The Hisense QD7QF is an entry-level TV released as part of the 2025 TV lineup. It sits above the Hisense QD6QF and below the Hisense U65QF. It's a basic 4k TV with an LCD panel and Mini LED backlighting, powered by the Fire TV smart interface. It's light on features, with basic VRR support but only a 60Hz refresh rate on the smaller sizes and no HDMI 2.1 bandwidth, but it supports all three mainstream HDR formats. We bought and tested the 65-inch version, but it's also available in 50, 55, 75, 85, and 100-inch options. The three largest sizes have completely different specifications and don't perform the same as the 65-inch model.
Our Verdict
The Hisense QD7QF is an alright TV overall. It performs best in a moderately-lit room, but it's also an okay choice for dark room viewing thanks to its Mini LED backlight. It's okay for gaming, with low input lag and a few gaming features like VRR, but there are some oddities with its supported resolutions that limit its compatibility with consoles. It also has disappointing motion handling, with a slow response time that results in blurry movement, which is especially noticeable when gaming or watching sports. The screen also has mediocre uniformity, and although this is usually mainly noticeable when watching sports, in this case, it's bad enough that you'll see it with most content.
Blacks remain deep in a bright room.
Great contrast thanks to its Mini LED backlight.
Poor handling of direct reflections.
Mediocre gray uniformity.
Can't smooth out macro blocking in low quality content.
Not bright enough in SDR to overcome glare in well-lit rooms.
The Hisense QD7QF is alright for watching movies under reference conditions, like in a dark room. It has decent black levels thanks to its Mini LED backlight and great contrast, but there's still some haloing around bright spots and subtitles. It supports all three HDR formats and all audio formats, which is great, but it's not bright enough to bring out bright highlights in HDR. It also has limited processing capabilities, and it can't do much at all to smooth out low-quality content. Colors are decent, though, and it has great accuracy in both SDR and HDR out of the box.
Accurate colors in SDR out of the box.
Great contrast thanks to its Mini LED backlight.
Good gradient handling.
Mediocre gray uniformity.
Can't smooth out macro blocking in low quality content.
Too dim in HDR for highlights to stand out.
Some haloing around subtitles and bright areas of the scene.
The Hisense QD7QF is alright for use in a bright room. It's bright enough to overcome some glare in a moderately-lit room with no direct sunlight, but it can't handle bright lights or lots of sunlight. It has sub-par reflection handling, as the glossy coating does almost nothing to reduce the intensity of direct, mirror-like reflections. On the other hand, there's no impact on picture quality when using it in a bright room, as black levels don't rise noticeably, and there's no noticeable decrease in color saturation.
Accurate colors in SDR out of the box.
Poor handling of direct reflections.
Not bright enough in SDR to overcome glare in well-lit rooms.
The Hisense QD7QF is alright for watching sports. It can handle some glare in a moderately lit room for afternoon games, but it has sub-par reflection handling. Its viewing angle is mediocre, so it's best suited for watching from directly in front. It has a slow response time, so fast motion is blurry. Finally, the screen uniformity is mediocre, with noticeable bright and dark patches that are distracting when watching sports.
Accurate colors in SDR out of the box.
Poor handling of direct reflections.
Slow pixel transitions lead to blurry motion.
Mediocre gray uniformity.
The Hisense QD7QF is just okay for gaming. It has okay responsiveness in Game Mode, with low input lag but a slow response time. Motion looks blurry, and due to its narrow refresh rate range at 4k, you'll still see tearing when gaming in 4k, even when using VRR. On the flip side, there's no impact on picture quality when you switch to the dedicated gaming mode.
Great contrast thanks to its Mini LED backlight.
Very low input lag.
Slow pixel transitions lead to blurry motion.
Buggy firmware, 1080p @ 120Hz doesn't work at all but 1440p does.
High input lag when gaming at 1440p @ 120Hz.
The Hisense QD7QF has mediocre peak brightness. It's okay in SDR, as it gets bright enough to handle some glare if you're in a moderately-lit room. It's more disappointing in HDR, though, where it's not bright enough to bring out specular highlights or very bright scenes well.
Too dim in HDR for highlights to stand out.
Not bright enough in SDR to overcome glare in well-lit rooms.
The Hisense QD7QF has decent black levels. Thanks to its Mini LED backlight, it has great contrast in most scenes. However, the limited zone count results in some noticeable haloing around subtitles and in more difficult scenes. There's also noticeable flicker as lights move between zones.
Blacks remain deep in a bright room.
Great contrast thanks to its Mini LED backlight.
Some haloing around subtitles and bright areas of the scene.
