Technology
Samsung TV upgrade program lets you upgrade every two years
Samsung
- Samsung has a TV upgrade program that lets you get a new
model every 24 months. - When you upgrade as part of this program, you get up to 33%
of the cost of the original TV you bought credited towards the
cost of the new TV you choose. - You also get to keep the TVs you buy under the program, so
you can sell them to help cover the cost of the new ones, if you
like. - It’s tough to recommend anyone upgrade TVs every two years —
even with the credit you’d get — because TV updates aren’t really
substantial.
Samsung has a TV
upgrade program that lets you upgrade to a new model every
two years.
It’s a similar upgrade program you might find for smartphones,
except now applied to TVs. Unlike some smartphone upgrade
programs, you get to keep the old TV when you use the program to
get a new one.
When you buy a Samsung TV under the program, you’ll sign up for a
36-month payment contract. After two years, or 24 months, you’ll
be able to buy a newer model and receive a credit in the amount
of the remaining balance that you can apply to your new TV. At 24
months, that remaining balance accounts for 33% of the cost of
the original TV you bought.
If you upgrade later than 24 months, the remaining balance that
can go towards a newer model will be lower. So it’s best to
upgrade as soon as you can if the program tempts you to get the
most from Samsung’s program.
You can’t just buy any Samsung TV you want to enter the program,
nor can you upgrade to any TV you want, either. You’ll have to
start with an eligible TV model, including any of Samsung’s Frame
series, or the QLED TVs that are 55 inches or larger.
As for TVs to which you can upgrade, you’ll be able to search for
eligible models while shopping on the Samsung TV website. They’ll
have a Samsung Upgrade icon to indicate if its eligible under the
upgrade program.
Samsung
Is it a good deal?
It’s hard for me to say that its worth upgrading TVs every two
years, as each successive update isn’t super different from the
generation prior. I also have never met anyone who usually
updates their TVs every two years.
With that said, I’m sure there are people who do upgrade TVs
every two years. For those people, Samsung’s TV upgrade program
makes the most sense, as they’d save up to 33% on each new TV
they upgrade to every two-year periods. However, I’d imagine
those who usually buy new TVs every two years probably don’t need
the discounts.
Samsung
Otherwise, if you’re the kind of person who upgrades TVs when
there’s a significant reason for it, like jumping from an older
1080p TV to a 4K HDR model, Samsung’s TV upgrade program doesn’t
really make much sense.
Sure, it would be nice to get a new TV every two years, but you’d
be spending more than you might otherwise on one of Samsung’s
highest-end models, and you wouldn’t really be getting much of a
benefit.
As I mentioned earlier, TV updates are pretty minimal, even every
two years. You’d be getting 4K TVs every couple of years with
only slight — if imperceptible — improvements. That will probably
be the case until something new arrives, like 8K resolution. And
even then, it would take a few years for there to be 8K content
to watch on your new TV, much as happened with the current 4K
standard.
The fact that you can keep all the TVs you purchase under the
program does sweeten this deal. You can do whatever you want with
the older TV models from the program, like selling them and using
the money to help cover the cost of the next TV. Unfortunately,
Samsung doesn’t have a program that lets you exchange your old TV
for credit that can go towards the cost of a new TV. That’s fine,
though, as you’d probably get more money from selling your old TV
on Craigslist or elsewhere, anyway.
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