No. A high refresh rate can make motion smoother and reduce some kinds of perceived flicker, but it does not automatically make a gaming monitor, ultrawide monitor, or portable display flicker-free.
Ever switched from 60Hz to 144Hz or 240Hz and still felt eye fatigue after a long gaming session or workday? The practical fix is usually not just “buy more hertz,” but checking brightness control, VRR behavior, and motion blur reduction settings at the brightness you actually use. This guide explains what high refresh rate solves, what it does not solve, and how to choose a monitor that is genuinely comfortable.
Refresh Rate and Flicker Are Related, but Not the Same
Refresh rate is how many times per second a monitor updates the image. A 60Hz display updates 60 times per second, while a 144Hz, 165Hz, 240Hz, or 360Hz gaming monitor updates far more often when the source device, cable, GPU, and monitor settings all support it. Higher refresh rates can reduce motion blur, screen tearing, input lag, and the choppy feel of scrolling or camera movement, which is why higher refresh rates are valuable for gaming and daily desktop use.
Flicker, in modern monitor buying, usually means rapid changes in light output. That can happen even when the image refreshes quickly. A 240Hz monitor may draw frames smoothly while its backlight or OLED pixels still pulse because of brightness control, VRR changes, or a strobing mode.
The Simple Buying Rule
Do not treat “144Hz,” “165Hz,” or “240Hz” as a substitute for “flicker-free.” Refresh rate tells you how often the image can update. Flicker behavior tells you how steadily the screen produces light.
For a gaming monitor buyer, the strongest choice is a display that combines high refresh rate with verified flicker-free dimming across the brightness range you plan to use. For office work, coding, writing, or long ultrawide sessions, a stable backlight at 30% to 50% brightness may matter more than jumping from 165Hz to 240Hz.
Where High Refresh Rate Actually Helps
High refresh rate helps most with motion clarity and responsiveness. A fast first-person game, racing sim, or side-scrolling title feels easier to track at 120Hz or 240Hz because object positions update more often. That reduces the “stepped” feeling that can make motion look rough on a 60Hz display.

Research using a 24.5-inch LCD monitor compared 60Hz, 120Hz, and 240Hz refresh rates while participants viewed motion stimuli from 7Hz to 28Hz. The study found stronger motion-related visual responses at higher refresh rates and recommended at least 120Hz for motion perception experiments, with 240Hz or higher for high motion frequency or velocity situations involving motion visual perception. For monitor buyers, that supports a practical point: high refresh rate is genuinely useful, especially when the screen is showing fast movement.
Why 120Hz Is Often the Comfort Threshold
For many users, 120Hz is where a monitor starts to feel noticeably calmer for scrolling, cursor movement, and camera pans. On a gaming laptop connected to a portable monitor, moving from 60Hz to 120Hz can make web pages, spreadsheets, and game menus feel less jumpy even before launching a game.
That does not mean every user needs 240Hz. A competitive player may benefit from 240Hz or higher if their GPU can sustain high frame rates. A writer using a 34-inch ultrawide for 8 hours may get more comfort from a stable flicker-free backlight, good brightness range, and usable text clarity than from a higher peak refresh rate alone.
Why a High-Refresh Monitor Can Still Flicker
Modern LCD and OLED displays do not usually flicker for the same reason old CRT monitors did. On many current screens, the issue is not the panel refreshing the image; it is how the display controls brightness. PWM dimming lowers perceived brightness by rapidly switching light output on and off, and PWM dimming operates separately from the screen’s refresh rate.

That is why a 240Hz OLED portable monitor or a 165Hz desktop gaming monitor can still bother sensitive users at low brightness. If the dimming system pulses strongly at 20% or 30% brightness, the high refresh rate may make motion look smooth while the light output still fluctuates enough to cause eye strain, headaches, or visible flicker.
Low Brightness Is a Common Trigger
Many people test a monitor at full brightness in a store or during the first setup, then use it at 30% to 50% brightness at home. That is exactly where PWM-related discomfort may show up. A monitor can feel fine in a bright room at 80% brightness but become uncomfortable during night gaming or office work at 25% brightness.

A practical test is to set the monitor to your real-use brightness, open a bright document window, and use it for 20 to 30 minutes. If eye fatigue, pulsing, or a shimmering sensation appears only at lower brightness, the problem may be brightness control rather than refresh rate.
“Flicker-Free” Still Needs Context
“Flicker-free” usually means the monitor avoids PWM dimming, uses DC dimming, or uses very high-frequency control to keep light output steadier. However, the exact behavior can vary by brightness level, HDR mode, panel type, and gaming feature settings. A high refresh rate such as 144Hz or 240Hz does not automatically remove PWM backlight pulsing.
For buyers comparing product pages, “flicker-free” is a useful signal but not a complete answer. Look for independent measurements, brightness-level notes, and whether flicker-free behavior applies with HDR, VRR, and blur-reduction modes enabled.
Gaming Features That Can Reintroduce Flicker
Gaming monitors often include features that improve motion or responsiveness but complicate flicker behavior. The most important are VRR, low-framerate compensation, and backlight strobing.
VRR changes the monitor’s refresh rate to match the game’s frame rate. This can reduce tearing and stutter, but some monitors show brightness flicker when frame rate swings. A common trouble spot is a 48Hz to 144Hz VRR range when a game drops around 47 FPS and low-framerate compensation starts repeating frames, which can cause abrupt refresh behavior and VRR brightness flicker.

