A 240Hz monitor in 2026 costs between $129.99 and $1,299.99, with the price driven primarily by the panel technology (LCD vs. OLED) and the screen resolution (1080p, 1440p, or 4K).
You don’t need to spend more than $300 to get a real 240Hz refresh rate, but what you get for that price—resolution, color quality, and motion clarity—is very different from what $900 buys. The gap between budget LCD 240Hz monitors and flagship OLED models has never been wider, and the wrong choice for your GPU or budget can leave you with a screen that either underperforms or cost more than it should. Below is the exact cost breakdown by tier, with the model names that define each bracket in 2026.
240Hz Monitor Pricing: What Does Each Dollar Bracket Buy?
The 240Hz market splits into three clean tiers in 2026. Choosing the wrong one usually means paying for resolution you can’t drive or missing the smoothness a stronger GPU deserves.
- Budget Tier (Under $250, 1080p LCD): The cheapest path to 240Hz. All are 1080p with IPS or VA panels. Motion clarity is good but contrast and color depth are basic. Best for competitive esports where frame rate beats image quality.
- Mid-Range Tier ($250–$500, 1440p): The sweet spot for high-refresh gaming. Most are QHD (2560×1440) IPS or the first affordable QD-OLEDs. Requires at least an RTX 3070-class card to push frame rates.
- Premium Tier ($650–$1,300, 4K OLED): The flagship zone. Every model here is QD-OLED or Tandem WOLED at 4K. Demands an RTX 4080 Super or 4090 to reach 240Hz at native resolution. Also includes 49-inch super-ultrawide options.
Budget 240Hz Monitors: 1080p Under $250
The entry-level for 240Hz is now firmly under $200, with the most affordable option being a Dell 27-inch IPS model that costs as little as a premium keyboard.
| Model | Price | Resolution & Panel |
|---|---|---|
| Dell 27-inch IPS | $129.99 | 1920×1080, IPS |
| Sansui 27-inch Curved | $174.99 | 1080p, Curved VA |
| AOC 27-inch Curved | $261 (approx.) | 1080p, VA |
The Dell at $129.99 is the cheapest true 240Hz monitor you can buy in 2026 from a major brand. The AOC crosses into the mid-range price zone but stays at 1080p for those who want curved VA contrast on a budget. None of these monitors need a powerhouse GPU—a mid-range card like an RTX 3060 or RX 6600 will easily feed them.
Mid-Range 240Hz Monitors: 1440p from $250 to $500
QHD resolution at 240Hz is where the value lives in 2026. IPS models sit under $350, and the first QD-OLED options have dropped below $500 for the first time.
- LG UltraGear 27-inch (QHD IPS): $307 — The clearest 1440p value buy. Solid motion handling, good color, and a price that undercuts many 1080p options from two years ago.
- KTC H27E6 (1440p LCD): $270 — Aggressively priced for a 1440p 240Hz LCD. Good for competitive play on a strict budget.
- AOC Agon Pro 27-inch QD-OLED: $499.99 — The cheapest 240Hz QD-OLED on the market in 2026. Gets you OLED-level black levels and response times at 1440p for under $500, which was unheard of a year ago.
- Gigabyte AORUS 27Q 28G: $479 (sale) / $500 — Previously $600. A QD-OLED at a 1440p price, though it uses earlier sub-pixel layout that can affect text sharpness for desktop use.
If you build around a $250–$500 budget and pair it with an RTX 4070 or better, the 1440p 240Hz tier is where you get the biggest visible upgrade for the money. The AOC Agon Pro at $499 is the single most interesting monitor in this bracket because it delivers OLED response without the 4K price tag.
If you are ready to buy now, our tested roundup of the best budget 240Hz monitors breaks down which models actually hold up under real gaming loads.
Premium 240Hz Monitors: 4K OLED from $650 to $1,300
The top tier is dominated by QD-OLED panels at 27-inch and 32-inch sizes. Every model here can hit 240Hz at 3840×2160, but only with a high-end GPU and a DisplayPort 2.1 connection.
