It’s very clear that Apple were going for peak brightness above all else. Nobody else has even tried to make a bright 6k display – in fact, every non-Apple 6k display is outright dim by modern display standards – they’re barely brighter than the original 5k display in the 2015 iMac!1
For the price of one Apple Pro Display XDR you can get four Asus ProArt 6k displays.
I suspect there’s only three 6k panel models in existence – the one used by Apple, the AUO one used by Asus2, and the LG one used by LG, Dell, & Kuycon.
It’s strange to me that Dell haven’t dropped the price of their 6k display given that LG are offering the same panel in a much svelter package for 15% less (and you can get the very similar Asus display for 45% less!).
| Pro Display XDR | LG UltraFine™evo 6K Nano IPS Black Monitor with Thunderbolt™ 5 (32U990A-S) | Dell UltraSharp 32 6K (U3224KB) | Asus ProArt Display 6K (PA32QCV) | Kuycon G32P | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screen diagonal | 81 cm | 80 cm | 80 cm | 80 cm | 80 cm |
| Resolution | 6,016 ⨉ 3,384 | 6,144 ⨉ 3,456 | 6,144 ⨉ 3,456 | 6,016 ⨉ 3,384 | 6,144 ⨉ 3,456 |
| Pixel count | 20,358,144 | 21,233,664 | 21,233,664 | 20,358,144 | 21,233,664 |
| Backlight zones | 576 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Pixels per backlight zone | 35,344 | 21,233,664 | 21,233,664 | 20,358,144 | 21,233,664 |
| Pixel density | 218 | 224 | 224 | 218 | 224 |
| Contrast ratio | 1,000,000 : 1 | 2,000 : 1 3 | 2,000 : 1 4 | 1,500 : 1 5 | 2,000 : 1 |
| Peak sustained brightness | 1,600 (≤ 25℃) | 4506 | 450 | 450 | 500 |
| Maximum “black” luminence | ? | ≤ 0.17 | ≤ 0.18 | ≤ 0.19 | ? |
| Bit depth | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
| Display P3 coverage | 98.7% 10 | 98% | 99% | 98% | 99% |
| Adobe RGB coverage | 96.7% | 99.5% | ? | ? | ? |
| Rec 709 coverage | ? | ? | 100% | ? | ? |
| sRGB coverage | 94.3% | ? | 100% | 100% | 99% |
| Refresh rate | 47.95 – 60.00 Hz | 30 – 60 Hz | 60 Hz | 60 Hz | 60 Hz |
| USB Power Delivery | 96W | 96W | 140W | 96W | 100W |
| Connectivity | 1⨉ Thunderbolt 3 3⨉ USB-C (5 Gb/s11) | 2⨉ Thunderbolt 5 3⨉ USB-C (10 Gb/s, 1 up 2 down) 1⨉ DisplayPort 2.1 1⨉ HDMI 2.1 | 2⨉ Thunderbolt 4 5⨉ USB-C (10 Gb/s, 1 up 4 down) 1⨉ Mini DisplayPort 2.? 1⨉ HDMI 2.? 1⨉ 2.5 Gb Ethernet (RJ45) | 2⨉ Thunderbolt 4 3⨉ USB-C (5 Gb/s, 1 up 2 down) 1x USB-C signal switch (for KVM) 1⨉ HDMI 2.1 1⨉ 3.5mm stereo audio (out) | 3⨉ USB-C (1 up 2 down) 1⨉ DisplayPort 2.1 2⨉ HDMI 2.1 1⨉ 3.5mm stereo audio (out) |
| Built-in KVM | No | No12 | Yes | Yes | No |
| Dimensions (excluding stand) | 41.2 ⨉ 71.8 ⨉ 2.7 cm | 41 ⨉ 72 ⨉ 2.56 cm | 49cm ⨉ 71cm ⨉ 6.6 cm | 41.97 ⨉ 71.42 ⨉ 4.69 cm | 41.5 ⨉ 71.2 ⨉ 2.5 cm |
| Naive volume13 (excluding stand) | 7,987 cm³ | 7,559 cm³ | 23,069 cm³ | 14,058 cm³ | 7,387 cm³ |
| Weight w/ stand | 11.8 kg | 9.48 kg | 13.29 kg | 9.3 kg | ? |
| Weight w/o stand | 7.48 kg | 5.99 kg | 8.62 kg | 6.3 kg | 7.5 kg |
| Price w/o stand | $4,999 US | N/A | N/A | N/A | $1,799 US |
| Price w/ stand | $5,999 US | $1,999 US | $2,350 US | $1,299 US | $1,898 US |
| Introduced | December 2019 | October 2025 | May 2023 | August 2025 | July 2025? |
| Discontinued | March 2026 | – | – | – | – |
⚠️ Note on Kuycon: I added the G32P after Kevin Yank suggested it. It’s a Chinese brand, which I would normally ignore for numerous reasons, but they actually have a functioning, well-designed English website, with a real working order system. So you can actually buy one in the western world. But be careful, nonetheless – there are plenty of anecdotes online about their non-existent customer support. Also, I’m not sure it’s worth a mere $100, vs the LG, to take the risk – and lose Thunderbolt 5 & KVM functionality – unless you really want a display that shamelessly rips off the appearance of the Pro Display XDR (but without any of the actual benefits, like HDR support and higher contrast ratio).