Backlight Strobing Is Intentional Flicker
Motion blur reduction modes often work by flashing the backlight between frames. Brands use different names for this, but the idea is similar: the monitor reduces perceived blur by showing each frame for a shorter burst of time. That can make motion look sharper in esports titles, but it also intentionally adds flicker and usually reduces brightness.
If your priority is eye comfort, disable strobe modes first. If your priority is competitive clarity, test strobing for your own tolerance instead of assuming it is harmless because the monitor is high refresh.
Frame Pacing Still Matters
A 240Hz monitor cannot make an unstable 50 FPS game feel like a locked 240 FPS experience. Uneven frame pacing can create visible stutter that some users describe as flicker, even when the monitor’s backlight is stable.
For gaming, check three things separately: the monitor refresh rate in the operating system, the in-game frame rate, and the frame-time graph if your performance overlay supports it. A locked 120 FPS experience on a 120Hz or 144Hz display may feel calmer than an uncapped game bouncing between 80 FPS and 160 FPS.
What to Check Before Buying a Monitor
The best monitor choice depends on how you use the display. A competitive gamer, a remote worker using a 34-inch ultrawide, and someone connecting a portable monitor to a laptop have different risk points.
Use Case |
Refresh Rate Priority |
Flicker Risk to Check |
Practical Buying Advice |
Competitive gaming monitor |
144Hz to 360Hz |
Strobe modes, VRR flicker, unstable frame rates |
Choose high refresh plus measured flicker-free behavior; test VRR on and off. |
Ultrawide productivity monitor |
100Hz to 165Hz |
Low-brightness PWM, text fatigue, long sessions |
Prioritize stable dimming at 30% to 50% brightness and good ergonomics. |
Portable monitor |
60Hz to 144Hz |
Single-cable power behavior, low brightness, OLED PWM |
Check dimming method carefully; test on battery and wall power. |
Console gaming monitor |
120Hz |
HDR brightness shifts, VRR flicker |
Confirm video-input support, 120Hz compatibility, and VRR performance. |
Mixed work and gaming display |
120Hz to 240Hz |
Brightness control, VRR, blur reduction |
Look for a balanced panel with flicker-free certification and independent tests. |
Settings Matter After Purchase
Even a good monitor can be configured badly. In the operating system, check the display settings and confirm the selected refresh rate matches what you bought. Some operating systems also support dynamic refresh rate on systems with VRR support and at least a 120Hz display, which can adjust refresh rate depending on activity through Advanced display.
Use the right cable as well. A monitor advertised as 240Hz may fall back to 60Hz, 100Hz, or 120Hz if the cable, dock, adapter, video-input version, display-output version, or GPU output cannot carry the required bandwidth.
How to Test Flicker at Home
Test the monitor under the conditions you will actually use. Set brightness to 30% to 50%, enable your normal color mode, open a white document, then switch between desktop scrolling, a game menu, and a fast-motion scene. Repeat with VRR on and off.
Next, disable motion blur reduction, backlight strobing, black frame insertion, or “extreme clarity” style modes. If the flicker or eye strain disappears, the issue is probably not the refresh rate; it is the mode intentionally pulsing the screen.
A Practical 10-Minute Checklist

- Set the monitor to its highest supported refresh rate in the operating system.
- Test brightness at 100%, 50%, 30%, and your preferred night setting.
- Turn VRR on, then off, while using the same game or scrolling test.
- Disable backlight strobing or motion blur reduction.
- Try SDR before HDR, since HDR can change brightness behavior.
- Use the cable included with the monitor or a certified cable with enough bandwidth.
- Compare symptoms on another display to separate monitor flicker from app, driver, or GPU issues.
A cell phone camera in slow-motion mode can sometimes reveal pulsing bands, but it is not a lab measurement. Use it as a quick screening tool, not a final verdict. Independent monitor measurements are more reliable when they report brightness level, refresh rate, VRR status, and whether special modes were enabled.
FAQ
Q: Does a 240Hz monitor mean it is flicker-free?
A: No. A 240Hz monitor can still flicker if it uses PWM dimming, VRR causes brightness fluctuations, or a motion blur reduction mode strobes the backlight. The 240Hz rating describes image update speed, not necessarily light-output stability.
Q: Why do my eyes hurt more at low brightness?
A: Some displays use more aggressive pulsing at lower brightness levels. If discomfort appears at 20% to 40% brightness but not near full brightness, PWM or another dimming behavior may be involved. Test the same monitor at several brightness settings before deciding whether refresh rate is the problem.
Q: Should I turn off VRR to avoid flicker?
A: Not always. VRR can make games smoother by reducing tearing and stutter, but some monitors show brightness flicker when frame rates swing sharply or drop near the bottom of the VRR range. If you notice flicker in menus, loading areas, or unstable scenes, compare VRR on and off with the same game settings.
Practical Next Steps
A high refresh rate is worth paying for when you play fast games, scroll constantly, or want a more responsive desktop. It is not a guarantee of flicker-free comfort. For most buyers, the best target is at least 120Hz, verified flicker-free dimming at real-use brightness, and gaming features that can be disabled individually.
Before keeping a new monitor, test it at your normal desk brightness for at least one long session. Use 30% to 50% brightness, check VRR both ways, disable strobing, and confirm the refresh rate in the operating system. If the monitor only feels comfortable at full brightness or only with major features disabled, a different panel may be the better buy.
References
- Assessing the Effect of the Refresh Rate of a Device on Various Motion Stimulation Frequencies Based on Steady-State Motion Visual Evoked Potentials
- Change the refresh rate on your monitor in Windows
- Monitor Flicker Explained: A Guide to Flicker-Free Tech
- Monitor Flicker Explained: A Guide to Flicker-Free Tech
- What is PWM dimming, and what are the alternatives?





