Price Comparison

Gaming Monitor Prices Compared

Cheapzix Editorial · Reviewed · Affiliate disclosure

A 1440p 165Hz gaming monitor costs $250–$400; premium 4K 144Hz OLED monitors run $700–$1,200. Amazon, Newegg, and Best Buy offer frequent sales, with the biggest discounts during Prime Day and Black Friday.

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Current Gaming Monitor Prices
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About our pricing: Cheapzix compares retailer listings when available. We include Amazon (which Google Shopping leaves out), Best Buy, Walmart, Target and more. Prices and availability can change by retailer. Read our affiliate disclosure. Always verify details on the retailer site before buying.

About Gaming Monitor

Popular models: LG 27GP850-B ($299, 27-inch 1440p 165Hz), Asus ROG Swift PG27AQN ($799, 27-inch 1440p 360Hz), Samsung Odyssey G7 ($399, 32-inch 1440p), and LG 27GR95QE-B ($699, OLED).

Best deal: The LG 27GP850-B ($249–$299 at Amazon) is the most-recommended 1440p gaming monitor under $300 — Nano IPS panel, 165Hz, 1ms response, and G-Sync Compatible.

Premium pick: The LG 27GR95QE-B OLED ($599–$699) delivers perfect blacks, 240Hz, and 0.03ms response — currently the best 1440p gaming panel for competitive and immersive gaming.

How to choose: Match the panel to your GPU and the games you play. For fast competitive shooters, prioritise refresh rate — 144Hz is the practical floor, 165–240Hz is the enthusiast range, and you need a capable graphics card to feed those frames. For single-player and story games, resolution and contrast matter more: 1440p at 27 inches is the value sweet spot, while 4K at 32 inches suits a desk you sit a little further back from. IPS panels give the best colour and viewing angles, VA delivers deeper contrast for dark scenes, and OLED leads on response time and black levels at a higher price.

When prices drop: Gaming monitors see their steepest cuts during Prime Day, back-to-school, and Black Friday, and older panels fall further whenever a brand refreshes its line-up. If you are building a full setup, it is worth weighing a gaming laptop against a desktop-plus-monitor combo, and checking Nvidia GPU prices so your card can actually drive the resolution and refresh rate you are paying for.

Where to Buy Gaming Monitor

Gaming monitors are sold at Amazon, Newegg, Best Buy, B&H Photo, and Costco, and pricing on the same model frequently differs between them. The comparison above covers the major retailers so you can review options before buying. For the full desk, see our laptops & monitors hub.

Frequently Asked Questions

1080p vs 1440p monitor — which should I choose for gaming?
1440p at 27 inches is the current sweet spot — sharper than 1080p without the GPU demand of 4K; most mid-range GPUs (RTX 4060/4070) handle it at high refresh rates.
What refresh rate do I need for gaming?
144Hz is the minimum for smooth competitive gaming; 165–240Hz is the enthusiast standard; 60Hz is acceptable for story games but noticeably choppy in fast action.
Is IPS, VA, or OLED better for gaming?
IPS offers the best color and viewing angles; VA has better contrast for dark scenes; OLED has infinite contrast and the fastest response time but costs more.
Do I need G-Sync or FreeSync?
Yes — variable refresh rate (VRR) eliminates screen tearing and stuttering. Nvidia GPU owners need G-Sync or G-Sync Compatible; AMD users need FreeSync.

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