Rollable OLED TVs are here, but is anyone going to buy them?

LG rollable OLED TV
(Image credit: LG)

LG's rollable OLED TV is slowly rolling out to more regions worldwide, but despite the very high price for this experimental television, market analysts are predicting to see thousands of units sold in a single year – and several magnitudes of that in the years thereafter.

Market analysts at Omdia (via OLED-info) have made their predictions for the rollable OLED TV, expecting that LG will be able to sell around 3,000 units in the course of 2022. That's a notable figure for such an expensive television, with it retailing at £99,999 in the UK and likely to cost an equivalent $99,999 in North America when it launches there in the coming months.

But the figures get truly astronomical a few years down the line. Omdia predicts that sales figures will rise to 74,000 units in 2024, and 672,000 units in 2027.

It's a fraction of the multi-million sales of OLED TVs every year, but notable nonetheless given the rather inaccessible price point. 

Some provisional reports out of South Korea – where the television launched first – claimed that only a handful of rollable OLED TV units (around 10) had been sold, so these figures may be somewhat optimistic. However, as the price point drops in the coming years, and potential audiences expand in new territories (the US is expected to get the set in late 2021), it's possible we'll see the rollable OLED TV gain some traction.

Omdia is certainly no stranger to changing up its forecasts on the fly. In late 2019, the company predicted we'd see 5.5 million OLED TV sales in the successive year, but it changed that forecast to 3.5 million shortly into 2020. So it's likely we'll hear from Omdia, as we near those milestones, as to whether the LG rollable OLED TV is staying on track for such big success.

Rolling with the punches

Since LG first showed off the Signature OLED R (65RX), it's inspired awe and fascination, as it utilizes OLED's flexible panel materials to furl and unfurl – much like a carpet – at the touch of a button.

It's an incredible space-saving measure, allowing viewers to hide away the screen entirely or set its height at 'half mast' for some limited smart display functionality. Unfortunately, it isn't a cost-saving measure, and the complex mechanical parts mean production is very pricey.

LG tells us that 'Each rollable TV is produced to order, painstakingly assembled and finished with a craftsman-like attention to detail by the most experienced production professionals at LG’s factory in South Korea.' So at least there aren't piles of these televisions lying around.

Of course, LG had also been experimenting with rollable OLED displays with its LG Rollable Phone. The company's departure from the smartphone business, though, means it's unlikely its roll-up mobile will ever hit shelves – and it speaks volumes that LG is ploughing ahead with its rollable OLED TV amid such a cautious retreat from other parts of the electronics market. Confident much?

TOPICS
Henry St Leger

Henry is a freelance technology journalist, and former News & Features Editor for TechRadar, where he specialized in home entertainment gadgets such as TVs, projectors, soundbars, and smart speakers. Other bylines include Edge, T3, iMore, GamesRadar, NBC News, Healthline, and The Times.

Read more
LG Signature OLEd TV transparent TV
LG’s incredible, transparent OLED TV is now available to buy, and no it's not cheap
Sony Bravia 9 backlight demo showing images on screen and on raw backlight
TCL overtaking LG's premium TV sales is the inevitable result of OLED's biggest problem and mini-LED's biggest strength
LG OLED W5 TV
LG's most stunning OLED TV of all time made a surprise secret return at CES, with a wireless twist
LG C4 OLED TV showing image of woman with blue eyes
The OLED TV I want to buy in 2025 is last year's LG C4 – here's why
LG G5 OLED TV on display at CES 2025 with George Clooney on screen
The first prices for LG’s brightest OLED TVs ever are out, and it's good news
The Samsung S95F OLED TV
Samsung says all sizes of the S95F OLED TV will hit 4,000 nits of brightness – even the W-OLED one
Latest in Televisions
Google Chromecast 2
Google is finally rolling out a fix for broken Chromecasts – just as new bugs appear on the Chromecast with Google TV
Sony UBP-X700/K shown from the front
Sony launches new version of the best cheap 4K Blu-ray player that drops the streaming tech – but the price looks odd
Samsung, Roku, and Hisense TV screens
I review TVs for a living, and here are the 3 best budget TVs you can buy today
Eight Samsung TVs mounted to the wall showing different basketball games
Samsung is offering you 8 new TVs in one bundle for March Madness, in case you want to watch all games at once like a Bond villain’s lair
OLED Philips Roku TV
The new 65-inch Roku OLED TV is already under $1,000, and that's a price I can get behind
close-up of soundbar mesh with Sonos branding
Sonos reportedly cancels its streaming video player, but I hope it resurrects one part of it, because it could be huge
Latest in News
A super close up image of the Google Gemini app in the Play Store
It's official: Google Assistant will be retired for phones this year, with Gemini taking over
Quordle on a smartphone held in a hand
Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, March 16 (game #1147)
NYT Strands homescreen on a mobile phone screen, on a light blue background
NYT Strands hints and answers for Sunday, March 16 (game #378)
NYT Connections homescreen on a phone, on a purple background
NYT Connections hints and answers for Sunday, March 16 (game #644)
Three iPhone 16 handsets on show
Apple could launch an iPhone 17 Ultra this year – but we've heard these rumors before
Super Mario Odyssey
ChatGPT is the ultimate gaming tool - here's 4 ways you can use AI to help with your next playthrough