The Hisense QD7QF has decent colors. It has great pre-calibration accuracy in both SDR and HDR. It also has decent color volume in both, but it has limited coverage of the wider HDR color spaces.
Accurate colors in SDR out of the box.
Limited coverage of HDR color gamuts.
Note: We're in the process of improving our tests related to image processing, but this score should give you a general idea of how a TV performs overall with its image processing capabilities.
The Hisense QD7QF has just okay processing capabilities. It handles HDR content well, with decent EOTF tracking and good gradient handling. It upscales low-resolution content decently, with no obvious issues or over-sharpening, but it can't do much at all to clear up posterization and macro blocking in low-quality content.
Good gradient handling.
Can't smooth out macro blocking in low quality content.
The Hisense QD7QF has just okay responsiveness when you switch to Game Mode. It has low input lag, ensuring a responsive gaming experience in some supported modes. It has limited format support, though, as it can only do 4k @ 60Hz or 1440p @ 120Hz, with no support for the far more common 1080p @ 120Hz. This also means that it doesn't work with Low Framerate Compensation when gaming at 4k, so you'll still see tearing. Finally, pixels are slow to transition between shades, resulting in a blurry experience overall.
Very low input lag.
Slow pixel transitions lead to blurry motion.
Buggy firmware, 1080p @ 120Hz doesn't work at all but 1440p does.
High input lag when gaming at 1440p @ 120Hz.
We're in the process of fixing the way we evaluate a TV's overall motion handling. This section is currently broken, and the score isn't indicative of how well a TV handles motion overall.
Changelog
-
Updated Sep 23, 2025:
We corrected the photo in the Contrast section to better show the TV's contrast performance.
-
Updated Sep 12, 2025:
We bought and tested the Hisense QD6QF, and added a comparison in the HDR Brightness section.
- Updated Sep 09, 2025: Review published.
- Updated Sep 08, 2025: Early access published.
Check Price
Differences Between Sizes And Variants
We bought and tested the 65-inch Hisense QD7QF, and these results are also valid for the 50-inch and 55-inch models. The 75, 85, and 100-inch models are advertised with completely different specs, including a higher refresh rate, HDMI 2.1 bandwidth, and more dimming zones, so most of these results aren't valid for those sizes. In Canada, this TV is known as the Hisense QD7QFM, but it's the same TV.
Size | US Model | Canadian Model | Refresh Rate | HDMI Ports |
---|---|---|---|---|
50" | Hisense 50QD7QF | Hisense 50QD7QFM | 60Hz | 4 x 2.0 |
55" | Hisense 55QD7QF | Hisense 55QD7QFM | 60Hz | 4 x 2.0 |
65" | Hisense 65QD7QF | Hisense 65QD7QFM | 60Hz | 4 x 2.0 |
75" | Hisense 75QD7QF | Hisense 75QD7QFM | 144Hz | 2 x 2.1, 2 x 2.0 |
85" | Hisense 85QD7QF | Hisense 85QD7QFM | 144Hz | 2 x 2.1, 2 x 2.0 |
100" | Hisense 100QD7QF | Hisense 100QD7QFM | 144Hz | 2 x 2.1, 2 x 2.0 |
Our unit was made in Mexico in January 2025.
Popular TV Comparisons
The Hisense QD7QF is a very basic TV with a decent selection of features, but lackluster picture quality. It's fairly priced for the performance it delivers, especially on the larger sizes, but most people are better off spending just a bit more to step up to competing models like the TCL QM6K or the Hisense U65QF. The 75, 85, and 100-inch models are far more interesting thanks to their higher refresh rate and HDMI 2.1 bandwidth, but Hisense's decision to offer vastly different performance levels depending on the size is very confusing. It is a noticeably better TV than the one below it, the Hisense QD6QF, which is otherwise similar but lacks local dimming.
For more options, check out our recommendations for the best Mini LED TVs, the best QLED TVs, and the best gaming TVs.
The TCL QM6K delivers better overall picture quality than the Hisense QD7QF. The TCL gets a bit brighter in HDR and SDR, so highlights stand out better and glare is less of an issue. The TCL also has better processing capabilities, especially when watching low quality content, where it can clean up a lot more macro blocking and pixelization than the Hisense. The TCL also supports a 144Hz refresh rate on all sizes, whereas the Hisense only does on the 75, 85, and 100-inch models.
The Hisense U65QF is a better TV than the Hisense QD7QF. The step-up U series delivers better picture quality thanks to its higher peak brightness, better colors, and better processing. Bright highlights stand out better in HDR, and although both TVs handle reflections poorly, the U65QF can overcome more glare in a bright room. The U65QF is also better for gaming thanks to its higher refresh rate and HDMI 2.1 bandwidth on all sizes, whereas those features are limited to the largest sizes available on the QD7QF.
