> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://vizio-com-setup.mintlify.site/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Vizio TV Display Settings Guide – Optimize Your Picture

> Optimize your Vizio Smart TV picture quality. Adjust picture mode, brightness, contrast, color temperature, HDR, and backlight for perfect viewing.

Your Vizio Smart TV ships with powerful picture customization tools that let you tailor the viewing experience to your room, your content, and your personal preferences. Whether you're watching a late-night film in a darkened room, playing fast-paced video games, or catching a Sunday afternoon football game in full sunlight, the right display settings make a noticeable difference. This guide walks you through every picture option available on your Vizio TV — from basic brightness and contrast adjustments to advanced HDR and local dimming controls — so you can get the most out of your screen.

<Note>
  Available settings vary by Vizio TV model and year. Premium models with Full Array LED backlights include additional local dimming and Active Pixel Tuning options not found on entry-level sets. If a setting described here does not appear on your TV, it may not be supported on your specific model.
</Note>

## How to Access Display Settings

Reaching your picture settings takes just a few seconds from any screen. You do not need to be on a specific input or app — the Settings menu is always accessible.

<Steps>
  <Step title="Press the Menu Button">
    Press the **Menu** button on your Vizio remote. This opens the main Settings panel on the right side of your screen.
  </Step>

  <Step title="Select Picture">
    Use the arrow keys to highlight **Picture**, then press **OK** to enter the Picture settings menu.
  </Step>

  <Step title="Choose a Setting to Adjust">
    Navigate to the specific setting you want — such as Picture Mode, Brightness, or Backlight — highlight it, and press **OK** or use the left/right arrows to change its value.
  </Step>

  <Step title="Exit When Finished">
    Press **Menu** or the **Back** button to exit and return to your content. Changes are saved automatically.
  </Step>
</Steps>

<Tip>
  Use **Calibrated** mode when watching in a dark or dimly lit room for the most accurate, cinema-like colors. Switch to **Standard** mode for well-lit daytime viewing where you need extra brightness to overcome ambient light.
</Tip>

***

## Picture Modes Explained

Picture modes are preset configurations that adjust multiple settings at once — brightness, contrast, color saturation, sharpness, and motion processing — to suit a particular type of content or environment. Choosing the right mode is the fastest way to dramatically improve your picture.

<CardGroup cols={2}>
  <Card title="Calibrated" icon="sliders">
    The most accurate mode for everyday viewing. Colors, contrast, and brightness are tuned to match professional display standards. Ideal for movies, TV shows, and streaming in a dark or moderately lit room. This is the mode most professional calibrators use as a starting point.
  </Card>

  <Card title="Standard" icon="tv">
    A balanced, versatile mode suited for typical daytime viewing. Slightly brighter than Calibrated to handle ambient room light. A solid default for households that watch a mix of content throughout the day.
  </Card>

  <Card title="Vivid" icon="sun">
    Cranks up brightness and color saturation for maximum visual impact. Best used in very bright showroom environments or retail demos — not recommended for home use, as it can make skin tones appear unnatural and cause eye fatigue over long sessions.
  </Card>

  <Card title="Game" icon="gamepad">
    Minimizes input lag by disabling most post-processing features. This is the mode to use whenever you connect a gaming console. Reduced lag means your controller inputs appear on screen faster, giving you a competitive edge.
  </Card>

  <Card title="Sports" icon="trophy">
    Enhances motion clarity for fast-moving content like live sports. Motion smoothing is increased to reduce blur on rapid panning shots and fast-moving players. Also boosts color vibrancy to make the green of a playing field pop.
  </Card>

  <Card title="Computer" icon="monitor">
    Optimized for use when your TV is connected to a PC or laptop. Sharpens fine text detail, reduces overscan, and disables motion smoothing that can interfere with cursor rendering. Select this mode when using your Vizio TV as a desktop display.
  </Card>
</CardGroup>

***

## Key Picture Settings

Beyond the preset modes, you can fine-tune individual picture parameters to dial in exactly the look you want. Here is what each core setting does and when to adjust it.