| Model | Price | Size & Panel Type |
|---|---|---|
| GIGABYTE MO27U2 | $649.99 | 27-inch, QD-OLED |
| Samsung G80 SD | $729 (value pick) | 4K, 240Hz |
| MSI MAG 321UPX | $798.99 | 32-inch, QD-OLED |
| MSI MPG 321URX | $829.99 | 32-inch, QD-OLED |
| Samsung G9 OLED 49-inch G93SC | $854 | 49-inch super-ultrawide, 240Hz |
| ASUS ROG Swift PG32UCDM | $899.00 | 32-inch, QD-OLED |
| ASUS ROG Swift OLED PG27UCDM | $1,099.99 | 27-inch, QD-OLED (first 4K 27-inch 240Hz) |
| ASUS ROG PG32UCDM3 | $1,299.99 | 32-inch, QD-OLED |
The GIGABYTE MO27U2 at $650 is notable as the cheapest 4K 240Hz QD-OLED on Newegg. The ASUS PG32UCDM3 at $1,300 is the most expensive 32-inch 240Hz monitor available and represents the current ceiling for desktop gaming displays. The Samsung G9 OLED at 49 inches is a distinct category—super-ultrawide at 240Hz for $854—which appeals to sim racers and flight-sim enthusiasts who want the field-of-view upgrade over raw resolution.
The Hidden Costs: What Most Buyers Miss
Three things decide whether a 240Hz monitor works as advertised after you unpack it, and ignoring them turns a premium purchase into a frustrating downgrade.
- Your GPU must be strong enough. Reaching 240 fps at 4K in modern titles demands an RTX 4080 Super or RTX 4090. A mid-range card will not sustain that frame rate, and the monitor becomes a waste of money at its native resolution. At 1440p, an RTX 4070 or RX 7800 XT is the realistic minimum.
- DisplayPort 2.1 is mandatory for 4K 240Hz. Using HDMI 2.1 caps you at 144Hz at 4K. Using DisplayPort 1.4 requires display stream compression, which some monitors handle well and others do not. Every 4K 240Hz OLED on the list above includes DP 2.1.
- Entry-level 1440p OLEDs can have fuzzy text. The sub-$500 QD-OLEDs often use older panel generations where the sub-pixel layout makes Windows text look slightly smeared. This is invisible in games but noticeable in desktop use or reading.
Checklist Before You Buy a 240Hz Monitor
The buying decision really comes down to matching the monitor to the hardware you already have:
- Check your GPU. If you have an RTX 4080 or higher, a 4K 240Hz OLED is worth the $650–$1,300. If you have an RTX 3060 or RX 6600, stay at 1080p or 1440p.
- Check your cable. DP 2.1 or HDMI 2.1 only. A boxed cable is usually correct—do not swap it for a cheaper one.
- Set a budget cap based on resolution. $200 max for 1080p, $500 max for 1440p, and $650–$1,300 for 4K. If your budget runs between tiers, save the difference and upgrade the GPU first.
- Decide between LCD and OLED. If the monitor is a primary productivity screen with 8+ hours of static windows, LCD reduces burn-in worry. If it is a dedicated gaming monitor, OLED wins on every measure of motion clarity.
FAQs
Is a 240Hz monitor worth it over a 144Hz model?
Yes, for competitive shooters and racing games where the difference between 144 and 240 fps is visible. For single-player or slower-paced titles, the upgrade from 144Hz to 240Hz is small and the money is better spent on a better GPU or a larger monitor.
What is the cheapest 240Hz monitor with good colors?
The LG UltraGear 27-inch at $307 gives you 1440p IPS color accuracy at the lowest price in its class. If you want actual OLED colors at 240Hz, the AOC Agon Pro at $499.99 is the cheapest entry point.
Can a PS5 or Xbox Series X run a 240Hz monitor at 240 fps?
No. Current consoles output a maximum of 120Hz over HDMI 2.1. A 240Hz monitor will work with a console but will never exceed 120Hz, making the extra refresh rate irrelevant for console gaming.
How many years will a 240Hz OLED monitor last before burn-in?
Under normal mixed-use conditions, three to five years before noticeable image retention, though newer Tandem WOLED panels from ASUS and LG claim up to 60% longer lifespan than previous OLED generations. Reducing peak brightness and hiding the taskbar help extend it.
Do I need a DisplayPort 2.1 cable for 1440p 240Hz?
No. DisplayPort 1.4 handles 1440p at 240Hz without compression using one cable. DisplayPort 2.1 is only required for 4K at 240Hz without compression or for future 8K monitors.
References & Sources
- RTINGS. “Best 240Hz Monitors – 2026 Roundup.” Independent technical review database used for baseline pricing and panel specs.
- Joybuy. “4K 240Hz Gaming Monitor Guide – What to Know Before You Buy.” Provides GPU requirement analysis and connection standard breakdowns.
- ASUS Press. “ASUS ROG at COMPUTEX 2026: New Displays.” Official spec and pricing for the PG27UCDM and PG32UCDM3.
