Full-array local dimming can flicker during scrolling because the monitor is constantly recalculating which backlight zones should brighten or dim as text, windows, and contrast edges move. The panel is usually not failing; the dimming algorithm is often reacting too visibly to fast, high-contrast desktop content.
How Full-Array Local Dimming Works
A full-array local dimming display places LEDs behind the LCD panel in a grid, then controls groups of LEDs as dimming zones. That lets the screen darken shadow areas while keeping highlights bright, improving perceived contrast and HDR impact compared with simpler backlights.

FALD is attractive for gaming, movies, and creator work because it helps LCD monitors deliver deeper blacks and brighter highlights without switching to pixel-level lighting. In practical terms, local dimming is a backlight-control system, not pixel-level lighting.
That distinction matters. A browser page, spreadsheet, or code editor may contain tiny black text, white backgrounds, dark sidebars, and moving scroll bars. If those elements cross zone boundaries, the backlight has to chase them.
Why Scrolling Makes Flicker More Visible
Scrolling creates a difficult workload for FALD because the image is moving while the zone grid stays fixed behind the panel. As bright and dark content passes over each zone, the monitor may brighten one area, dim another, then reverse that decision a fraction of a second later.
The result can look like pulsing, shimmer, or brightness stepping. It is usually most visible with white text on a dark background, dark text on a bright page, sticky headers and sidebars, subtitles, cursors, thin UI lines, or HDR mode enabled on the desktop.
This is not the same as classic whole-screen flicker caused by a bad cable, driver issue, or refresh-rate mismatch. FALD flicker often appears locally, following the content as it moves.
More zones usually help, but they do not guarantee perfect behavior because processing speed, tuning, and zone transition logic matter as much as zone count.
FALD vs Mini-LED vs OLED
Traditional FALD improves contrast by using zones, but each zone still covers many pixels. When a small bright object sits inside a mostly dark zone, the monitor has to compromise: brighten the zone and risk blooming, or dim it and lose highlight punch.

Mini-LED improves the formula by using much smaller LEDs and denser control, giving the display finer brightness control. Added precision in Mini-LED backlighting can reduce visible halos and make transitions feel cleaner.
OLED and QD-OLED avoid this specific problem because each pixel controls its own light. The tradeoff is cost, brightness behavior, and burn-in risk depending on usage. For a productivity-heavy setup with static toolbars, Mini-LED can still be a smart value.
How to Reduce Brightness Flickering
Start with the monitor’s local dimming setting. Many displays offer Off, Low, Medium, and High modes. For office work, Low or Off often looks steadier than High because the backlight is less aggressive.

For HDR gaming or movies, turn local dimming back up if the content benefits from stronger contrast. FALD is usually at its best in full-screen HDR scenes, not mixed desktop windows.
Quick fixes to try:
- Use SDR for office work and HDR for games or movies.
- Set local dimming to Low for scrolling-heavy tasks.
- Update graphics drivers and monitor firmware if available.
- Match refresh rate settings in the operating system and graphics control panel.
- Test another cable or port if the whole screen flickers.
If the flicker affects everything, including the desktop and multiple apps, follow standard display troubleshooting. Driver checks are a common step when dealing with screen flickering.
Should You Avoid FALD Monitors?
No, but you should buy for your real workload. For immersive HDR gaming, cinematic single-player titles, and media, FALD or Mini-LED can deliver far better contrast than basic edge-lit LCD monitors. For all-day spreadsheets, coding, and web browsing, stable brightness and text clarity may matter more than dramatic HDR.
The best setup is mode-based: local dimming low or off for productivity, stronger dimming for games and video. That gives you the value of high-impact contrast without letting the backlight algorithm distract you during everyday scrolling.







