
LG Display is ramping up its teaser announcements ahead of CES 2026, with a new video posted on YouTube revealing additional Tandem WOLED panels with higher resolution that are set to launch in the new year.
The OLED display maker’s monitor-sized offerings are currently limited to just 2K resolution 27-inch and 39-inch options with 280Hz and 540Hz refresh rates. However it’s planning to expand this next year with a new 39-inch 5K ultrawide panel. In addition, it’s also set to reveal a new 4K resolution 27-inch panel.
LG Display last week announced that it’s rebranding its most advanced display technology from Primary RGB Tandem OLED to “Tandem WOLED”. The company supplies its OLED panels to a number of top monitor makers. For instance, Gigabyte and Asus both sell 27-inch, 1440p monitors with 280Hz, as well as even faster models that bump up the refresh rate to a native 540Hz, or 720Hz when the resolution is scaled down to just 720p.
However, it now looks like LG Display wants to beef up the resolution of its 27-inch panels at higher refresh rates. In its latest YouTube video, it showed off a 27-inch Tandem WOLED panel that has “high PPI for exceptional clarity”. The company didn’t say so, but that claim suggests it’s going to have higher resolution than its existing 2560 x 1440 panels, for there’s not really any other way for it to increase the pixels-per-inch ratio or PPI.

The company was more specific about its upcoming 39-inch Tandem WOLED panel. It said this is going to be a 5K resolution ultrawide panel, and that suggests it will likely have 5120 x 2160 pixels. Because it measures 39-inches diagonally, that should mean it has a PPI of around 142, which would mean it has much sharper quality than existing 39-inch 3440 x 1440 WOLED offerings.
LG Display has not yet said which monitor brands will adopt the new panels, and it has not shared anything about their refresh rates, brightness or pricing. That said, the video does explain how Tandem WOLED enables higher peak brightness and improved colour performance, so we’re expecting to see some significantly enhanced specifications with the new panels. We’ll learn more about them at CES 2026 next month.
You can watch the promotional video here: