Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: The Big-Screen TV That Makes Guests Google Its Price
Two months, one World Cup cycle, a dozen Premier League matches (only to find out that Arsenal is going to win it), a Stranger Things binge, and more IPL evenings than I can count. The Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 has been the constant backdrop to all of it, and not once did it give me a reason to complain.
At Rs 69,999, it is the kind of TV that makes guests do a double-take and quietly pull out their phones to Google the price, because nothing about the way it looks suggests it costs less than seventy thousand rupees. Every single person who walked into my living room guessed higher. Not one believed me when I told them the actual number. But here is the thing: a 75-inch QLED at this price does not come without trade-offs, and whether those trade-offs matter to you depends entirely on how you watch TV. I have spent the last two months finding out exactly where this panel earns its keep and where it asks you to look the other way.

Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: Two-Minute Review
I have been using the Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 for about two months now. IPL, Premier League, Stranger Things, WonderMan, Muthu Alias Kaattaan - this TV has handled everything I have thrown at it without breaking a sweat. No crashes, no lag, no signs of ageing. At Rs 69,999, what you are really buying here is screen size that most people do not associate with this price. Every guest who walked into my living room guessed the price to be above Rs 1,00,000. Not one person believed me when I told them it costs less than 70K.
The catch? Panel quality. There is visible clouding in dark scenes and some banding in whites that you would never see on a premium Samsung or Sony. But honestly, if you are not pixel-peeping or comparing side-by-side with a TV twice the price, you will not lose sleep over it. PatchWall plus Google TV remains the best software combo on any Indian TV, the 34W speakers are better than they have any right to be at this price, and the sheer size of a 75-inch screen changes how you watch content. Period. The market that was making space for 65-inchers is now wide open for 75-inch, and this TV is the clearest proof of that shift
Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: Design and Build
If you have seen the 65-inch Xiaomi X Pro QLED, you already know what this looks like. Same design language, same brushed metal chin, same near-invisible bezels. Xiaomi claims 97.76 percent screen-to-body ratio and it genuinely feels like a wall of display. From the front, this TV has no business looking this good at this price.
The back is matte plastic - functional, not fancy. Wall-mount it and you will never care. Keep it on a tabletop stand and... well, still nobody looks at the back of a TV. Speaking of tabletop: please wall-mount this thing. At 75 inches, one accidental nudge from a kid or an overenthusiastic guest and you will have a very expensive, very sad evening.
The remote is the same Bluetooth unit from the 65-inch model. Hotkeys for Netflix, Prime, Disney+ Hotstar, YouTube. Google Assistant voice button. Clean layout, comfortable grip. Nothing to complain about, nothing new to celebrate. It just works.
Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: Display
This is where the TV gives you the most and also asks for the most forgiveness.
Colours are vibrant and punchy - QLED with 94 percent DCI-P3 coverage and 1.07 billion colours means HDR content on Netflix, JioCinema, and Apple TV+ looks genuinely impressive. Dolby Vision and HDR10+ both work well. Filmmaker Mode is there for the purists. At 75 inches, the immersion during live sports is on a completely different level. Watching IPL on this panel versus the 65-inch felt like upgrading seats at a stadium - you notice the pitch graphics, the crowd movement, boundary rope details you would miss on a smaller screen. Football felt the same way. Once you get used to 75 inches, going back to 55 or even 65 feels like a downgrade.
Now, the trade-off. There is visible clouding in dark scenes, especially with letterboxed content. White uniformity is not perfect either - some banding shows up during bright, flat scenes. No local dimming, no zone-based backlight control, edge-lit panel. If you have spent time with a Samsung QN90 or an LG C-series, you will notice. If your last TV was a Rs 30,000 LED from two years ago, you probably will not.
The refresh rate is native 60Hz with DLG simulating 120Hz. MEMC is available. For sports, the DLG mode does help with motion clarity during fast pans. For movies and series, I kept MEMC off because the soap opera effect ruins everything. This is not true 120Hz and you should not buy it expecting that.
Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: Sound Quality
The 34W speaker system is an upgrade over the smaller X Pro models and it shows. Dialogue comes through clean - commentary during cricket, conversations in Stranger Things, Tamil dialogue in Muthu Alias Kaattaan - all crisp and well separated from background music. For a built-in TV speaker, that is better than what most brands deliver at this size.
Soundstage is wider than expected. The speakers fill a medium-to-large living room without making you immediately want to buy a soundbar. Xiaomi's sound tuning adjusts based on content type and it does a decent job most of the time.
Bass is where it falls short. Action sequences, crowd roars during a six, bass-heavy music - all sound thin. There is no subwoofer and you feel that absence. If bass matters to you, budget for a soundbar. Also worth noting: no native Dolby Atmos decoding. You get Dolby Atmos passthrough via eARC, so a compatible soundbar will handle spatial audio. The built-in speakers will not.
Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: Features
PatchWall plus Google TV. This combination is the best smart TV software experience you can get in India right now, and I will keep saying this until someone actually builds something better.
Google TV on Android 14 handles the basics - Play Store, Chromecast, AirPlay 2, Miracast, Google Assistant. PatchWall adds the layer that makes the daily experience smooth: universal search across 30-plus OTT platforms, over 200 live TV channels through Xiaomi TV+, a sports hub, curated content collections, Kids Mode with parental controls, and Language Universe for multilingual households. You search for a movie and PatchWall tells you which platform has it, whether it is free or paid. That alone saves you the frustration of opening four apps just to find where something is streaming.
Google Assistant on the remote is responsive. Hindi and English both work without issues. App load times are fine - Netflix and YouTube open in two to three seconds, Prime Video takes a beat longer. In two months, not a single crash or forced restart.
The 32GB storage is adequate. The 2GB RAM is the spec I wish Xiaomi had bumped to 3GB. The TV runs smooth today, but this is a four-to-five year purchase and future app updates will get heavier. It is the one spec that could age this TV faster than it should.
Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: Performance
The Cortex-A55 quad-core with Mali-G52 GPU handles daily tasks without drama. Menus are smooth, app switching is lag-free, 4K decoding works as expected. Nothing exciting, nothing broken.
For gaming, there is ALLM, a 120Hz Game Booster mode, and MEMC. Plug in a PS5 or Xbox Series X and the TV switches to Game mode automatically. The DLG 120Hz gives a smoother feel compared to native 60Hz. But there is no VRR, no true 120Hz, and no HDMI 2.1 bandwidth for 4K at 120fps. If gaming is your primary use case, look elsewhere. If it is a secondary thing alongside movies and sports, the setup here works fine.
Ports: 3x HDMI (one eARC), 2x USB 2.0, Ethernet, optical, AV, antenna, 3.5mm jack. Dual-band Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. Nothing missing for a typical living room
Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: Value for Money
Let's take a look at the competition in the same price range:
TCL 75T6C QLED (Rs 69,990): Closest rival. Similar QLED panel, Dolby Vision, HDR10+, 30W speakers with Dolby Atmos. Slightly better peak brightness and gaming mode, but PatchWall's content aggregation and live TV give Xiaomi the edge in everyday usability.
Hisense E7Q 75 (Rs 69,999): Better for gamers - VRR and ALLM support out of the box. Runs VIDAA OS though, which is fast but has fewer apps than Google TV. After-sales in India remains a coin toss depending on your city.
TCL 75Q6C QD-Mini LED (under Rs 1 lakh during sales): Objectively superior hardware - local dimming, 144Hz panel, HDMI 2.1, 40W Dolby Atmos audio. If you can stretch your budget or catch a sale, this is the better buy for movie buffs and gamers.
Vu GloLED 75 (Rs 79,990 approx): Much louder speakers (88W), great for sports without a soundbar. But panel tuning and software polish trail the Xiaomi by a noticeable margin.
Who Should Buy It
- You want a 75-inch TV under Rs 70,000 and screen size is your top priority
- Your household watches a mix of OTT, live sports, YouTube, and regional content
- You care about smart TV software and want PatchWall plus Google TV
- You want a TV that looks and feels more expensive than what you paid
- Your living room has 8 to 12 feet of viewing distance and wall space for 167cm of TV
Who Should Skip It
- You need true 120Hz, VRR, and HDMI 2.1 for serious gaming
- Perfect blacks and zero clouding are non-negotiable for you
- Your budget can stretch to Rs 1 lakh where Mini LED options exist
- You sit closer than 7 feet - 75 inches gets overwhelming and panel flaws become more visible
Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 Review: Verdict
The Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 is not flawless. The panel has clouding, the blacks are not deep enough, the bass is thin, and 2GB RAM in 2026 is cutting it close. All of that is true.
But here is what is also true: at Rs 69,999, no other TV in India gives you this size, this software, and this overall experience. Every person I showed this TV to guessed the price wrong - and not by a small margin. It looks like a lakh-plus TV. It performs like one too, for the kind of content most Indian households actually watch.
After two months with it, I have not wished I had spent more. The 75-inch screen changes how you watch everything - cricket feels like a stadium, movies feel like a theatre, and even YouTube cooking videos feel more immersive than they have any right to. If you have the wall space and a broadband connection, this is the big-screen TV to beat under Rs 70,000.
| Attributes | Notes | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| Design and Build | Familiar design, but still a looker | 4/5 |
| Display | 75-inches of goodness | 4/5 |
| Sound Quality | 34W speaker system for a movie night | 3/5 |
| Features | Runs Patchwall and Google TV | 4.5/5 |
| Performance | Not just for movie watching | 3.4/5 |
| Value for Money | 4.5/5 |


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