Best LED TV in Pakistan: A Comprehensive Guide for 2026
The right LED TV in Pakistan does five jobs at once: deliver a picture good enough for cricket matches without making you squint, run Netflix and YouTube natively without a separate Fire Stick, survive WAPDA’s voltage spikes for at least 5 years, fit your drawing room without overwhelming it, and not break the EMI budget. We compared all 110 LED TVs currently in stock — TCL, Samsung, LG, Haier, Dawlance, EcoStar, Orient, Hisense, Skyworth, Xiaomi — across every size from 32 inches to 85 inches, and ranked the 10 worth your money in 2026.
Top 10 LED TVs compared at a glance
Prices below are pulled live from our catalogue — they update daily, so what you see is what you’ll pay today.
| Product | Price (Today) | Size | Resolution | OS | EMI from | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TCL 55T6D 4K QLED Google TV - 55 Inch - Dolby Audio - Dolby Vision - HDR10+
|
₨136,700 | 55 inch | 4K Ultra HD (3840x2160) | Google TV | Rs. 11,392/mo | Buy Now |
TCL 32 Inch HD LED TV 32D3400
|
₨40,000 | 32 inch | HD (1366x768) | Non-Android TV | Rs. 3,334/mo | Buy Now |
Dawlance 32 Inch Google LED TV (Kore Series)
|
₨44,500 | 32 inch | HD (1366x768) | Google TV | Rs. 3,709/mo | Buy Now |
Haier 43-inch H43K6FG Smart Bezel-less LED TV (Voice Control)
|
₨82,900 | 43 inch | Full HD (1920x1080) | Android TV | Rs. 6,909/mo | Buy Now |
EcoStar 50 Inch QLED 4K Smart Google TV CX-50Q966
|
₨106,800 | 50 inch | 4K Ultra HD (3840x2160) | Google TV | Rs. 8,900/mo | Buy Now |
TCL 65T6D 4K QLED Google TV - 65 Inch - Dolby Audio - Dolby Vision - HDR10+
|
₨200,400 | 65 inch | 4K Ultra HD (3840x2160) | Google TV | Rs. 16,700/mo | View |
Samsung 55 Inch 4K Smart LED TV UA55U8000FUSMM (OTS Lite, HDR10+, Game Mode)
|
₨152,000 | 55 inch | 4K Ultra HD (3840x2160) | Non-Android TV | Rs. 12,667/mo | Buy Now |
LG 55NANO80ASA 55 Inch 4K Smart LED TV - NanoCell - Filmmaker Mode
|
₨190,000 | 55 inch | 4K Ultra HD (3840x2160) | Non-Android TV | Rs. 15,834/mo | Buy Now |
TCL 55P8L QD-MiniLED Google TV - 55 Inch - Dolby Vision - Onkyo 2.1 Hi-Fi
|
₨184,200 | 55 inch | 4K Ultra HD (3840x2160) | Google TV | Rs. 15,350/mo | Buy Now |
|
|
₨430,000 | 75 inch | 4K Ultra HD (3840x2160) | Non-Android TV | Rs. 35,834/mo | Buy Now |
How to choose an LED TV in Pakistan: 7 things that actually matter
Specifications sheets are designed to confuse, not inform. Here’s what specifically matters for Pakistani homes in 2026 — what to focus on, what to ignore, and where brands try to upsell you.
1. Screen size — measure your room first, then shop
The single most common buying mistake: getting whatever’s on sale, then realising it’s too small (or too big) once installed. The correct approach is to measure the viewing distance from your sofa to where the TV will sit, then size accordingly:
- Viewing distance under 7 ft (bedrooms, hostel rooms, small kitchens) → 32–40 inch
- 7–9 ft (typical Pakistani bedroom or small living room) → 43–50 inch
- 9–11 ft (standard drawing room) → 55–65 inch (the sweet spot for most Pakistani homes)
- 11–14 ft (large drawing room or family hall) → 65–75 inch
- 14+ ft (commercial space, very large halls) → 75–85 inch
An oversized TV at close range causes eye strain — you’ll find yourself unconsciously moving back, or just watching less. An undersized TV at long range means you can’t read subtitles or see fine details. Get this right.
