White Screen Test: Complete Display Testing Guide
Why you should test a new monitor immediately
Most monitor manufacturers allow a return or warranty claim for dead pixel issues — but only if you report them within a specific window (often 7–30 days). Running a thorough display test as soon as you unbox a new monitor, laptop, or phone ensures you can claim a replacement before the window closes.
Understanding the white screen test
A white screen maximises all three sub-pixels (red, green, blue) on every pixel simultaneously. Any pixel that cannot fully illuminate shows as a dark spot against the white background. These are dead pixels — pixels whose sub-pixels have failed and cannot turn on.
White also reveals backlight uniformity issues on LCD displays. An ideal white screen should be perfectly even brightness from edge to edge. Any patches that look slightly grey, yellow, or darker indicate backlight or panel quality issues.
The complete test sequence
A professional display test includes at minimum: white (dead pixel + uniformity), black (hot pixel + backlight bleed), red (red sub-pixel faults), green (green sub-pixel faults), blue (blue sub-pixel faults), and grey (mid-tone uniformity + gamma). WhiteScreen.cc provides all these test screens free — use the sequence buttons above or visit our dedicated Dead Pixel Test page for the full guided experience.
What to do if you find a problem
If you find dead pixels, check the manufacturer's dead pixel policy. Most manufacturers allow one or two dead pixels without a replacement — exact thresholds vary. For backlight bleed or severe uniformity issues on a new display, contact the retailer immediately within the return window. For older displays, check if the issue is covered by any extended warranty.