The Hisense QD7QF and the Hisense QD6QF are very similar overall, with the biggest difference being the addition of local dimming on the QD7QF. This makes a significant difference in picture quality, though, making it the much better TV overall. The QD7QF gets brighter, it has better black levels, and colors are more vibrant.
The Hisense QD7QF performs better than the Samsung Q7F 2025. The Hisense has a full array local dimming feature, resulting in deeper blacks and better overall black uniformity, although it's still not perfect and you'll see some haloing around bright highlights and subtitles. The Hisense is also a bit brighter, and it has better colors, so HDR content stands out a bit better and looks a bit more vibrant overall.
We buy and test dozens of TVs yearly, taking an objective, data-driven approach to deliver results you can trust. Our testing process is complex, with hundreds of individual tests that take over a week to complete. Most of our tests are done with specially designed test patterns that mimic real content, but we also use the same sources you have at home to ensure our results match the real-world experience. We use two main tools for our testing: a Colorimetry Research CR-100 colorimeter and a CR-250 spectroradiometer.
Test Results
The HDR brightness on this TV is disappointing. While most moderately-lit scenes like the landscape photo look pretty good, bright scenes and bright specular highlights don't stand out at all.
There's no visible difference in HDR brightness when using Game Mode.
The Hisense QD7QF has okay peak brightness in SDR. It can handle some glare, but it's not bright enough to overcome the glare caused by bright lights or natural sunlight.
This TV has great contrast. The panel's native contrast is high enough to deliver deep blacks in more difficult scenes where local dimming can't keep up. The Mini LED backlight also helps deliver considerably better contrast than its lower-end sibling, the Hisense QD6QF, and it performs surprisingly well, even beating out the higher-end Hisense U65QF.
This TV has decent zone transitions. There's noticeable flicker both trailing and leading lights as they move across the screen, but there's very little trailing halo effect.
This TV has just okay black uniformity. As mentioned above, it can't dim tightly around oddly-shaped bright areas, so there's noticeable haloing around bright parts of the scene. With local dimming disabled there's no haloing, but the screen is a bit more washed out and cloudy.
The Hisense QD7QF has decent color volume in SDR. Like almost any TV in 2025, it easily covers the entire range of colors in the BT.709 color space used by most SDR content. It has good coverage of the wider DCI-P3 color space, but mediocre coverage of the widest BT.2020 color space. If you enjoy saturated colors, though, you have to use the 'Dynamic' picture setting, as it clamps the color space to BT.709 in the 'Movie' mode.
Volume ΔE³ | DCI-P3 Coverage |
BT.2020 Coverage |
---|---|---|
L10 | 85.76% | 66.41% |
L20 | 88.31% | 66.61% |
L30 | 92.14% | 66.27% |
L40 | 94.02% | 67.61% |
L50 | 94.02% | 67.68% |
L60 | 87.39% | 64.04% |
L70 | 81.62% | 55.74% |
L80 | 82.78% | 52.50% |
L90 | 85.2% | 52.54% |
L100 | 79.24% | 74.48% |
Total | 86.79% | 60.92% |
This TV has just okay color volume in HDR. It displays deep colors well thanks to its high contrast ratio, but most bright colors are nowhere near as bright and vibrant as they should be. It also can't display the full range of colors supported by HDR.
The Hisense QD7QF has great SDR accuracy before calibration. It has fantastic color accuracy, with no noticeable issues at all, and the white balance is great. Gamma is a bit high in dark shades and midtones, so those scenes are a bit too dark, and there's a bit too much red in all shades, giving it a warm color temperature.
The SDR accuracy after calibration is stunning, with no noticeable issues at all. Gamma, white balance, and color accuracy are all nearly perfect.
See our full calibration settings.
The Hisense QD7QF has great accuracy in HDR out of the box. The white balance is great, with just a few issues in midtones, and color accuracy is good overall. The RGB balance is very good as well, and the overall color temperature is just a bit warm.
This TV has decent PQ EOTF tracking. Most scenes are slightly too bright, but it's barely noticeable. It hard clips at the TV's peak brightness regardless of the content's mastering level, so there's a loss of fine details in content that exceeds its peak brightness.
The Hisense QD7QF has decent sharpness processing. Fine details are sharp and clear enough, but text isn't as clear as it is on the Hisense U65QF.
This TV has good gradient handling. There's some minor banding in all colors, but it's not too noticeable.
