BenQ PD2705Q 27” 2K 27" Review

The BenQ PD2705Q offers pro-level color accuracy and superb USB-C connectivity at a budget price, but its 60Hz refresh rate anchors it firmly in the slow lane.

Screen Size 27
Resolution 2560 x 1440
Panel Type IPS
Refresh Rate 60
Response Time Ms 5
Hdr HDR10
BenQ PD2705Q 27” 2K 27" monitor
59.9 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

A focused tool for creatives, not gamers. Excellent color accuracy and best-in-class USB-C connectivity make it a great value for design work, but the 60Hz refresh rate is a letdown. Worth buying if your priority is color, not speed.

Overview

The BenQ PD2705Q is a 27-inch QHD monitor built for one thing: getting design work done. It's not a gaming screen or a media powerhouse, but a focused tool for creatives who need accurate colors and a clean, organized desk.

With a 60Hz refresh rate and 5ms response time, this isn't about speed. It's about stability and precision. The main draw here is the USB-C connectivity and BenQ's suite of creative-focused features like specialized display modes and color calibration tools.

Performance

Performance is a mixed bag, and that's by design. For color-critical work, it's strong. The IPS panel hits 100% sRGB coverage with solid Delta E ≤3 accuracy, putting it well above average for color work. But in raw specs, it's underwhelming. The 60Hz refresh rate and 300-nit brightness are middle of the pack at best, and the 5ms response time lags behind most modern monitors. It's built for accuracy, not for fast motion or HDR brilliance.

Performance Percentiles

Color 82.5
Portability 89.6
Display 71.1
Feature 82.4
Ergonomic 72.3
Performance 22.5
Connectivity 95
Social Proof 54.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • USB-C connectivity is top-tier, handling video, data, and power in one cable. 95th
  • Color accuracy is impressive for the price, great for sRGB workflows. 90th
  • Specialized modes like CAD/CAM and Animation are genuinely useful tools. 83th
  • The Display Pilot software makes managing color profiles and settings easy. 82th

Cons

  • The 60Hz refresh rate feels dated and is a weak spot. 23th
  • HDR support is basically a checkbox feature with only 300 nits of brightness.
  • Ergonomics are limited to tilt and swivel, no height adjustment.
  • Built-in speakers are an afterthought and sound tinny.

The Word on the Street

5.0/5 (2 reviews)
👍 Users are extremely satisfied with the color accuracy and out-of-the-box calibration for professional design work.
👍 The single-cable USB-C setup for laptops is repeatedly praised for cleaning up desk clutter and simplifying workflow.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 27"
Resolution 2560 (QHD)
Panel Type IPS
Aspect Ratio 16:9

Performance

Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Response Time 5

Color & HDR

Brightness 300 nits
HDR HDR10
HDR Support HDR10

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 1
DisplayPort 1
USB-C 1
Speakers Yes

Ergonomics

Height Adjustable No
Tilt Yes
Swivel Yes
Pivot No

Features

Power 24
Weight 5.7 kg / 12.6 lbs

Value & Pricing

At around $280, the value proposition is clear. You're paying for color accuracy and USB-C convenience, not cutting-edge panel tech. Compared to the wild $10,115 high end of the price spread we see in our database, this BenQ is a focused, budget-friendly professional tool. Newegg often has the best deal. Just don't expect gaming monitor features at this price.

vs Competition

Stacked up, it's a specialist. The LG UltraGear offers high refresh rates for gamers. The Dell UltraSharp and ASUS ROG Swift models typically bring better brightness, ergonomics, or resolution. This BenQ carves its niche with better USB-C integration and creative software than the basic Dells, and more accurate out-of-the-box color than the gaming-focused MSI and Samsung options. You trade raw performance for workflow smarts.

Spec BenQ PD2705Q 27” 2K 27" LG UltraGear LG - UltraGear 27" IPS Dual Mode (4K UHD 180Hz, 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 G7 27" UHD 4K 144Hz IPS AMD Dell UltraSharp Dell UltraSharp U3225QE 31.5" 4K HDR 120 Hz
Screen Size 27 27 32 32 27 31.5
Resolution 2560 x 1440 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160
Panel Type IPS IPS OLED OLED IPS IPS
Refresh Rate 60 180 165 240 144 120
Response Time Ms 5 1 0 - 1 5
Adaptive Sync - G-Sync Compatible G-Sync Compatible G-Sync Compatible G-Sync Compatible -
Hdr HDR10 HDR400 HDR400 HDR10 HDR10+ HDR
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product ColorCompactDisplayFeatureErgonomicPerformanceConnectivitySocial Proof
BenQ PD2705Q 27” 2K 27" 82.589.671.182.472.322.59554.6
LG UltraGear 27" Dual Mode Compare 89.880.490.582.496.594.199.997.3
MSI MAG 321cup Qd-oled 31.5" Compare 998.298.797.296.599.889.499.3
ASUS ROG Swift 32" Compare 99.972.598.782.487.881.396.797.3
Samsung Odyssey G7 27" Compare 95.178.790.582.496.59098.990.6
Dell UltraSharp Dual 31.5" Compare 97.672.590.582.487.858.397.290.6

Common Questions

Q: Is this monitor good for gaming?

Not really. The 60Hz refresh rate and 5ms response time are disappointing for gaming. Look at the LG UltraGear or MSI models instead.

Q: Does the USB-C port deliver enough power for a laptop?

It provides power delivery, but at 24W total power draw for the monitor itself, it's likely only suitable for charging smaller devices or providing maintenance power, not fully running a high-power laptop.

Q: How does the HDR perform?

It's basic HDR10 support. With a 300-nit peak brightness, don't expect a dramatic HDR experience. It's a checkbox feature, not a highlight.

Who Should Skip This

Gamers and motion-heavy users should skip this. The 60Hz refresh is a dealbreaker for fast-paced action. Also, if you need true HDR for video editing or media consumption, the low brightness won't cut it. Look at higher-nit IPS or OLED panels instead.

Verdict

Buy this if you're a graphic designer, video editor, or CAD user on a budget who needs reliable color and the clean desk that USB-C provides. It's a no-fuss workhorse that gets the job done without flash. The KVM switch is a nice bonus if you juggle multiple computers.