What is the HDR10+ certification program and why does it matter?
HDR10+
HDR10+ maintains a formal certification program that independently verifies devices meet the standard’s requirements before they can carry the HDR10+ certification mark. Certification is conducted at HDR10+ Authorized Test Centers — independent labs running standardized test procedures against published test specifications.
For consumers, certification means the HDR10+ logo on a device is a verified claim, not a self-declaration. A certified display has been independently confirmed to correctly process HDR10+ metadata, track luminance accurately, and reproduce the D65 white point — the international standard for HDR color reference.
For HDR10+ GAMING, both the display and the source device — such as a graphics processor — must be independently certified.
For the ecosystem, certification creates a quality floor. The open nature of HDR10+ means any manufacturer can adopt it, and certification is what ensures that openness doesn’t come at the cost of consistency. Over 22,000+ certified products across 11 categories carry the mark today.
The full list of certified products is searchable at hdr10plus.org/certified-products.