Samsung HW-Q950A review

With more channels and huge power the Samsung HW-Q950A is all kinds of awesome

Samsung HW-Q950A complete with speakers, soundbar and subwoofer
Editor's Choice
(Image: © Future)

TechRadar Verdict

The Samsung HW-Q950A soundbar hits the ground running by delivering no less than 16 separate channels of sound. This is one of the most immersive Dolby Atmos performances we’ve heard from a soundbar yet. For the Q950A’s price, you could assemble a decent separates system instead but here you get all of the convenience of a soundbar.

Pros

  • +

    Hugely powerful movie playback

  • +

    Remarkably well-rounded Dolby Atmos soundstage

  • +

    Dolby Vision and HDR10+ passthrough

Cons

  • -

    Expensive compared to rivals

  • -

    Poorly positioned display

  • -

    A little unrefined with music

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Two-minute review

The Samsung HW-Q950A stretches the definition of a soundbar to the max. That's because it's actually four separate bits of kit, and there’s nothing about its appearance that prepares you for the scale of sound it delivers.

The main soundbar part of the Samsung HW-Q950A is more than a metre wide, but slim enough to tuck under the screen of most TVs. The rears are heavy, but sufficiently compact to easily fit on a bookshelf, and despite carrying an unusually large 8-inch driver, the subwoofer has a slim-enough profile to hide down the side of a sofa or under a sideboard.

Samsung HW-Q950A Specs

Power: 616W | Speakers: 11.1.4 | Dimensions: Main soundbar - 1232 x 69.5 x 138mm/Subwoofer 210 x 403 x 403mm/Rear - 125 x 203 x 141 (W x H x D) | Connections: Two HDMI inputs, one HDMI output with eARC, optical digital-audio input, USB port, Bluetooth / Wi-Fi | Subwoofer included?: Yes

Tucked inside the Samsung HW-Q950A’s relatively unimposing set of speakers is a remarkable—unprecedented, in fact—16 channels of sound, delivered via 22 speakers. Driving all those channels of sound is a mammoth 616W of unbridled audio horsepower.

While the Samsung HW-Q950A’s masses of power and huge channel count might not be obvious by looking at it, it becomes blissfully obvious when you turn it on. Film soundtracks erupt out of each speaker with enough power and projection to fill even the biggest living rooms, putting you at the heart of the action more completely than any other soundbar we've tested. Especially since the HW-Q950A’s two new channels fill the slight gaps that previously existed off each shoulder. 

For all of these reasons and many more, the Samsung HW-Q950A is one of our top picks in our best soundbars guide and our best Dolby Atmos speakers and soundbars guide. Read on for our full Samsung HW-Q950A review.

The Samsung HW-Q950A soundbar pictured on its own on a wooden surface

(Image credit: Future)

Samsung HW-Q950A: price and availability

  • Costs $1,499.99 / £1,599 / AU$1,999
  • Samsung's flagship soundbar for 2021

The HW-Q950A is available now in every major territory across the world.

You don't have to spend a fortune to find a decent soundbar. There are some very impressive models to buy for as little as $400 / £400 / AU$550. Yet the Samsung HW-Q950A costs $1,499.99 / £1,599 / AU$1,999, ouch. Although you will find it available at a discounted price now it's been out for more than a year. 

Check out our Sony HT-G700 Soundbar review for an affordable option at $600 / £450 / AU$900 or our Sonos Ray review for a very capable budget option at $279 / £279 / AU$399.

As we’ll see, though, through a combination of the sheer number of physical speakers, channels, and the power it delivers, the HW-Q950A has a good stab at justifying its price. However, for that money you could, just about, get yourself a pretty good separates system instead if you wanted to.

At launch, there were no other soundbars that were able to provide so many real audio channels. Since then, the HW-Q950A has been usurped by the latest flagship, read our Samsung HW-Q990B review for Samsung's best soundbar of 2022. Which costs a similar price at launch, $1,899 / £1,599 / AU$2,199.

Samsung HW-Q950A: design and features

  • Four-piece system 
  • LED read-out
  • 16 channels of sound in an 11.1.4 configuration

The Samsung HW-Q950A soundbar is much more than just a soundbar. Yes, it takes the usual form of a long, slim speaker designed to sit under your TV screen. But this unit is joined by a large subwoofer with a huge 8-inch driver, and a pair of wireless ‘bookshelf’ rears, which, despite their compact size, contain three drivers each. One fires upwards for height effects with Dolby Atmos/DTS:X sources; another faces forward towards your seating position; the third faces out towards the rear side of your room.

The main soundbar continues the theme of being stuffed to bursting point with speakers. As well as the dedicated front-centre, front-left and front-right channels you’d hope to see with a serious soundbar, there are two more upfiring drivers, two drivers firing off to the side, and a further two drivers firing forwards at an angle to deliver mid-side effects reflected off your walls.