2. Resolution: when 4K actually matters, when it doesn’t
Three resolutions you’ll see on sale in Pakistan:
- HD (1366×768) — fine for 32-inch and smaller, especially for cable/PEMRA channels which are SD anyway. Don’t pay premium for “HD” on a small TV.
- Full HD (1920×1080) — the right baseline for 40–43 inch sets. Netflix and YouTube look noticeably better than HD; cable TV looks the same.
- 4K Ultra HD (3840×2160) — essential for any TV 50 inches or larger, because at that size the pixels of lower-resolution content become visible. Above 50 inches, Full HD looks soft and blurry up close.
What 4K actually buys you in Pakistan: better Netflix, YouTube, and Disney+ streaming quality, plus PS5 / Xbox Series gaming. What it does NOT improve: PEMRA cable TV channels (still SD), regular cable boxes, and most DVDs. If most of your viewing is cable TV via set-top box, the 4K premium delivers less than the marketing suggests.
3. Smart TV operating system — this matters more than the panel
A “Smart TV” means it has a built-in operating system to run apps. Four systems you’ll see in 2026:
- Google TV (newest, best content discovery) — Netflix, YouTube, Disney+, Hulu, Prime Video, Tapmad all native. Recommended by Google’s apps team. The best choice for most buyers.
- Android TV (older Google) — same app store as Google TV but worse interface. Still good. Most apps available.
- Samsung Tizen (Samsung’s own OS) — fast, smooth, all major apps native. Samsung’s UA models. 7-year OS upgrade promise on newer models is unmatched.
- LG WebOS (LG’s own OS) — fast, smooth, all major apps. Comparable to Tizen.
What to avoid: “Non-smart” TVs that require you to buy a separate Fire Stick or Android Box (Rs. 5,000–15,000 extra) to get streaming. The smart TV premium over a non-smart equivalent is typically Rs. 6,000–10,000 — same money you’d spend on the external box, but cleaner setup and one less remote.
4. QLED vs LED vs Mini-LED vs OLED — what’s the difference?
The panel technology determines picture quality. Four terms you’ll encounter, simplest to most advanced:
- LED (basic) — standard LCD panel backlit by LEDs. Good enough for most viewing. Cheapest.
- QLED (better colours) — LED panel with a quantum-dot layer for richer, more accurate colours. Worth the small premium. Most of our top picks use QLED.
- Mini-LED (better contrast) — backlit with thousands of tiny LEDs that turn off in dark zones, giving deeper blacks. Significantly better picture quality. Premium pricing.
- OLED (best picture, premium) — each pixel emits its own light, giving perfect blacks. Best picture quality available, but typically Rs. 400,000+ and not widely available in our catalogue.
For most Pakistani buyers, QLED is the right sweet spot — meaningful upgrade over basic LED at a small price premium. Mini-LED is worth it if you watch a lot of dark-scene content (films, premier streaming originals) and have the budget.
5. HDR — the format wars you can mostly ignore
HDR (High Dynamic Range) means brighter highlights and deeper shadows. You’ll see HDR10, HDR10+, Dolby Vision, HLG marketed on TVs. The honest truth: HDR10 is the universal baseline — every modern TV supports it, all 4K Netflix/YouTube content uses it. HDR10+ and Dolby Vision are marginal improvements that 95% of viewers can’t reliably distinguish without a side-by-side comparison. Don’t pay a large premium just for Dolby Vision support unless you’re a cinephile.
6. Refresh rate — 60Hz is fine for almost everyone
Refresh rate is how many times per second the screen updates. 60Hz is standard and adequate for movies, shows, cricket, and casual gaming. 120Hz matters only for PS5/Xbox Series at 120fps mode and competitive PC gaming via HDMI 2.1. If you’re not a gamer, ignore refresh rate above 60Hz — it’s a feature you’ll pay for and never use.
7. Voltage protection — the silent feature that prevents disasters
Pakistani voltage routinely swings between 180V and 240V during summer peak load. LED TVs are sensitive electronics — a single bad voltage spike can blow the power board, costing Rs. 8,000–25,000 to repair. Look for “voltage protection” or “auto voltage range” in specifications (some Samsung and LG models advertise this explicitly). Regardless of the TV’s built-in protection, pair every TV over Rs. 50,000 with a UPS or voltage stabilizer (Rs. 4,000–8,000) — it’s the cheapest insurance you’ll ever buy for a six-figure appliance.