Also, there is a G32X which is similar but inferior – it has a lower contrast ratio and only 8-bit depth.
- Apple don’t appear to have ever published a brightness spec for the original Retina iMac, but Tom’s Guide measured their review model at 382 lumens.
The comparison to the original Retina iMac is apt because it was the first of the retina [desktop] displays, of which these 6k displays are all members. It also had the exact same pixel density – 218 PPI – as the Apple and Asus displays – i.e. each individual pixel is the exact same size – so it’s a very fair point of comparison despite the overall differences in resolution. ↩︎ - Speculation is that the Asus uses an AUO panel (the same one that’s popular with Chinese display manufacturers, because it’s very cheap). I wouldn’t normally give this much weight, except it is interesting that both the Asus and the Chinese displays are frequently reported as making an annoying whining noise at certain brightness levels, and have identical panel specifications, and were released at similar times (notably, many years after the Pro Display XDR). ↩︎
- This is what LG states in the monitor’s specifications. Yet, LG also states that this monitor is DisplayHDR 600 certified, which means it’s required to have a static contrast ratio of at least 8,000 : 1. ↩︎
- As with the LG, Dell states a 2,000 : 1 contrast ratio even though DisplayHDR 600 conformance requires at least 8,000 : 1. ↩︎
- Asus states a 1,500 : 1 contrast ratio even though DisplayHDR 600 conformance requires at least 8,000 : 1. Though they also describe the 1,500 : 1 as “typical” while also listing 3,000 : 1 as the maximum. ↩︎
- LG says “typical” brightness is 450, with minimum being 360, without explaining the difference – e.g. whether that’s for a white patch vs full-screen white, or perhaps depending on ambient temperature. I’m choosing to be generous and assume it’s merely a temperature thing, and not likely to be a concern in a typical indoor environment, because 360 is ridiculously dim. ↩︎
- LG don’t explicitly state this, but it’s a requirement of the DisplayHDR 600 conformance. ↩︎
- Dell don’t explicitly state this, but it’s a requirement of the DisplayHDR 600 conformance. ↩︎
- Asus don’t explicitly state this, but it’s a requirement of the DisplayHDR 600 conformance. ↩︎
- Apple don’t state the actual coverage – just vaguely reference the various colour gamut standards – so these are the figures as actually tested by PCMag. ↩︎
- Only when used with Macs which support DSC (Display Stream Compression), otherwise the USB-C ports are limited to USB 2.0 (400 Mb/s). ↩︎
- The tech specs claim it has a built-in KVM, but there’s no mention of that anywhere else in the marketing materials nor the user manual. It does have a USB hub, which you can manually switch between the Thunderbolt or USB upstream ports by diving into the on-screen display, but there’s no apparent support for (a) doing this automatically when the input source changes nor (b) switching input sources & USB routing via keypress. ↩︎
- Meaning the simple product of the three maximal dimensions. Some of these displays have curved backs, so their actual volume will be substantially less. ↩︎


@everything there are a few others listed here, but seems like the same panels.
I bought the Asus 6K in August and love it. Great value if you care about getting the most pixels/$ with decent color and don't care about other stuff nearly as much. Biggest downside is a faint electrical coil whine that I can only hear if the room is very quiet, but that might be a bigger downside to some.
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Kuycon G32P?
Yeah, fair suggestion – I’ve added it to the table.
You can see all the panels ever made, and filter by size and those still in production, at https://panelook.com
I’ve used this in the past to find certain 480p IPS LCD panels, and then track down EDTVs with those in: https://blog.gingerbeardman.com/2021/05/06/pixel-perfect-retro-gaming-in-480p/