Roku LED 4K – Select Roku - 43" Class Select Series 4K LED Smart RokuTV Review

The Roku Select Series 43" TV offers elite smart features and connectivity for under $200, but its basic LED panel sits in the 13th percentile. It's the ultimate streaming machine for casual viewers, not a videophile's dream.

Screen Size 43
Resolution 3840x2160
Panel Type LED
Refresh Rate 60
Hdr HDR10+, HLG
Smart Platform Roku TV
Dolby Vision No
Hdmi Version 2.1
Roku LED 4K – Select Roku - 43" Class Select Series 4K LED Smart RokuTV tv
74.4 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

This TV is a streaming genius in a budget-panel body. Its smart platform and connectivity score in the mid-90s percentile, making it smoother to use than TVs twice its price. But the display hardware sits in the 13th percentile, so don't expect reference-quality HDR. For under $200, it's a brilliant deal for casual viewers.

Overview

The Roku Select Series 43" 4K TV is a streaming powerhouse that's almost suspiciously good at being a smart TV. Its smart platform scores in the 94th percentile, and its connectivity hits the 93rd. That means it gets you to your shows faster and connects to more of your stuff than nearly any other TV we've tested. For around $200, you're getting a 4K HDR screen with a built-in experience that's smoother than what you'd find on TVs costing twice as much.

But there's a trade-off, and it's in the picture department. The display itself lands in the 13th percentile, which is a polite way of saying the panel tech is basic. It's a direct-lit LED, not a fancy Mini-LED or OLED. So while the smart features are top-tier, the foundation they're built on is decidedly budget. Think of it as a brilliant brain in an average body.

Performance

Let's talk numbers. This TV's party trick is its software. A 94th percentile smart score means the Roku OS is blisteringly fast, launching apps in a snap and making navigation feel effortless. Pair that with 93rd percentile connectivity, including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.2, Apple AirPlay 2, and Miracast, and you've got a TV that plays nice with everything in your house. For gamers, it's surprisingly capable with a solid 82nd percentile gaming score, thanks to HDMI 2.1 support and VRR at 60Hz.

The audio is another bright spot, sitting in the 89th percentile with Dolby Audio and eARC. That means the built-in speakers are better than you'd expect, and it can pass high-quality sound to a soundbar without a hitch. The HDR support is also strong at the 90th percentile, with HDR10+ and HLG. But here's the catch: the picture quality metric is at the 40th percentile. The HDR specs are there on paper, but the direct-lit LED panel just can't deliver the same contrast and peak brightness as more expensive sets. It's a good picture for the price, not a great one in absolute terms.

Performance Percentiles

Hdr 93
Audio 74.6
Smart 96.8
Gaming 62.7
Display 46.9
Connectivity 94.7
Social Proof 98.9
Picture Quality 43.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The Roku smart platform is elite, scoring in the 94th percentile for speed and ease of use. 99th
  • Connectivity is fantastic at the 93rd percentile, with all the modern ports and wireless standards you need. 97th
  • Audio performance punches above its weight at the 89th percentile, with clear Dolby Audio from the internal speakers. 95th
  • Gaming features are solid for a budget TV, hitting the 82nd percentile with VRR and HDMI 2.1. 93th
  • The value proposition is insane, offering top-tier smart features for a price that's consistently under $200.

Cons

  • The display hardware is its weakest link, landing in the bottom 13th percentile for panel technology.
  • Picture quality is merely average at the 40th percentile, as the basic LED backlight limits HDR impact.
  • It's not a bright TV, so performance in well-lit rooms will be compromised compared to higher-tier models.
  • The 60Hz refresh rate is fine for most content but won't satisfy high-frame-rate PC gamers.
  • While lightweight at 14.4 lbs, its 'portable' score is just 62.4/100β€”it's a TV, not a monitor you'll move often.

The Word on the Street

4.8/5 (586 reviews)
πŸ‘ Owners consistently praise the incredibly simple and fast setup process, often mentioning it takes 20 minutes or less.
πŸ‘ Many users are pleasantly surprised by the picture and sound quality for a TV in this price range, calling it crisp, vibrant, and more than adequate for daily viewing.
πŸ‘ The convenience features, like the phone app remote and the lost remote finder, receive frequent shout-outs for solving everyday annoyances.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 43"
Resolution 4K (2160p)
Panel Type LED
Backlight Direct-Lit
Curved No
Year 2025

