Screen Burn-In Test
Check for existing burn-in or image retention on your OLED, AMOLED, or plasma display. Displays solid colors to reveal ghostly outlines of previously static images. Also useful for detecting uniformity issues on LCD panels.
What is a Screen Burn-In Test?
A burn-in test fills your entire display with solid colors to reveal any existing burn-in or image retention. Ghost outlines of previously static elements — taskbars, logos, game overlays, status bars — become visible against uniform colored backgrounds that they would be hidden on during normal content viewing. This test is especially useful for OLED and AMOLED displays, which are susceptible to pixel-level organic degradation from static content.
Burn-In Risk by Display Type
OLED / QD-OLED
High RiskEach pixel is an organic emitter that degrades with use. Static bright content causes uneven aging, resulting in permanent burn-in. Mitigation: pixel shift, screen savers, panel refresh cycles.
AMOLED (Phones/TVs)
High RiskSame organic technology as OLED. Phone status bars and game overlays are common burn-in sources. Always-on display features accelerate degradation.
IPS LCD / VA LCD
Low RiskCannot experience true burn-in. May develop temporary image retention with extreme static content, but this clears with normal use. Long-term backlight LEDs may show slight dimming variation.
TN LCD
Very Low RiskSame as IPS/VA — no organic compounds to degrade. Very fast response times mean image retention is essentially non-existent on TN panels.
Related Hardware Tests
More free tools to check your setup.
Dead Pixel Tester
Test your monitor for dead pixels, stuck pixels, and screen uniformity with our professional color testing tool.
Screen Uniformity Test
Check your monitor for backlight bleeding, IPS glow, and uneven brightness with full-screen solid color tests.
Pixel Refresh Tool
Attempt to fix stuck pixels by rapidly cycling through 8 colors. Adjustable speed from 50ms to 500ms with fullscreen support.
Monitor Flicker Test
Detect PWM backlight flickering with frequency patterns from 30 to 1000 Hz. Includes motion ruler mode and strobe mode.
HDR Monitor Test
Test HDR display performance: peak brightness, shadow detail, contrast ratio, and color volume using Canvas-rendered test patterns.