Since a number of these channels need to bounce their sound off walls or ceilings for the best effect, you should consider if your room design and layout is well suited to the HW-Q950A’s needs. For instance, vaulted or barrelled ceilings won’t help the height effects, and big disparities in the distance between the walls to the soundbar’s left and right side could cause some balance issues.

The Samsung HW-Q950A subwoofer with speakers on a wooden surface

(Image credit: Future)

You can manually adjust the relative weight of each channel, although it’s a pity that Samsung still provides a full-bore audio calibration system, despite the HW-Q950A being its flagship soundbar. This year, at least, there’s a built-in bass adjuster. And if you happen to have a reasonably recent Samsung TV, then you can use its mic to provide the soundbar with information on your room characteristics.

At launch, the 11.1.4 channels of sound supported by the HW-Q950A is the most we’ve seen—or, rather, heard—from any soundbar to date. Although you'll find the same configuration in the newer Samsung HW-Q990B.

The idea behind this being to get the most from the Dolby Atmos and DTS:X formats’ ‘object-based’ approach to sound, where audio effects are placed within a carefully crafted 3D space created around the listener. The more channels there are, in theory at least, the more complete that 3D space will sound. 

The HW-Q950A even carries a Q-Symphony feature that lets you combine its speakers with those of a compatible Samsung TV, to create more of a wall of sound at the front. This works surprisingly well, at least with Samsung’s premium TVs—although, at the same time, the HW-Q950A is more than good enough on its own not to need any assistance from other speakers.

The Samsung HW-Q950A subwoofer on its own on a wooden surface

(Image credit: Future)

Samsung provides processing modes that can remix any sound source so that it takes advantage of the system’s full speaker and channel count, and even includes a Game preset that emphasises surround and ambient effects for greater immersion into the game’s world. 

Connectivity comes by way of two HDMI inputs, one HDMI output, an optical digital-audio input, and the now obligatory Wi-Fi and Bluetooth support. Samsung even provides support for Tap View technology, where you can establish a connection between a compatible Samsung phone and the soundbar simply by touching the phone to the soundbar’s chassis.

The HDMI loop-through system supports all the key HDR formats: HDR, HDR10+ and Dolby Vision. However, they don’t support pass-through of 4K at 120Hz, or variable refresh rate signals now available from premium PC cards and the latest Xbox Series X/S and PS5 consoles. To be fair, most other soundbars don’t support such gaming features either, although there are newer soundbars from Klipsch and Sony (as well as many AV receivers) that do.

Samsung HW-Q950A: audio performance

  • Exceptionally complete three-dimensional soundstage
  • Huge power and aggression
  • Good playback of Dolby Atmos and DTS:X

The question we have to ask here is: does the HW-Q950A really make its ground-breaking number of audio channels count? The short answer is, yes. The long answer is, yes—with knobs on.

For starters, the extra drivers that Samsung has shoehorned into each of the two wireless rear speakers seriously punch above their weight in terms of the difference they make to the HW-Q950A’s soundstage. What’s more, they do so without negatively impacting the sound quality of the other rear speaker drivers they sit in such close proximity.

In terms of the new rear side channels’ impact on the HW-Q950A’s sound, there’s clearly an enhanced sense of width to the rear soundstage versus its HW-Q950T predecessor. This immediately makes three-dimensional Dolby Atmos and DTS:X object-based soundstages appear more complete; there are no gaps in the ‘dome’ of sound to your rear left and right. They also remove the ‘funnelling effect’, where sound can narrow as it moves from spacious-sounding front soundbars to smaller, less-effusive rears. 

Sounds that pass from front to back and rear-left to rear-right are handled with far more conviction than they are not only by last year’s HW-Q950T, but also, arguably, by any other soundbar. Plus, you can hear specific rear-left and rear-right sound details that would have been delivered with less precision by just the front side drivers on last year’s HW-Q950T. 

In addition, the HW-Q950A’s new rear channels provide an unexpected secondary benefit: they make the rear soundstage feel generally more involved in the action. This again underlines the cohesion of the wrap-around 3D soundstage, further sealing your immersion in the world of whatever movie you’re watching.

A close up look at the logos on the Samsung HW-Q950A soundbar

(Image credit: Future)

While this is clearly at its most effective when that movie is using a DTS:X or, especially, Dolby Atmos soundtrack, the soundbar’s processing options can do an excellent job of reworking lower-channel sources to take advantage of the HW-Q950A’s unprecedented speakerage. 

The HW-Q950A’s new drivers merely add another layer of excellence to the class-leading experience that was introduced by last year’s HW-Q950T. All of that predecessor’s qualities remain intact. So, the main soundbar still spreads its sound left, right, forward, up and down with a combination of precision and scale that at times is hard to believe. From floor to ceiling, wall to wall and back to front, even the largest room is filled with the sort of sound you should only really achieve through a separates system that would likely cost much more than the HW-Q950A. 