Our top 10 LED TVs in Pakistan, reviewed
Every model below is in stock at AYS Online, comes with the official manufacturer warranty, and is available on 0% down payment EMI through Bank Alfalah, JS Bank, and MCB credit and debit cards.
TCL 55T6D 4K QLED Google TV - 55 Inch - Dolby Audio - Dolby Vision - HDR10+
₨136,700
or Rs. 11,392/mo on EMI
The TCL 55T6D is the LED TV we recommend when budget meets sensible requirements. TCL has spent the last five years quietly overtaking established brands on value — they manufacture their own panels (most other brands buy from LG Display or Samsung Display), which lets them sell QLED at the price of basic LED elsewhere. At Rs. 136,700 you get a 55-inch 4K QLED panel with native Google TV (Netflix, YouTube, Disney+, Hulu, Tapmad all pre-installed), Dolby Vision HDR, Dolby Audio sound, and the kind of bezel-less design that looks expensive in a drawing room photo. It’s not the flashiest brand name and won’t impress your neighbour like a Samsung might — but for actual picture-quality-per-rupee, nothing else at this price comes close.
Not every Pakistani household needs a Rs. 130,000+ drawing room TV. For bedrooms, hostels, servant quarters, kitchen counters, or any “second TV” use, the TCL 32D3400 is the right answer. At Rs. 40,000 it’s the cheapest brand-name 32-inch TV worth buying — below this price you’re into unknown Chinese brands with no service network. It’s not “smart” (you’d need a separate Fire Stick for streaming) but for a bedroom TV used mainly for cable channels and casual viewing, that’s fine.
Two years ago, Google TV at 32-inch was Rs. 70,000+. The Dawlance Kore Series changed that. At Rs. 44,500 you get a real Google TV experience in a 32-inch form factor — Netflix, YouTube, Disney+, Hulu all pre-installed, voice search via Google Assistant, and Dawlance’s reliability and service network behind it. For bedrooms, parents’ rooms, or anyone who wants modern streaming without paying for screen size they don’t need, this is the smart buy.
For a medium-sized bedroom or a small drawing room, 43-inch is the right size — large enough to feel like a “real TV” without dominating the wall. The Haier H43K6FG is the pick here. Bezel-less design (the screen extends almost to the edge with minimal black border), voice control built into the remote, Android TV with all the apps you’ll actually use, and Haier’s growing Pakistani service network. At Rs. 82,900 it sits between the basic 43-inch options (around Rs. 60K) and the premium ones (Rs. 95K+), hitting the right value point for most upgraders.
EcoStar is one of Pakistan’s local TV brands — they assemble locally with imported panels, which lets them undercut imported brands by 15–25% at equivalent specs. The EcoStar CX-50Q966 shows what that pricing advantage delivers: a 50-inch 4K QLED Google TV for Rs. 106,800, roughly Rs. 20,000–30,000 cheaper than comparable specs from Samsung or LG. The trade-off is brand resale value (EcoStar resells for less than Samsung) and slightly less polished software, but for buyers prioritising specs-per-rupee in the 50-inch tier, this is the smart pick.
For drawing rooms with 11–14 feet viewing distance, 55 inches starts to feel small and 75 inches feels excessive. 65-inch is the right size — and the TCL 65T6D is the same proven platform as our #1 pick, just scaled up. QLED panel, Google TV, Dolby Vision, Dolby Audio. At Rs. 200,400 it’s Rs. 60,000+ cheaper than equivalent specs in 65-inch Samsung or LG. For buyers who want big-screen impact without premium-brand pricing, this is the call.
Samsung is what most Pakistani buyers actually want when they shop for a TV — the brand recognition is unmatched, the resale value holds, and the build quality genuinely is excellent. The UA55U8000FUSMM brings Samsung’s panel and electronics together (some Samsung models use third-party panels — this one doesn’t) with HDR10+, Game Mode for PS5/Xbox owners, and Object Tracking Sound Lite (the audio follows the action on screen). The 7-year OS upgrade promise on newer Samsung TVs is unmatched in the industry — verify current terms on the product page. At Rs. 152,000 it’s Rs. 20K more than the TCL #1 pick — money you’re paying for brand and ecosystem, not just specs.
