Free Online Backlight Bleed Checker
Screen Bleeding Test
Check your monitor, laptop, smartphone, or TV for backlight bleed, IPS glow, clouding, and light leakage with our free online Screen Bleeding Tester. Detect uneven illumination, corner hotspots, and edge bleed on any LCD or LED display — no downloads, no installation, completely free.
// Overview
What Is a Screen Bleeding Test?
A Screen Bleeding Test (also called a Backlight Bleed Test, Monitor Bleeding Checker, or Display Bleed Test) is a quick visual diagnostic that reveals whether light is leaking from the edges or corners of your LCD or LED display. Because backlight bleed is invisible during normal daylight use, a dedicated full-screen black test is the only reliable way to detect it.
Our free online Screen Bleeding Tester fills your display with pure black, near-black, and low-intensity color patterns to expose every form of light leakage — including backlight bleed, IPS glow, clouding (mura effect), corner hotspots, and edge illumination. It works on any LCD-based monitor, laptop, smartphone, tablet, or TV with a modern browser, and requires no download or installation.
If you've recently bought a new monitor, are inspecting a used display before purchase, or want to document bleed severity for a warranty claim, this Screen Bleed Checker gives you the exact visual reference that manufacturers and professional reviewers use to evaluate panel uniformity.
// Technical Deep Dive
How the Screen Bleed Checker Works
Our Screen Bleeding Test works by filling your display with carefully designed dark color patterns rendered directly to an HTML5 canvas at native pixel resolution. No compression, no scaling, no rendering shortcuts — just the exact color values your screen is asked to reproduce.
The pure black mode (#000000) sends a "display zero light" signal to every pixel. On a properly functioning LCD, the liquid crystals fully block the backlight, producing deep uniform black. Any visible glow, patch, or bright corner is confirmed backlight bleed — the backlight escaping through imperfect seals or misaligned layers.
The near-black gray modes (#0a0a0a through #333333) test for clouding and mura effect — uneven patches of brightness that appear across the middle of the screen, not just edges. These are more subtle than edge bleed but still indicate panel quality issues.
The color cycle mode rotates through dark tinted backgrounds (deep blue, purple, green, red). Different backlight wavelengths reveal different kinds of panel stress — some bleed is only visible in cool colors while other forms show only in warm tones. Professional reviewers use this same technique to fully characterize panel uniformity.
// Common Questions
Screen Bleeding Test FAQ
Clear answers to the most frequent questions about screen bleeding, backlight bleed, and display diagnostics.
Is some backlight bleed normal on LCD monitors?+
Yes — minor backlight bleed is considered normal on most LCD and IPS displays, especially in dark rooms. Manufacturing tolerances allow some light leakage. Only bleed that is clearly visible during normal use (not just in pitch-dark rooms with black content) qualifies as a defect.
Can backlight bleed be fixed?+
Backlight bleed cannot be fixed by software. It's a physical issue with the panel. However, lowering brightness, adding bias lighting, loosening bezel screws, and letting a new panel settle can reduce visibility. For severe cases, panel replacement via warranty is the only real solution.
Do OLED screens have backlight bleed?+
No. OLED displays do not have backlight bleed because they don't use a backlight — each pixel produces its own light independently. This gives OLED perfect blacks with no edge glow. OLED panels can suffer from burn-in instead, so they have their own testing concerns.
How is IPS glow different from backlight bleed?+
IPS glow changes with viewing angle — move your head and it shifts or disappears. Backlight bleed stays fixed in the same spot regardless of angle. IPS glow is a normal property of IPS technology; backlight bleed is a defect. Test at 90° straight-on to distinguish them: glow vanishes, bleed remains.
How much backlight bleed qualifies for a warranty return?+
Generally, bleed affecting more than 5-7% of the screen area, or any bleed visible during normal (non-dark-room) viewing, qualifies for RMA. Check your manufacturer's specific policy — some premium brands have stricter standards. Document with photos before contacting support.
Does this tool work on phones and tablets?+
Yes — the Screen Bleeding Tester works on any device with a modern browser, including smartphones, tablets, laptops, and smart TVs. Note that phones with AMOLED/OLED screens (most modern flagships) don't have backlight bleed. The test is most useful on LCD-based mobile devices.
Does backlight bleed get worse over time?+
It can. Thermal expansion from extended use, component aging, and sealant degradation can cause bleed to worsen gradually. However, the opposite also happens — some new panels have more bleed initially that settles after 2–4 weeks of use as internal pressure equalizes.
Why do I only see bleeding at night?+
Backlight bleed is only visible when displaying dark content in a dark environment. Ambient room light completely masks the effect. This is why testing must be done in a fully darkened room. If bleed only appears in total darkness with black content, it's usually mild enough to ignore.