Few things are more frustrating than seeing "No signal" or a black screen when you just want to watch something on your Samsung QLED TV. Modern HDMI chains are sensitive to cables, ports, and even the order you power things on — HDMI gear really is touchier than it should be.
Quick answer
- Check the correct input — verify your TV is on the right HDMI port
- Try a different HDMI cable — use a certified Ultra High Speed cable
- Connect directly to TV — bypass any receiver or soundbar temporarily
- Use the highest-bandwidth port — look for HDMI 2.1 or 4K 120 labels
- Power cycle everything — unplug all devices for 30 seconds
- Lower resolution temporarily — start with 1080p or 4K at 60Hz
Symptoms
- TV displays "No signal" message on HDMI input
- Black screen with audio but no video
- Picture cuts in and out intermittently
- 4K HDR content shows garbled colors or fails to display
- Device worked yesterday but shows no signal today
Quick checks
- Confirm the correct input — double-check that your Samsung TV is on the HDMI input where the source is actually connected. It's very easy to bump the input button to the wrong port.
- Inspect the HDMI cable — look for sharp bends, kinks, or loose connectors. Try reseating both ends until they click into place.
- Test another HDMI source or display — if you can, plug a known-working device (like a streaming stick) into the same port, or plug your source into a different TV. This quickly tells you which side is misbehaving.
- Restart everything — power off the TV, the source device, and any receiver in between. Unplug them for 30 seconds before turning them back on.
Step-by-step fix
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Start with a direct connection — if you normally run through a receiver or soundbar, temporarily connect the source straight to the TV with a short HDMI cable. This removes one variable while you troubleshoot.
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Use the highest-bandwidth port — many TVs only support full 4K or 4K120 on one or two HDMI inputs. Check your manual for labels like "HDMI 2.1," "4K 120," or "eARC," and move the cable there.
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Match resolution and refresh rate — set the source to a conservative resolution first. Try 1080p or 4K at 60Hz. Once you see a picture, you can step back up to higher frame rates.
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Disable advanced features temporarily — turn off VRR, ALLM, and deep color modes while testing. These features sometimes cause handshakes to fail until the basics are stable.
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Power on in a clean order — turn on the TV first and let it reach the home screen. Then power on the receiver (if used), and finally the source. Some combinations really do depend on power-up order.
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Try a different HDMI cable — a surprising number of no-signal problems end up being a marginal HDMI cable that only fails at 4K or at higher frame rates. Swapping to a short, certified Ultra High Speed HDMI cable is one of the fastest ways to tell whether you're chasing a wiring problem or a device issue.
If it still isn't working
After verifying cables, ports, and basic resolution settings, persistent "No signal" or black-screen behavior usually points to a failing port or a deeper compatibility issue. Here's how to narrow it down:
- Source device problem — if the TV shows "No signal" no matter which port you try, but other devices work fine in the same port, the console or streamer may be at fault.
- TV problem — if multiple inputs intermittently lose signal for every device, check for a TV firmware update and consider a full factory reset after backing up your picture settings.
- Receiver or switch problem — if things only fail when a receiver or HDMI switch is in the chain, connect the source directly to the TV. If that works, review the receiver's video pass-through and 4K/8K settings.
Document which combinations of source, port, and cable work or fail. Having that matrix ready makes support with Samsung far more effective and can help justify a warranty repair or replacement when simple fixes are exhausted.
FAQ
Why does my Samsung QLED work with some devices but not others? Different devices output different resolutions and HDR formats. Your TV may handle 1080p sources fine but struggle with 4K120 or certain HDR modes from newer consoles.
Can a working HDMI cable suddenly stop working? Yes, especially with 4K content. Cables can develop intermittent connections or fail to handle higher bandwidth signals even if they worked fine at lower resolutions.
Which HDMI port should I use on my Samsung QLED? Use the port labeled for highest bandwidth — usually HDMI 3 or 4, marked as "HDMI 2.1" or "4K 120." Check your TV's manual for the specific port that supports your desired resolution and refresh rate.
Does power-on order really matter for HDMI? Unfortunately, yes. Many HDMI handshake issues resolve when you power on the TV first, then any receiver, then the source device. It's an annoying quirk of HDMI protocol.