If Samsung is the most aspirational brand, LG is the runner-up — and for cinephiles, often the first choice. The LG 55NANO80ASA uses LG’s NanoCell technology (a step up from basic LED, comparable to QLED in colour accuracy) and runs LG’s WebOS, which most reviewers consider the smoothest smart TV interface available. Filmmaker Mode is a deeper feature than most realise — it disables motion smoothing and turns off picture “enhancements” to display the content exactly as the director graded it. For serious movie watchers, this matters. At Rs. 190,000 it’s premium territory, but justified for buyers who prioritise colour accuracy and interface quality.
Mini-LED is the technology gap between QLED and OLED. By using thousands of tiny LEDs (instead of a single backlight) the TV can turn off LEDs behind dark scenes, producing the deep blacks that OLED is famous for — at a fraction of the OLED price. The TCL 55P8L adds Onkyo 2.1 Hi-Fi speakers built into the TV (Onkyo is a respected audio brand — most TV speakers are afterthoughts, these are deliberately tuned). At Rs. 184,200 it costs less than the premium Samsung/LG picks but delivers technology one generation ahead. For tech enthusiasts and home-cinema buyers, this is the smartest pick on the list.
For new homes, large drawing rooms, or anyone for whom the TV is the centrepiece of the room, the Samsung QA75Q7FAAUSMM at 75 inches is the statement pick. Samsung’s QLED panel technology, the brand’s signature build quality, and a 7-year OS upgrade promise (verify on the product page) means this TV stays current with new app versions and streaming features for nearly a decade. At Rs. 430,000 this is premium territory — but for buyers in this segment, the brand and longevity guarantee justify the price.
Best LED TV by use case
| If you need… | Buy this | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Best overall, drawing room | TCL 55T6D 4K QLED Google TV | Rs. 136,700 |
| Cheapest brand-name TV | TCL 32D3400 HD (32 inch) | Rs. 40,000 |
| Cheapest smart TV | Dawlance Kore 32 Inch Google TV | Rs. 44,500 |
| Medium bedroom / small living | Haier H43K6FG 43″ Bezel-less | Rs. 82,900 |
| Best 50-inch (mid-range) | EcoStar 50″ QLED Google TV | Rs. 106,800 |
| Large drawing room | TCL 65T6D 4K QLED Google TV | Rs. 200,400 |
| Premium Samsung 55″ | Samsung UA55U8000FUSMM | Rs. 152,000 |
| Premium LG (cinephiles) | LG 55NANO80ASA NanoCell | Rs. 190,000 |
| Cutting-edge Mini-LED | TCL 55P8L QD-MiniLED | Rs. 184,200 |
| Statement piece (75-inch) | Samsung QA75Q7FAAUSMM | Rs. 430,000 |
What screen size do you need for your room?
Use this table to size correctly. Measure from your sofa to where the TV will sit, then match.
| Viewing distance | Screen size | Resolution | Recommended model |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 7 ft (bedroom, kitchen) | 32 inch | HD or Full HD | TCL 32D3400 / Dawlance Kore 32 |
| 7–9 ft (medium bedroom) | 43 inch | Full HD or 4K | Haier H43K6FG |
| 8–10 ft (small living) | 50 inch | 4K Ultra HD | EcoStar CX-50Q966 |
| 9–11 ft (standard drawing room) | 55 inch | 4K Ultra HD | TCL 55T6D / Samsung UA55U8000FUSMM |
| 11–14 ft (large drawing room) | 65 inch | 4K Ultra HD | TCL 65T6D |
| 14+ ft (hall / large room) | 75–85 inch | 4K Ultra HD | Samsung QA75Q7FAAUSMM |
Care, maintenance, and what kills an LED TV
LED TVs typically last 7–10 years with reasonable care. Three things kill them prematurely:
- Voltage spikes. The #1 killer of Pakistani LED TVs. A single 270V+ spike during summer can blow the power board (Rs. 8,000–25,000 to repair, often more than worth it on cheaper TVs). Pair every TV over Rs. 50,000 with a UPS or stabilizer (Rs. 4,000–8,000). It’s the cheapest insurance you’ll ever buy.
- Dust accumulation in vents. TVs need airflow to dissipate heat. Dust blocks the rear vents, the panel overheats, and the lifespan shortens significantly. Vacuum the rear vents and stand area every 2–3 months — takes 5 minutes.
