Free Online Pixel Checker & Fixer
Dead Pixel Test
Check your monitor, laptop, smartphone, or TV display for dead pixels, stuck pixels, hot pixels, bright pixels, and dark dots with our free online Dead Pixel Tester. Includes a built-in pixel fixer that rapidly flashes colors to revive stuck pixels — no downloads, no installation, 100% free.
// Overview
What Is a Dead Pixel Test?
A Dead Pixel Test (also called a Pixel Checker, Stuck Pixel Test, Monitor Pixel Test, or Screen Defect Tester) is a quick visual diagnostic that reveals whether any individual pixels on your display are malfunctioning. By filling your screen with pure solid colors, the test makes non-functioning pixels instantly visible as tiny black dots, colored specks, or bright spots against the uniform background.
Our free online Dead Pixel Tester combines a complete pixel diagnostic suite in one browser-based tool. It includes 12 solid test colors, gradient and checkerboard patterns, and a built-in Pixel Fixer that uses rapid color cycling to potentially revive stuck pixels. The tool works on any device with a modern browser — monitors, laptops, smartphones, tablets, and smart TVs.
Whether you're checking a brand-new monitor within the return window, inspecting a used display before purchase, or trying to revive a stuck pixel on your smartphone, this pixel checker and fixer is the same tool used by professional reviewers and quality-control specialists — available free in your browser.
// Technical Explanation
How the Dead Pixel Checker Works
Our Dead Pixel Test works by rendering pure, single-color images directly to your browser's canvas at native pixel resolution. No compression, no image scaling, no rendering shortcuts — each pixel on your screen is asked to produce the exact target color. Any pixel that fails to reproduce the color correctly becomes immediately visible as a contrasting spot.
A modern display is built from millions of individual pixels, each containing three sub-pixels — red, green, and blue. When all three sub-pixels work correctly, they combine to produce the intended color. When one or more sub-pixels fail, the pixel displays the wrong color entirely, creating the defect you see during testing.
The Pixel Fixer mode uses a scientifically-proven technique: rapid color cycling. By flashing red, green, blue, white, and black at high frequency, the tool forces each sub-pixel to rapidly switch between fully-on and fully-off states. This electrical stimulation can "exercise" stuck sub-pixels and sometimes restore normal function. Dead pixels cannot be fixed — they have no electrical signal at all — but stuck pixels have a 50–80% chance of recovery with 20–30 minutes of treatment.
All testing happens locally in your browser. No data, pixel counts, or test results are ever transmitted to any server. The entire tool works offline after the initial page load.
// Common Questions
Dead Pixel Test FAQ
Quick answers to the most common questions about testing, fixing, and diagnosing pixel defects on any display.
Is this Dead Pixel Tester really free?+
Yes — 100% free, no sign-up, no downloads, no installation. Everything runs in your browser using standard HTML5 Canvas API. All testing happens locally — nothing is sent to any server.
Can the Pixel Fixer actually revive dead pixels?+
No — truly dead pixels cannot be fixed by any software because they have no electrical signal. The Pixel Fixer only works on stuck pixels (those locked on one color). Success rate on stuck pixels is 50-80% with 20-30 minutes of rapid color cycling.
How long should I run the Pixel Fixer?+
Start with 10-20 minutes. If no improvement, try longer sessions of 1-2 hours. Some stubborn stuck pixels require multiple 30-minute sessions over several days. Always run in fullscreen for best results.
Does the Dead Pixel Test work on smartphones?+
Yes — the tool works on any device with a modern browser, including iPhone, Android, iPad, tablets, and smart TVs. On mobile, tap the screen to cycle colors or use the on-screen buttons. For best results, disable auto-brightness and set display to maximum brightness.
How many dead pixels qualify for a warranty replacement?+
Varies by manufacturer. Most brands follow ISO 9241-307 pixel fault classes. Generally, 3+ dead pixels, or any dead pixel in the screen center, qualifies for replacement. Premium brands (Dell UltraSharp, Apple Pro Display, LG) often have zero-defect policies within 30 days.
Will dead pixels spread to other pixels?+
No — dead pixels don't spread to neighboring pixels through electrical means. However, if the cause is physical damage (a crushed area), that damage can expand over time with pressure or temperature changes. Normal manufacturing-defect pixels remain isolated.
Is the Pixel Fixer safe for my screen?+
Yes — the rapid color cycling uses normal display operations that won't damage your screen. However, do not watch the screen during fix mode if you have photosensitive epilepsy or sensitivity to flashing lights. Let the tool run while looking away or with eyes closed.
What's the difference between dead and stuck pixels?+
A dead pixel is permanently black — no sub-pixel receives power, so it appears black on every color. A stuck pixel is locked on one subpixel (red, green, or blue) and shows that color regardless of the image. Stuck pixels are sometimes fixable; dead pixels are permanent.