Phone Backlight Bleed Test
Run a backlight bleed and color test on your phone in the browser. What each pattern reveals, LCD vs OLED differences, and when to push for a replacement.
A dim room and a full-screen black field reveal problems that normal use hides. Backlight bleed and color shifts stay invisible on photos and videos. A solid-color test exposes them in under two minutes.
Run the test
Tap Full screen on the test above to fill the display edge to edge, then step through the solid color patterns. This is the same test used for computer monitors, and it runs identically in mobile Safari, Chrome, or Firefox without any download.
Start on solid black. Look at the corners and edges while the room is dim. Bright patches, glowing halos along the bezel, or a washed-out center against dark content are exactly what you’re checking for.
What each pattern reveals
Black is the diagnostic core. Glowing patches at the edges or corners on a black fill point to backlight bleed on LCD phones. A hazy white glow at extreme viewing angles on a black field is IPS glow. It’s different, and covered below.
Solid white, red, green, and blue expose color uniformity. A red field that looks slightly purple in one corner tells you that area’s color balance is off. On any solid primary color, the entire screen should match itself without visible patches or shadows.
The gradient pattern catches banding. A smooth ramp from black to white should have no visible steps or horizontal lines. Banding on solid gradients usually reflects a panel calibration issue or, on some budget phones, the display’s dithering algorithm working around a limited bit depth.
Backlight bleed vs IPS glow
These look similar but come from different places. Backlight bleed is fixed light leaking through the panel edges due to uneven pressure between the LCD layer and the backlight behind it. Move around the room and it stays exactly where it is.
IPS glow is a viewing-angle artifact from the panel’s liquid crystal alignment. Hold the phone at arm’s length and straight on. The haze disappears or shrinks significantly. Tilt it and it grows. That response to angle is the distinction. IPS glow is present on every IPS panel to some degree. How much varies by unit.
Neither worsens under normal use. Backlight bleed can shift slightly after temperature changes or if the frame warps from impact, but day-to-day it’s stable.
OLED phones
OLED panels have no backlight. Each pixel generates its own light, so the edge-glow pattern LCD phones get doesn’t occur. What OLED phones show instead is mura: subtle brightness or color variation across the panel surface. On the gradient pattern, watch the dark end of the ramp in a dim room. Cloud-like patches or blotches in that zone are mura.
A colored dot on an OLED screen against a black or gray fill is almost always a stuck pixel, not a backlight fault. See a lit spot? Run the phone dead pixel test separately to confirm whether it’s stuck, dead, or hot.
How much is normal
Minor backlight bleed in two or three corners is within manufacturing tolerance for LCD phones. Heavy bleed covering a broad band along an edge, or bleed that reaches far enough into the screen to affect daily reading, is a defect.
Phone warranties handle this differently than monitor warranties. Samsung Galaxy S series and Apple state a zero bright-dot policy for stuck pixels. Budget Android phones are often sold under ISO 9241-307 Class II, which permits up to two stuck pixels before the device qualifies as defective. If bleed is severe, pull up your phone’s spec sheet and check the display class before you contact support.
Test before the return window closes. Faults found after it passes are almost always out-of-warranty and you’ll need photos or a video to get anywhere with support.
What to do about it
Stuck pixels on OLED phones sometimes respond to rapid color cycling. Run the test on Auto-cycle for five to ten minutes: the voltage changes can clear a non-dead cell. Dead pixels are permanent.
Backlight bleed on an LCD phone doesn’t get better with software. Physical workarounds like loosening the screws or pressing the frame are risky on a phone. The housing is thinner than a monitor chassis and the display stack can crack. Skip it.
If the issue is outside warranty and not severe enough to replace, a black or dark wallpaper keeps the bleed out of your typical viewing content.
Check the rest of your display
If the panel passed the bleed test, still check pixels separately. The solid-color fields that expose bleed won’t catch a stuck pixel that glows the same color as the fill. Run the phone dead pixel test on every fill in sequence. On an OLED phone, run the phone burn-in test too, since image retention shows on the same flat fills. Then run the phone refresh rate test if you’re seeing motion stutter; bleed and frame-rate problems sometimes appear together on budget LCD phones.
FAQ
- Is backlight bleed on a phone normal?
- Minor bleed in a corner or two sits within LCD manufacturing tolerance. A bright band across a full edge, or bleed that cuts into your reading area, is a defect worth a warranty claim.
- Will backlight bleed get worse over time?
- Day to day it's stable. Temperature swings or a warped frame after a drop can shift it slightly, but bleed doesn't spread on its own.
- Can OLED phones have backlight bleed?
- No, there's no backlight. What OLED panels show instead is mura: cloudy brightness patches, clearest at the dark end of a gradient in a dim room.
- Can I fix bleed by pressing on the screen?
- Not on a phone. The housing is thin and the display stack cracks at far less force than a monitor takes. If it's under warranty, claim it. If not, a dark wallpaper hides it.
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