LED Panel Products

Browse our full range of LED panel modules. Click any panel for full specifications and 3D preview.

Interactive Panel Viewer
How to read LED panel specs
Pixel pitch (e.g., P2.5) is the millimeter distance between LED bulbs — lower number means more bulbs packed into each panel, sharper image, higher cost. Brightness is measured in nits. For reference, a typical laptop screen is 300–500 nits, and most people keep theirs at 50% or less because full brightness is usually just too bright indoors for most use cases. A sunny window you'd squint at is around 2,000 nits, and direct sunlight hits roughly 10,000 nits. Indoor LED panels run 600–1,500 nits — comfortably bright in a room with office lighting, and easily dimmed down for darker environments like home theaters or studios. Outdoor panels push 5,000–8,000 nits so the image stays visible even in direct sun. Panel size (e.g., 500×500 mm) determines how many panels you need to cover a given wall — larger cabinets mean fewer seams and faster installation, but heavier individual modules.
Indoor vs outdoor: which do you need
Indoor panels (IP30–IP43) are designed for climate-controlled spaces — offices, lobbies, houses of worship, studios. They're thinner (2.6–3.0 in. deep), lighter (15–17 lbs each), and optimized for viewing in ambient room lighting. Outdoor panels (IP65) are sealed against rain, dust, and temperature swings from −4 to 122 °F (−20 to 50 °C). They weigh more (19–62 lbs), sit deeper (3.5–4.7 in.), and push 4–10× the brightness. Installing an indoor panel outdoors voids the rating and will fail within months.
What “starting at” price means
The per-panel price shown is the lowest volume tier — what you pay when ordering enough panels for a large wall. Smaller orders (fewer panels) cost more per unit. Click into any panel to see the full tier breakdown and use the configurator to get an exact total based on your wall dimensions.
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