**Backlight** controls the brightness of the LED panel behind the screen. Increasing backlight makes the entire image brighter, which helps in well-lit rooms. Lowering it reduces eye strain in dark environments and saves energy. On Full Array LED models, backlight works in tandem with local dimming for more precise control.

**Brightness** (also called Black Level on some models) sets how dark the darkest parts of your image appear. Too low and shadow detail disappears into pure black. Too high and blacks look grayish and washed out. Adjust this so that dark scenes still show subtle detail without looking muddy.

**Contrast** (also called White Level) controls the peak brightness of the brightest parts of the image. Increasing contrast makes bright highlights pop, but pushing it too high clips detail in bright areas like clouds or lamp shades. Set it as high as possible without losing highlight detail.

**Color** (Saturation) controls the intensity of all colors. A setting of 50 is neutral. Increase it for more vivid, saturated images; decrease it if skin tones look overly pink or orange.

**Tint** adjusts the green-to-red color balance. In most cases the default value of 0 is correct. Only adjust this if skin tones appear distinctly green or red.

**Sharpness** adds artificial edge enhancement to the image. Many TVs ship with this set too high, which creates a harsh, over-processed look. For native HD and 4K content, a setting of 0 to 10 usually looks best. Higher values can help with lower-resolution content or older DVDs.

**Color Temperature** shifts the overall tone of the image between Cool (bluish), Normal, and Warm. The **Warm** setting is closest to the D65 color standard used by content creators, making it the most accurate choice for cinematic content.

***

## HDR Settings

HDR (High Dynamic Range) dramatically expands the range of brightness and color your TV can display, making highlights brighter and shadows deeper than standard dynamic range content. Your Vizio TV supports multiple HDR formats depending on the model.

**HDR10** is the baseline HDR format supported on all Vizio 4K models. It is an open standard used by most streaming services, Ultra HD Blu-ray discs, and gaming consoles. HDR10 activates automatically when your TV detects an HDR10 signal — you do not need to manually enable it in most cases.

**Dolby Vision** is a premium HDR format available on select Vizio models (look for the Dolby Vision logo on the TV's packaging or spec sheet). Dolby Vision carries dynamic metadata that adjusts HDR settings scene by scene, delivering more precise brightness and color accuracy than HDR10. Like HDR10, it activates automatically when a Dolby Vision signal is detected.

To confirm HDR is active on your display:

<Steps>
  <Step title="Play HDR Content">
    Start playing a movie or show that supports HDR10 or Dolby Vision on a compatible app such as Netflix, Disney+, or Apple TV+.
  </Step>

  <Step title="Check the Info Banner">
    Press the **Info** button on your remote. The info banner will display the current signal format, including **HDR10**, **Dolby Vision**, or **SDR**.
  </Step>

  <Step title="Verify HDR Picture Mode">
    When HDR content is detected, your TV may automatically switch to an HDR-specific picture mode. You can choose between available HDR modes (such as HDR Calibrated or HDR Vivid) from the Picture Mode menu.
  </Step>
</Steps>

***

## Advanced Picture Settings

Advanced picture settings give you granular control over motion processing, local contrast, and noise reduction. Access these through **Menu → Picture → More Picture**.

**Active Pixel Tuning** is a Vizio-exclusive technology available on select premium models. It analyzes each frame in real time and adjusts individual pixel brightness to preserve detail in both highlights and shadows simultaneously. Enable it for the most refined picture quality when watching HDR content.

**Local Dimming** (available on Full Array LED models) divides the backlight into zones that can independently brighten or dim. This allows the TV to display deep blacks next to bright highlights in the same frame. Setting local dimming to **High** delivers the strongest contrast but may cause slight blooming (light halo) around bright objects on dark backgrounds. **Low** or **Medium** reduces blooming while still improving contrast over a global backlight.