- Heat and humidity. Don’t install a TV directly above a heat source (heater, radiator) or in direct sunlight. Pakistani summer humidity also affects circuit boards — if your TV’s installed area gets very humid in monsoon, an occasional fan helps.
Why buy your LED TV from AYS Online
AYS Online has been selling home appliances and electronics in Pakistan since 1956. Here’s what that 70-year track record means versus buying from a marketplace or street-side retailer:
- 100% original products with the official manufacturer’s warranty card and serial number. We don’t sell refurbished, grey-market, or imported-without-warranty stock. Every Samsung, LG, TCL we sell is a Pakistan-warranty unit, fully serviceable by the manufacturer.
- 0% down payment EMI through Bank Alfalah, JS Bank, and MCB Bank credit and debit cards — fully automated at checkout, no paperwork. Critical for the Rs. 150K+ premium tier where most buyers benefit from spreading payment over 6–12 months.
- Daily updated prices with visible 365-day price history on every product, so you can verify you’re paying fair market rate (TV prices move more than most appliances — watch for genuine sale periods).
- Free delivery in Peshawar with safe, fast shipping nationwide. TVs ship with extra protection given the fragile panel.
- Cash on Delivery available across Pakistan.
- 8 physical branches if you want to see the TV in person before buying — strongly recommended for 65-inch+ purchases where the physical scale matters more than online photos suggest.
- Installation support available on selected models — check the specific product page or contact us before purchase.
Browse our complete LED TV catalogue for all 110 models, or jump to a specific brand: Samsung, TCL, Haier, Dawlance, LG, EcoStar, Orient, Xiaomi. Or filter by screen size: 32 inch, 43 inch, 50 inch, 55 inch, 65 inch, 75 inch. Or by feature: Google TV, Android LED TV, Smart TV.
Frequently asked questions
Which is the best LED TV brand in Pakistan?
It depends on what you value. For best value-per-rupee, TCL — they manufacture their own panels and consistently undercut imported brands at equivalent specs. For brand prestige, build quality, and resale value, Samsung — still the most aspirational TV brand in Pakistan. For cinephiles and movie watchers, LG with WebOS and NanoCell. For local-brand pricing with strong service, Dawlance and EcoStar (both Pakistani). For mid-range automatics with growing reputation, Haier.
What is the price of an LED TV in Pakistan in 2026?
LED TV prices in Pakistan currently range from Rs. 35,000 to Rs. 1,110,000, with the average around Rs. 230,500. 32-inch bedrooms TVs start around Rs. 37,000–55,000. 43-inch family-room TVs are Rs. 58,000–100,000. 55-inch drawing-room TVs are Rs. 112,000–230,000. 65-inch is Rs. 173,000–300,000. 75-inch+ flagships start at Rs. 360,000 and reach Rs. 750,000+ for premium Samsung QLED.
What size TV should I buy for my room?
Measure your viewing distance — the distance from your sofa to where the TV will sit. Under 7 ft → 32 inch. 7–9 ft → 43 inch. 9–11 ft (standard Pakistani drawing room) → 55 inch. 11–14 ft (large drawing room) → 65 inch. 14+ ft → 75 inch or larger. Buying too big causes eye strain at close range; too small means you can’t see fine details.
Is 4K worth it in Pakistan?
For 50-inch and larger TVs, yes — at that size, lower-resolution content becomes visible and looks soft. For 32-inch and 40-inch TVs, 4K is overkill — HD or Full HD is fine and saves money. What 4K actually buys you: better Netflix, YouTube, Disney+, and PS5/Xbox gaming. What it does NOT improve: PEMRA cable TV channels (still broadcast in SD) and most cable set-top boxes.
What is QLED and is it worth the extra money?
QLED is an LED panel with a quantum-dot layer that produces richer, more accurate colours than basic LED. It’s not a different display technology like OLED — it’s an enhanced LED. The price premium over basic LED is typically Rs. 5,000–15,000, and for most viewers QLED is a noticeable upgrade in colour vibrancy. Worth it for any TV 43-inch or larger that will be your primary TV.
Google TV vs Android TV vs Samsung Tizen — which is best?
All three give you Netflix, YouTube, Disney+, Hulu, and major streaming apps natively. Google TV (newest) has better content discovery and the friendliest interface. Android TV (older) has the largest app library but uglier interface. Samsung Tizen is fastest and gets the longest OS update support (7 years on newer models). For most buyers, Google TV is the easiest to recommend. Samsung Tizen is the right choice if you specifically want Samsung’s ecosystem (SmartThings, Galaxy phone integration).