Picture Quality

Processor HDR Plus

HDR

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

Gaming

Refresh Rate 60 Hz
VRR VRR

Smart TV

Platform Roku TV
Voice Assistant Not Applicable, Not Applicable
Screen Mirroring Apple AirPlay 2, Miracast
Works With Apple Home, Amazon Alexa, Google Home

Audio

Surround Sound Dolby Audio
eARC Yes

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 3
HDMI Version 2.1
USB Ports 1
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi
Bluetooth 5.2
Ethernet Yes
Optical Audio Yes
VESA Mount 300x300

Power & Size

Energy Star No
Annual Energy 200
Weight 6.5 kg / 14.4 lbs

Value & Pricing

Here's the thing: this TV is almost all value. At a street price hovering between $198 and $200, you're paying for a brilliant smart TV that happens to have a 4K screen attached. The price-to-performance ratio for streaming and smart home integration is off the charts. You'd typically have to buy a separate streaming device and a mid-range TV to get this level of seamless connectivity and software polish, and that combo would cost you well over $300. Roku just bundles it all in for the price of a basic panel.

Price History

$190 $200 $210 $220 $230 $240 Mar 13Mar 13Mar 14Mar 16Mar 16 $230

vs Competition

Stacked against its peers, the Roku Select's story is clear. It smokes similarly priced basic TVs from other brands on smart features and connectivity. A comparable TCL or Hisense at this price might have a slightly better panel (maybe hitting the 20th percentile instead of the 13th), but their smart software often feels clunky and slow in comparison. If you step up to a $500-$600 TV like the Hisense U6 Series Mini-LED, you'll get a massive jump in picture quality (think 70th+ percentile) but you're paying more than double. The Sony BRAVIA 5 and LG OLEDs are in a different universe for picture quality but cost 5-10x as much. For pure, no-fuss streaming, the Roku is the efficiency champion.

Spec Roku LED 4K – Select Roku - 43" Class Select Series 4K LED Smart RokuTV Sony BRAVIA 5 Sony BRAVIA 5 98" 4K HDR Smart Mini-LED TV Samsung Neo QLED Samsung QN85QN90F 85 inch Class QN90F Series Neo Hisense U65QF Mini-LED Hisense - 75" Class U6 Series MiniLED QLED UHD 4K LG OLED evo AI LG OLED evo AI G5 77" 4K HDR Smart TV with Wall Roku Mini-LED QLED 4K - Pro Roku - 55" Class Pro Series 4K QLED Mini-LED Smart
Screen Size 43 98 85 75 77 55
Resolution 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160
Panel Type LED Mini-LED Mini-LED Mini-LED QLED OLED Mini-LED QLED
Refresh Rate 60 120 120 144 120 120
Hdr HDR10+, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG HDR10+, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HLG
Smart Platform Roku TV Google TV Tizen Fire TV webOS Roku TV
Dolby Vision false true false true true true
Dolby Atmos β€” false false true false true
Hdmi Version 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1

Common Questions

Q: How good is this TV for gaming?

It's surprisingly decent for a budget TV, scoring in the 82nd percentile. It has HDMI 2.1 and VRR, but it's limited to a 60Hz refresh rate. It's perfect for consoles like the Switch or PS5/Xbox in quality mode, but competitive PC gamers will want a higher refresh rate.

Q: Can I use Bluetooth headphones with it?

Yes, absolutely. With Bluetooth 5.2 connectivity scoring in the 93rd percentile, pairing wireless headphones or speakers is straightforward through the settings menu. It's a great feature for late-night viewing.

Q: Is the voice remote actually useful?

It's a key part of why the smart score is so high (94th percentile). You can search across all your streaming apps by voice, which is a huge time-saver compared to typing on an on-screen keyboard. The remote finder feature is also a legit lifesaver.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this TV if your main criteria is cinematic picture quality. The display ranks in the 13th percentile, which means its direct-lit LED panel can't deliver the deep blacks, high contrast, or eye-searing brightness of Mini-LED or OLED TVs. If you're setting up a dedicated home theater room or you're a stickler for perfect HDR, your money is better spent on a panel with better hardware, even if it means a less slick smart interface.

Verdict

We recommend the Roku Select Series 43" TV without hesitation if your priority is a fantastic, frustration-free streaming hub for a bedroom, office, or secondary space. The data is clear: it excels at being smart and connected. But we have to give a hard data-backed anti-recommendation if you're a videophile or your main living room TV needs to wow with picture quality. That 13th percentile display score is a real limitation. For the vast majority of people who just want to watch Netflix without fighting their TV, this is the one to get.