Xiaomi has
opened pre-sales for its S Pro Mini LED 2026 TV lineup in China. The series comes in 65, 75, and 85 inches, starting at 6,499 yuan ($909) and going up to 10,499 yuan ($1,469). A 98-inch version also appears on the official site for 19,999 yuan ($2,799), though
Xiaomi has not confirmed if this is the final tag.
Designed for brightness and speed
The company’s latest TVs build on last year’s Mini LED models but add a stronger display package. Every size supports 4K resolution at 165Hz, with a new 330Hz gaming mode for smoother action. Peak brightness hits 5,200 nits, and the number of dimming zones ranges from 1,792 on the smaller set to 3,864 on the 98-inch model.
Color accuracy is also a focus. The panels cover 95% of the DCI-P3 color range, display 10.7 billion colors, and promise near-professional calibration.
Slim design with anti-glare
To improve everyday use, Xiaomi uses a low-reflection wide-angle panel with a coating that cuts surface glare to just 0.5%. This helps the picture stay sharp in bright rooms. The bezels measure only 4.35mm, while the thin black border is 0.9mm, making the display look nearly edge-to-edge.
Smarter with HyperOS 3
Under the hood is
HyperOS 3, powered by the MediaTek 9655 chip, a quad-core Cortex-A73 CPU, 4GB RAM, and 64GB storage. The system runs a 4K user interface, works with Xiaomi’s Super XiaoAi voice assistant, and adjusts brightness automatically with room lighting.
Xiaomi adds its XM9000 image processor and Master Image Engine, which handle motion, upscaling, and color. All the major standards are supported, including
Dolby Vision, HDR10+, FreeSync Premium Pro, VRR, MEMC, and Filmmaker Mode.
Sound and ports
Audio is provided by a 2.1.2-channel, 61W Harman-tuned system with two upward speakers for Dolby Atmos effects. Buyers get a metal stand with two height settings and a new slim silver remote.
Connections include three HDMI 2.1 ports (one with eARC), USB 3.0, USB 2.0, LAN, AV in, optical out, and antenna input. Wireless options cover Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2.
Extra features and rivals
A small but useful addition is the millimeter-wave radar, which checks how close viewers are to the screen. In Kids Mode, it sends alerts if they sit too close. The TVs also link with
Mi Home devices and support multi-screen sports streaming.
Xiaomi is not alone in this space. TCL has just announced its QM9K QD-Mini LED TV with 6,500 nits and Google Gemini AI, while AKAI has introduced its PowerView Series in India at more budget-friendly prices.