**Reduce Judder** (also called Motion Smoothing or the "soap opera effect") interpolates extra frames between the original content frames to reduce motion blur. Some viewers love the smooth look; others find it unnatural for film content. Set this to **0** for movies to preserve the original cinematic 24fps motion feel, and increase it for sports or fast-paced TV.

**Reduce Noise** applies digital filtering to reduce video noise and compression artifacts. Useful for lower-quality sources like standard-definition broadcasts or streaming at lower bitrates. Keep this at **Low** or **Off** for high-quality 4K sources to avoid softening fine detail.

**Film Mode** (also called Telecine or 3:2 Pulldown Detection) recognizes content originally shot at 24fps and applies correct motion handling. Leave this **On** for movie watching to preserve the cinematic look.

***

## Best Display Settings by Use Case

<Tabs>
  <Tab title="Movie Watching">
    For the most immersive, cinematic movie experience:

    * **Picture Mode:** Calibrated (or Calibrated Dark for very dark rooms)
    * **Backlight:** 20–40 (lower in dark rooms)
    * **Brightness:** 50 (default)
    * **Contrast:** 50 (default)
    * **Color Temperature:** Warm
    * **Reduce Judder:** 0 (off)
    * **Film Mode:** On
    * **Local Dimming:** Medium or High

    These settings preserve director-intended colors and motion, giving you the experience closest to what the filmmaker intended.
  </Tab>

  <Tab title="Gaming">
    For the lowest input lag and responsive gameplay:

    * **Picture Mode:** Game
    * **Backlight:** 60–80 (enough to see shadow areas clearly)
    * **Brightness:** 50–55
    * **Contrast:** 50
    * **Reduce Judder:** Off (disabled automatically in Game mode)
    * **Local Dimming:** Low or Off (reduces processing delay)
    * **Active Pixel Tuning:** Off (reduces processing delay)

    Game mode disables most post-processing, which is exactly what you want. Some Vizio models also support VRR (Variable Refresh Rate) — enable it in the Game menu for compatible consoles.
  </Tab>

  <Tab title="Sports">
    For sharp, fluid live sports viewing:

    * **Picture Mode:** Sports
    * **Backlight:** 70–100 (sports are often watched in daylight)
    * **Brightness:** 52–55
    * **Color:** 55–60 (slightly boosted for vivid uniforms and turf)
    * **Reduce Judder:** 5–8 (moderate smoothing for fluid motion)
    * **Sharpness:** 15–20 (slightly higher to sharpen player details)

    The boosted motion smoothing in this profile helps with the rapid panning shots common in broadcast sports coverage.
  </Tab>

  <Tab title="Daytime TV">
    For bright-room casual viewing throughout the day:

    * **Picture Mode:** Standard
    * **Backlight:** 80–100 (combat ambient light)
    * **Brightness:** 50
    * **Contrast:** 50
    * **Color Temperature:** Normal
    * **Reduce Noise:** Low

    Standard mode with a high backlight level lets your picture remain visible and punchy even with windows open and lights on.
  </Tab>
</Tabs>

***

## Reset Picture Settings to Default

If you have experimented with settings and want to start fresh, you can reset all picture settings to their factory defaults in a few steps.

<Steps>
  <Step title="Open the Picture Menu">
    Press **Menu** on your remote, then navigate to **Picture** and press **OK**.
  </Step>

  <Step title="Navigate to Reset Picture Mode">
    Scroll to the bottom of the Picture menu and select **Reset Picture Mode** (some models show this as **Reset Picture Settings**).
  </Step>

  <Step title="Confirm the Reset">
    Press **OK** to confirm. Your picture settings will return to their factory defaults for the currently selected Picture Mode.
  </Step>
</Steps>

<Note>
  Resetting picture settings only affects the currently active Picture Mode. If you have made changes to multiple modes (for example, both Calibrated and Game), you will need to reset each mode individually.
</Note>

If you need additional help with your display setup, visit **vizio.com/setup** to access model-specific guides, support tools, and setup walkthroughs tailored to your exact TV.