The Hisense QD7QF has great input lag when you switch to Game Mode. It's low enough to deliver a very responsive gaming experience. Oddly, it doesn't support 1080p @ 120Hz but 1440p @ 120Hz is supported. The input lag in that mode increases to a very high 28.2ms, and it feels very sluggish.
Unfortunately, this TV has limited format support. At its native 4k resolution, it supports a maximum refresh rate of 60Hz. It doesn't support 1080p @ 120Hz, but 1440p @ 120Hz is supported, which is incredibly odd and likely a bug. Note that the 75-inch and up models of this TV support up to 144Hz.
Although Hisense doesn't mention any VRR support on this TV, it does in fact work with all three types of VRR. Due to its low maximum refresh rate at 4k, though, the refresh rate range isn't wide enough to work with low framerate compensation (LFC), so you'll see tearing if your framerate drops below 48Hz.
With a 1440p resolution, VRR works up to 120Hz and down to <20Hz, so that resolution does work with LFC.
Unfortunately, the Hisense QD7QF has disappointing pixel response times at the max refresh rate of 60Hz. There's very little overshoot, but transitions are slow, resulting in blurry motion overall. It's worse in near-blacks, resulting in more blur in dark scenes.
This TV doesn't support a 120Hz refresh rate at it's native resolution.
Unfortunately, pixel response times at 60Hz on this TV are disappointing. There's very little overshoot, but transitions are slow, resulting in blurry motion overall. It's worse in near-blacks, resulting in more blur in dark scenes.
The Hisense QD7QF is a 60Hz TV, so it only supports 4k @ 60Hz on the P55. You can switch it to 1440p @ 120Hz instead, but oddly, it doesn't support 1080p @ 120Hz. It has Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM), so it'll automatically switch to Game Mode when the TV detects a game playing, which gives you the lowest possible input lag for games.
This TV only supports 4k @ 60Hz or 1440p @ 120Hz on the Xbox Series consoles. Oddly, 1080p @ 120Hz isn't supported. It has Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM), so it'll automatically switch to Game Mode when the TV detects a game playing, which gives you the lowest possible input lag for games. It also supports Dolby Vision gaming with supported titles.
Thanks to this TV's relatively slow response time, there's very little stutter with most low framerate content. You'll still see a bit of stutter in very slow panning shots, but it's not bad.
This TV can remove judder from all external sources, included sources that only support 60Hz outputs, like most cable boxes. Oddly, it can't remove judder from the native apps.
The cinematic response time on this TV is just okay. There's a bit of overshoot, but it's not enough to cause noticeable overshoot. All transitions are slow, resulting in blurry motion in most shots.
The TV doesn't have an optional backlight strobing feature, commonly known as black frame insertion (BFI), to help reduce persistence blur.
The Hisense QD7QF has sub-par direct reflection handling. The glossy coating does very little to reduce the intensity of bright, mirror-like reflections from lights or windows.
There's only some minor black level raise in a room with ambient lighting, so you still get deep blacks with your lights turned on.
The TV's perceived color volume in a bright room is decent. Ambient light has little impact on the total color volume, but it's low to begin with.
The Hisense QD7QF has a mediocre viewing angle. The image starts to shift noticeably at a moderate angle, as colors wash out and gamma shifts considerably very quickly. There's also a noticeable yellow shift as blues drop quickly as you move off-axis, while red and green are stable.
Unfortunately, this TV has mediocre gray uniformity. The screen is patchy and cloudy throughout, with bright spots in the center that are noticeable when watching sports or anything with a somewhat uniform color. Near-blacks don't look any better either.
This TV uses a BGR subpixel layout. It doesn't affect picture quality but can cause issues with text clarity in some applications when using it as a PC monitor.
It uses a KSF phosphor coating to produce red light and has high peaks on reds and blues. This model does have good separation between colors, giving it solid color purity and a wide color gamut.
This TV is limited to HDMI 2.0 bandwidth on all four inputs, and it doesn't support ATSC 3.0, so you're limited to a maximum of 1080p for over-the-air broadcasts. The 75" and larger models have two HDMI 2.1 bandwidth ports instead.
This TV supports eARC, which allows you to pass high-quality, uncompressed audio to a compatible receiver through an HDMI cable. It supports all major audio formats, so you don't have to worry about compatibility with external sources.
The back of the TV has a textured pattern similar to the Hisense U65QF. All of the inputs are side-facing, but they're in a recessed cutout that makes them a bit hard to access if you have it mounted to a wall. Unfortunately, there's no clips or grooves to help with cable management.
This TV has a mediocre frequency response. There's a noticeable dip in low-treble that muddies dialogue a bit, and it can't get very loud. There's also very little deep bass.