This isn’t a vague audio space, either. The HW-Q950A’s extreme power is partnered with impressively accurate channel ‘throw’ and effects placement, resulting in a soundstage that’s as busy and involving as it is loud.

And, man, can it go loud. Louder than your ears will be comfortable with, in fact. And without a trace of distortion, speaker fall-out, cabinet buzzing/rattling, or harshness. The sound can grow to fill out the most extreme action scenes, and never misses a beat when it comes to thumping out even the hardest impact sounds. It isn’t polite in the slightest—but that’s exactly how we like it.

The Samsung HW-Q950A soundbar remote control

(Image credit: Future)

That’s not to say the HW-Q950A doesn’t care about the little things. Not even the tiniest detail in the mix escapes the soundbar’s attention—and it shows an impressive knack, too, for understanding the relative weight that each element in a mix is supposed to have. 

The main soundbar has enough dynamic range to never sound thin or boxy, and it latches on to the bass whumping out from the subwoofer seamlessly. Despite that subwoofer hitting depths of bass as profound and well-rounded as anything I’ve heard from a soundbar system.

Voices are always clear and natural, and seem to enjoy a little lift in the mix, so that they appear to be partnering the on-screen images, rather than coming from below the picture.

While the HW-Q950A is undoubtedly made with movies at the forefront of its mind, its room-filling power is in evidence with music playback, too. The staging is sufficiently big and aggressive to make you feel like you’re at a concert, rather than just playing a CD or audio file. While this is seldom less than fun, it doesn’t suit every type of genre or recording. There are other soundbars out there that deliver a better and more refined ear for music. But none of them have the HW-Q950A’s flair and feel for films.

The only other complaint that could be levelled at the HW-Q950A is that neither its ‘reflected’ side or height channels are as precise with the effects they produce as speakers in a separates system. That’s pretty much inevitable, though. And if you’re looking at a soundbar rather than a separates system, you’re surely doing so in the knowledge that you’re prepared to accept one or two compromises (albeit small ones, in the HW-Q950A’s case) in return for not having lots of speakers all around your room.

A close up of the Samsung HW-Q950A soundbar's grille

(Image credit: Samsung)

Conclusion

At the time of launch, the Samsung HW-Q950A delivered more powerful and immersive sound from any soundbar we'd tested—particularly making the most of film soundtracks. Now the latest Samsung HW-Q990B sounds just as good, but that doesn't mean the older version isn't well worth your time. 

If you’re looking to turn a living room into a serious home cinema with the minimum of fuss, the Samsung HW-Q950A is a fantastic choice—especially if you have a large room to fill, that's when this soundbar performs at its best.

If you’re not fussed about having lots of speakers around the room and even, potentially, in/on your ceiling, then you could try (although you’ll struggle) to put together a separates system for around the HW-Q950A’s asking price. But for most people, the Samsung HW-Q950A is a better option.

Also consider...

If our Samsung HW-Q950A review has you considering other soundbars, here are three alternatives to take a look at.

Image

Sonos Arc
If you’re a hi-fi as well as a music buff, then you could consider something with more music pedigree, such as a Sonos Arc and Sub. The Sonos Arc may not deliver anywhere near as many real Dolby Atmos-friendly sound channels as the HW-Q950A, but it's our top soundbar for a reason and boasts amazing surround sound and music playback.
Read our full <a href="https://www.techradar.com/uk/reviews/sonos-arc" data-link-merchant="techradar.com"">Sonos Arc review

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Samsung HW-Q990B
The HW-Q990B is the newest flagship soundbar from Samsung, taking over from the HW-Q950A. The HW-Q990B has no right to deliver the amount of power, precision and soundstage craft it does from just four speakers. Basically, if you want the sound of a talented separates system but without the cables and clutter, your search stops here.
Read our full <a href="https://www.techradar.com/uk/reviews/samsung-hw-q990b" data-link-merchant="techradar.com"">Samsung HW-Q990B review

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Sony HT-G700 Soundbar
The Samsung HW-Q950A soundbar is incredibly expensive, so take a look at the Sony HT-G700 for a cheaper alternative. It’s not class-leading at the price, and the claims for delivering virtual height and surround are overstated, but it’s a nice little soundbar that will perfectly complement Sony TVs in particular.
Read our full <a href="https://www.techradar.com/uk/reviews/sony-ht-g700-soundbar" data-link-merchant="techradar.com"">Sony HT-G700 Soundbar review

First reviewed: August 2021

John Archer
AV Technology Contributor

John has been writing about home entertainment technology for more than two decades - an especially impressive feat considering he still claims to only be 35 years old (yeah, right). In that time he’s reviewed hundreds if not thousands of TVs, projectors and speakers, and spent frankly far too long sitting by himself in a dark room.