60Hz vs 144Hz: is the upgrade actually worth it?
The refresh-rate upgrade that most people notice more than a resolution bump.
A 144 Hz display refreshes 2.4× as often as 60 Hz — every 6.94 ms instead of every 16.67 ms. That difference is instantly obvious to anyone who moves a window or fires a mouse across the screen: motion is cleaner, input feels more responsive, and the display's own motion blur essentially disappears. It's one of the few tech upgrades where the "day and night" marketing language actually applies.
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Live side-by-side at 0.1× speed — the lower frame rate's stutter cadence is obvious in slow motion, even when it's imperceptible at real speed.
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Side-by-side specs
| Spec | 60 Hz | 144 Hz |
|---|---|---|
| Refresh rate | 60 Hz | 144 Hz |
| Frame time | 16.67 ms | 6.94 ms (better on this spec) |
| Frames per second (cap) | 60 fps | 144 fps (better on this spec) |
| Perceived motion clarity | Standard | Noticeably better (better on this spec) |
| Input-to-display latency | ~23-30 ms typical | ~10-15 ms typical (better on this spec) |
| Required GPU power (1080p) | 1.0× (baseline) | ~2.4× |
| Bandwidth required (1440p HDR) | 7.9 Gbps | 17.8 Gbps |
| Typical monitor price (27" 1440p) | $180-250 | $250-350 |
| Ideal for competitive FPS | Below minimum | Capable (better on this spec) |
| Difference vs 60 Hz | — | Immediately obvious |
How they differ
The practical gap breaks down into three effects. First, frame time: 6.94 ms between frames means the visible lag between your input and a new frame being shown is less than half of 60 Hz's. Second, motion sampling: doubling the frame count cuts eye-tracked motion blur roughly in half, making UI scrolling and camera panning genuinely clearer. Third, input latency: most game engines cap their input sampling rate to the monitor's refresh, so 144 Hz samples mouse/keyboard 2.4× more often. The combined effect is why 144 Hz is considered the minimum competitive spec for any modern shooter, even though 60 Hz remains usable for productivity and casual gaming.
Verdict
144 Hz is the upgrade with the highest noticed-impact-per-dollar on modern monitors. It costs very little price premium over 60 Hz at 1080p and 1440p in 2026, and requires only modest GPU power to hit in non-AAA games. 60 Hz is the right target only for 4K productivity where framerate stability at max settings matters more than motion smoothness.
Check bandwidth for 4K 144 HzWhich should you pick?
Choose 60 Hz
Stick with 60 Hz only for 4K productivity displays, home office use where gaming isn't a factor, or legacy systems whose GPU genuinely can't sustain higher framerates.
Choose 144 Hz
Pick 144 Hz for every new gaming or mixed-use monitor purchase in 2026. The price premium is small, the perceptual gain is large, and desktop use (window dragging, text scrolling) benefits even outside games.
See DP 1.4 bandwidth for 1440p 144 HzRelated comparisons
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