 96.780.499.499.672.322.59698.1
BenQ Mobiuz EX271U 27" Compare 9288.590.582.496.592.191.874

Common Questions

Q: Is 300 nits bright enough for a well-lit room?

Yes, 300 nits is the standard brightness for monitors in this class and is sufficient for most office and home environments with indirect lighting. It places the monitor solidly in the mainstream. However, if you have a window directly behind you or work in a very bright space, you might want to look for a model with 400 nits or higher for more comfortable viewing.

Q: What does 1.07 billion colors (10-bit color depth) actually mean for me?

A 10-bit panel (which 1.07 billion colors represents) can display many more shades of color than a standard 8-bit panel. This means smoother gradients, especially in areas like skies, shadows, and skin tones, with less visible banding or stepping between colors. For photo editing, video work, or even just enjoying high-quality media, it's a noticeable step up in image quality and a key spec for a monitor scoring highly for creative use.

Q: Can I use a monitor arm with this?

Absolutely. It has a standard 100x100 VESA mount pattern on the back, so it's compatible with the vast majority of monitor arms and wall mounts on the market. This is great if you want even more flexibility than the excellent included stand offers, or if you're setting up a multi-monitor workstation on a single arm.

Q: Does the USB-C port charge a laptop?

The product specs list a USB-C port for video/data, but do not specify its power delivery (PD) capability. Typically, in this price range, a USB-C port on a monitor might offer around 60-65W of power, enough to slowly charge or maintain most ultrabooks but not enough to fast-charge power-hungry laptops. For guaranteed laptop charging, you'd need to verify the exact PD wattage from LG's official specs.

Who Should Skip This

Hardcore gamers should skip this without a second thought. The 60Hz refresh rate and lack of Adaptive Sync mean you're leaving a lot of smoothness and responsiveness on the table. Look instead at 144Hz+ 4K monitors from brands like MSI, ASUS, or LG's own UltraGear line, even if you have to step down to 27-inch QHD for your budget.

Professional video editors or colorists working in HDR pipelines should also look elsewhere. The 300-nit brightness and lack of certified HDR support mean it can't display the full dynamic range needed for that work. Similarly, if you need a monitor for on-the-go use, its 22.5/100 portable score says it all—this is a heavy, desk-bound unit. For those users, a premium portable 4K display from Asus or a high-brightness, high-contrast pro panel from Dell or BenQ would be a better fit.

Verdict

If you're a professional, hybrid creative, or office worker who spends 8+ hours a day at your desk, this monitor is an easy recommendation. The combination of a sharp 4K IPS panel and that fantastic, fully adjustable stand is a productivity and comfort game-changer. It's the kind of upgrade you'll appreciate every single day.

However, if you're a hardcore gamer who needs high frame rates, a video editor requiring absolute color perfection and HDR, or someone with a very bright home office, you should keep looking. This monitor excels at being an excellent, comfortable daily driver, not a specialist tool for extreme performance.