Do I need a Fire Stick or Android Box if I buy a smart TV?
No — a smart TV with Google TV, Android TV, Tizen, or WebOS has Netflix, YouTube, Disney+, and major streaming apps built in. The Fire Stick / Android Box use case is for upgrading old non-smart TVs to add streaming. If you’re buying a new smart TV, save the Rs. 5,000–15,000 Fire Stick budget — you don’t need it.
Will a voltage spike damage my LED TV?
Yes — voltage spikes are the #1 cause of premature LED TV failure in Pakistan. A single 270V+ spike can blow the power board (Rs. 8,000–25,000 to repair). Pair every TV over Rs. 50,000 with a UPS or voltage stabilizer (Rs. 4,000–8,000). Some Samsung and LG models advertise “auto voltage range” or “wide voltage protection” in their specs — these have some built-in protection but external stabilizer is still recommended.
How long should an LED TV last?
With proper care (voltage stabilizer, regular dust cleaning, not running for 18+ hours/day continuously), a quality LED TV from Samsung, LG, TCL, Haier, or Dawlance should last 7–10 years. Cheap unknown-brand TVs typically fail in 3–5 years. The single biggest factor isn’t the brand — it’s voltage stability. Same brand TV, one with stabilizer lasts 10 years, one without lasts 4.
Can I buy an LED TV on EMI / installments in Pakistan?
Yes — at AYS Online every LED TV is available on 0% down payment EMI through Bank Alfalah, JS Bank, and MCB Bank credit and debit cards. Installment plans range from 3 to 12 months. The EMI checkout is fully automated — no paperwork, no separate application. EMI is especially useful for the 55-inch+ tier (Rs. 130K+) where spreading payment makes the upgrade financially comfortable.
Should I buy a TV online or from a physical shop?
Both work — AYS Online has 8 physical branches plus a complete online store. For 32-inch and 43-inch TVs, online with Cash on Delivery is fine — the size differences are minor. For 65-inch and larger, we recommend visiting a branch first if possible — the physical scale of a 65 or 75-inch screen is significantly larger than online photos suggest, and many buyers underestimate the wall space needed.
What’s the difference between QLED, Mini-LED, and OLED?
QLED is an LED panel enhanced with quantum dots — better colours than basic LED at small premium. Mini-LED uses thousands of tiny LEDs that can turn off in dark areas — better contrast and deeper blacks. OLED has each pixel emit its own light — best picture quality available but typically Rs. 400,000+ and limited availability. For most Pakistani buyers, QLED is the sweet spot. Mini-LED is worth the premium for serious movie watchers. OLED is for the premium tier.
Does AYS Online deliver LED TVs nationwide?
Yes — AYS Online delivers LED TVs across Pakistan with extra packaging protection for the fragile panel. Delivery is free within Peshawar; standard rates apply elsewhere. Cash on Delivery is available nationwide. Delivery typically takes 2–4 working days. For larger TVs (55-inch and above), inspecting the panel for shipping damage before signing for receipt is recommended.
What warranty do LED TVs come with?
LED TVs sold at AYS Online come with the official manufacturer’s warranty — typically 1 year on the panel and 1 year on parts and labour. Samsung and LG offer extended warranties on certain premium models (verify on the specific product page). The warranty card with serial number is included in the box. Note: voltage damage and physical damage are generally NOT covered by warranty — pair every TV with a stabilizer.
The bottom line
If you read nothing else: the TCL 55T6D 4K QLED Google TV at Rs. 134,800 is the best overall LED TV in Pakistan for most drawing rooms in 2026. For bedrooms on a tight budget, the TCL 32D3400 at Rs. 40,000. For bedrooms that need streaming, the Dawlance Kore 32″ Google TV at Rs. 44,400. For Samsung loyalists, the UA55U8000FUSMM at Rs. 155,000. For cinephiles, the LG NanoCell 55″ at Rs. 190,000.
Every model in this guide is in stock today at AYS Online, with daily updated pricing, official manufacturer warranty, EMI from Bank Alfalah, JS Bank, and MCB, and free delivery in Peshawar. Browse all 110 LED TV models →