If you’ve been in the interactive whiteboard or commercial display market long enough, you’ve probably heard this sentence more times than you can count:
“Is this an LED screen?”
Sometimes it comes from distributors.
Sometimes from school buyers.
Sometimes even from people already selling displays.
And here’s the awkward truth:
Most of the time, when people say “LED screen”, they’re not actually talking about an LED display at all.
At Qtenboard, we manufacture LCD-based interactive whiteboards, but we still hear the term “LED” every single day. So instead of correcting people with cold technical definitions, we usually explain it like this:
“There are two very different things in the market that both get called ‘LED’. One is a real LED display. The other is an LCD display that uses LED backlight.”
This article is here to slow things down and explain the difference properly — not from a marketing angle, but from a factory and engineering perspective.
Let’s start with the confusion itself.
In everyday language, “LED screen” has become a catch-all phrase. It sounds modern, bright, and high-end. But technically, it can mean two completely different products:
Both exist.
Both are widely used.
But they are built, priced, maintained, and applied in completely different ways.
Understanding this difference is critical if you’re buying interactive whiteboards for education, meetings, or long-term commercial use.
A real LED display (often called Direct View LED) does not use an LCD panel at all.
Instead:
LED displays are powerful, but:
This is why LED displays are rarely used as interactive whiteboards in classrooms or meeting rooms.
Now let’s talk about the product Qtenboard actually manufactures.
An LCD interactive whiteboard is built around a large-format LCD panel, combined with:
This is the type of product most schools, offices, and training centers are using today — even if they casually call it an “LED board”.
Because:
But technically speaking, it’s still an LCD display.
Let’s break it down in a simple, non-textbook way.
LED Display
LCD Whiteboard
This one difference changes everything else: cost, size limits, heat, touch integration, lifespan.
This is where LCD has a huge practical advantage for interactive use.
A 86” 4K LCD panel has fixed, high pixel density
For LED displays:
In classrooms and meeting rooms, people sit close to the screen. LCD simply works better here.
Interactive whiteboards are not just for watching — they’re for writing, drawing, annotating, and teaching.
LCD whiteboards:
LED displays:
From a factory perspective, LCD touch systems are far more controllable and reliable at scale.
This is the part many brands avoid saying clearly. We won’t.
At Qtenboard, our choice to focus on LCD interactive whiteboards is not about “following the market” — it’s about long-term manufacturability and user experience.
In classrooms and meeting rooms:
LCD with LED backlight delivers exactly that.
LCD whiteboards allow us to:
With LED displays, much of this depends on:
As a factory, control equals reliability.
Most education and corporate buyers care about:
LCD whiteboards hit the sweet spot:
Here’s where Qtenboard actually invests its R&D effort.
Not all LCD whiteboards are equal — even if they look the same on the outside.
One critical difference is the LED backlight system.
At Qtenboard, we adopt 2W LED light bars, but not blindly.
We redesign:
So the LED is not overdriven, and brightness stays consistent over long-term use.
This is not something you see on a spec sheet — but it shows up after 2–3 years of real operation.
If you’re selecting products for real-world use, here’s a simple rule:
Choose LED Displays if:
Choose LCD Interactive Whiteboards if:
For most schools and offices, LCD is still the most rational choice.
The display industry loves simple words, but real products are never simple.
“LED screen” can mean very different things — and misunderstanding that difference often leads to wrong buying decisions.
At Qtenboard, we focus on LCD interactive whiteboards not because they sound trendy, but because they allow us to engineer:
Sometimes, the best technology is not the loudest one — but the one that works quietly, every day, for years.