Dead Pixels vs Stuck Pixels: How to Tell the Difference Fast
A black dot on white is usually a dead pixel. A bright colored dot on black is usually a stuck pixel. Here is how to check before you try a fix or ask for a return.
Rapidly cycle through colors to try fixing stuck pixels. This browser-based stuck pixel fixer repeatedly changes displayed colors and works without downloads. Results vary, and the tool cannot repair dead pixels or permanent panel damage.
This tool rapidly cycles through eight colors: black, white, red, green, blue, cyan, magenta, and yellow. The repeated changes may help some LCD stuck pixels, but results vary and there is no guaranteed software fix. Use fullscreen mode and position the affected area in the center of the screen. Permanent dead pixels and OLED burn-in cannot be repaired by this browser tool.
Red, green, blue, or combined color. TFT transistor stuck on. Color cycling may help.
Transistor has failed. No signal reaches the pixel. Cannot be fixed by software.
All three sub-pixels appear lit simultaneously. Color cycling may help in some LCD cases.
Common questions about stuck pixels, dead pixels, and how to fix them.
More free tools to check your setup.
Check your monitor for dead pixels, stuck pixels, and screen uniformity with a full-screen color test.
Check OLED, AMOLED, and LCD image retention using solid colors, gray screens, and checkerboard patterns.
Check backlight bleed, IPS glow, dirty screen effect, clouding, and color tinting with full-screen solid colors.
Check monitor ghosting, motion blur, inverse ghosting, overdrive artifacts, and pixel response online.
Display simulated flicker patterns from 30 to 1000 Hz for visual inspection. Includes motion ruler mode and a warning-gated strobe mode.
Guides on stuck pixels, dead pixels, monitor maintenance, and display care.
A black dot on white is usually a dead pixel. A bright colored dot on black is usually a stuck pixel. Here is how to check before you try a fix or ask for a return.
If you see a strange dot, patch, or shadow on your display, use white, black, gray, and color tests to figure out whether it is a dead pixel, a stuck pixel, IPS glow, backlight bleed, or burn-in.
A true dead pixel usually does not come back. A stuck pixel sometimes does. Here is what is worth trying, what is not, and when to stop wasting time and return the screen.