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4K vs 5K is a comparison that almost exclusively matters for creative professionals — and within that group, mainly those working on Apple hardware or doing high-end photo and video work. Here’s the actual difference, who it helps, and whether it’s worth the price jump.
The numbers: what 4K and 5K actually mean
4K (UHD): 3840 × 2160 pixels. The standard “4K” resolution used across consumer displays, gaming monitors, and professional panels. At 27″, this is 163 PPI.
5K: 5120 × 2880 pixels. Roughly 77% more pixels than 4K. At 27″, this is approximately 218 PPI — the same density as a Retina MacBook Pro display. At 32″, it’s around 185 PPI.
The iMac 27″ shipped at 5K from 2014 through its discontinuation in 2022. The Studio Display (2022) is 5K at 27″. The Pro Display XDR is 6K. Apple’s ecosystem is where 5K matters most.
What the extra pixels actually do for design work
Text and UI clarity
At 4K on a 27″ display running at native resolution, text is sharp but small. macOS and Windows handle 4K with HiDPI scaling — they typically run at 2× scale, effectively treating the display as a sharp 1920×1080 equivalent. At 5K, 2× scaling gives you a sharp 2560×1440 equivalent — significantly more working space at the same readability.
For designers who work in environments where seeing the actual final pixel output matters — retouching, pixel-perfect UI work, font rendering — more pixels mean more detail to work with at the same physical viewing distance.
Image detail in photo and video
At 4K, a 4K photo or video file displays at 1:1 pixel ratio at native resolution. At 5K, you can view a 4K file at 1:1 and still have screen real estate around it — or view parts of a file at greater than 100% zoom without software upscaling. For detail work in Photoshop at high zoom levels, more screen pixels give you more to work with.
For video work: if you’re grading 4K footage, a 5K display shows the full frame at close to 1:1 without taking the entire screen. You have room for panels and tools around the image. Same principle applies to photo editing at high magnification.
The real-world 5K monitor landscape
5K monitors are rare. The options in 2026:
- Apple Studio Display ($1,599): 27″ 5K IPS, P3 wide gamut, Thunderbolt 3, built-in webcam and speakers. Best-in-class for Mac users.
- LG UltraFine 5K (discontinued): Was widely used with Macs. Replaced by Apple’s own display.
- Dell UltraSharp 27 5K (U2723QE and successors): 5K IPS, Thunderbolt 4 hub, USB-C 90W PD. Windows-compatible 5K option.
The 4K landscape is far broader: dozens of options from $200 to $1,500+, with choices across IPS, Mini-LED, and OLED. Competitively priced 4K with excellent color accuracy (27″ IPS 4K with 99% sRGB) is available for $300–$500.
4K vs 5K: the comparison
| Factor | 4K (3840×2160) | 5K (5120×2880) |
|---|---|---|
| Pixel count at 27″ | 163 PPI | 218 PPI |
| HiDPI working space | 1920×1080 equivalent at 2× | 2560×1440 equivalent at 2× |
| Available monitors | Dozens of options | 3–4 mainstream options |
| Price floor | ~$300 (quality IPS) | ~$800 (Dell) / $1,599 (Apple) |
| Windows compatibility | Full — all GPUs support it | Limited — Thunderbolt typically required for 5K via single cable |
| Mac compatibility | Full | Full (Thunderbolt) |
| GPU requirements | Moderate — most modern GPUs | Higher — needs Thunderbolt or dual cable output |
Who should get 5K
Mac users with a Pro or Ultra chip who are doing serious photo or video work. The Apple Studio Display at 5K paired with an M-series Mac is a cohesive, calibrated system where the display density matches the rest of the Apple product line. If you’re in this ecosystem and doing the work that justifies the price, 5K makes sense.
Windows users doing professional creative work who want maximum screen real estate. The Dell UltraSharp 5K is a legitimate professional display with Thunderbolt 4 connectivity. The working space at 2× scaling is meaningfully more productive than 4K at the same physical size.
Who should get 4K
Everyone else doing creative work who doesn’t need the specific advantages of 5K. A well-specced 4K IPS at 27″ — factory calibrated, 99% sRGB, Delta E < 2 — will serve photographers, illustrators, and video editors at a fraction of 5K prices. The color accuracy difference between a well-calibrated 4K and a 5K panel is zero. The pixel density difference is real but matters less than perceived at typical viewing distances.
Budget-conscious creatives: 4K. Apple ecosystem professionals who need the density: 5K. Everyone on Windows doing general creative work: save the money and put it toward a better colorimeter or a second calibrated 4K display.
