BenQ

BenQ RD280U 28 2 4K 3840x2560 3 2 Programming Monitor Eye-Care Nano Matte Panel Coding Modes MoonHalo Backlight

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$569.99$599.99

About this item

  • Nano Matte Panel: Unlock peak productivity with BenQ's exclusive anti-glare, anti-reflective Nano Matte Panel designed for programmers.
  • Advanced Coding Modes for Improved Codes Differentiation: Crafted for programmers, BenQ Programming Monitor offers you full immersion in your code.
  • Experience Focus with Unique Backlight: Experience MoonHalo by BenQ – a blend of immersive and comforting illumination.
  • Optimal Posture, Superior Output: BenQ Programming Monitors prioritize your comfort for long-term projects.
  • Keep Your Eyes Fatigue-Free: Experience unmatched eye comfort during night hours with our Night Hours Protection and Brightness Intelligence Gen2.
$569.99
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Product details

BrandBenQ
Screen Size28.2 Inches
Resolution4K UHD 2160p
Aspect Ratio3:2
Screen Surface DescriptionMatte

Technical specifications

standing_screen_display_size28.2 Inches
screen_resolution3840x2560
max_screen_resolution3840 x 2560 Pixels
number_of_usb_30_ports1
best_sellers_rank#10,711 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics )

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Customer reviews

4.4159 ratings

Customers say

Customers find the monitor excellent for coding, particularly during long sessions, with impeccable text resolution and top-notch image quality for coding tasks.

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Winning the production game

Aβ€”February 18, 2025

Everything works. No errors. No dead pixels. The RD280U/RD280UA 28.2" is the only high resolution monitor that has a 3:2 aspect ratio, aside from the (discontinued) Huawei MateView that had the same specs. It's becoming a winner for serious work, programming, media, multitrack production. It took a day or so to visually adapt. I'm using it as a middle monitor in a three monitor setup. FYI: 1. You should have enough depth on your desk to place it further back for a comfortable field of focus. 2. You need a DisplayPort cable if you're not using USB-C for display. It's an odd oversight by BenQ. To use the monitor in full native 3840x2560 resolution 60 Hz, you have to use the DisplayPort or USB-C connection. You can't use the HDMI port because it's HDMI 2.0 which lacks the bandwidth for full resolution at 60Hz. The odd part is that BenQ provides cables for all of these USB connections and HDMI, but not the DisplayPort cable. No problem. Get a DisplayPort 1.4 cable. The cable I got from UGREEN is perfect, 6.6 ft, braided, on sale for $7: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B088GQM9CV --- OR --- Alternatively, if you don't have a DisplayPort on your GPU, but your GPU has an HDMI 2.1 port, get a "DisplayPort 1.4 to HDMI 2.1" cable. 3. LED lights under it, in front, and in back can all be turned off, as you'd expect. Turn them off by hitting the toggle button (the middle button underneath) > Coding Booster > Function Bar > Power Key LED and the LED Indicator. MoonHalo settings are nearby. 4. Yes, the speaker sound is expectedly bad. That's fine. No one buys monitors for the speakers. If it meant making the monitor rim smaller, I'd assume they not include it. On the other hand, it's a nice rudimentary backup selling point for sound, alerts, talk radio streaming. 5. The adjustable MoonHalo is a genius add. Very handy to help eyes when you're in a darker area. I keep mine on all the time now with the 270 option. Nice adjustable glow as the sun sets. 6. I was hesitant, thinking the extra grey bulk and notch at the bottom of the monitor would be distracting. I prefer pure black and uniformity, no weird notches, no flashy branding. Luckily, when you start using it, it mostly fades out of sight in contrast to the illuminated screen, both in daylight and night. 7. To do firmware upgrades using the Display Quickit software, make sure your USB upstream cable (included) is plugged in and into the computer, with no other USB cables in the monitor, along with your DisplayPort cable, as the software will tell you: it only tells you all that just before an OK click initiates the attempt. The firmware upgrade takes a few minutes. Or, if you're using USB-C, I think that's all you need as the connection. 8. 60 Hz isn't a problem whatsoever. Games will be fine for most casual folks. Video is good. Negativity surrounding 60Hz could be justified if your life is more focused on gaming, but then you're probably reducing your resolution anyway to achieve more frames and choosing a smaller monitor. If or when monitors in 3:2 go to 120Hz+, yes, that'll be great too, and I'm sure it will boost sales. That's probably no time soon. Even so, serious productivity, dragging windows, scrolling browser pages, reading, writing, production, and the like doesn't require higher refresh rates. The vast portion of your time spent interacting and reading is in the continual pauses between dragging and scrolling. You won't notice a deficit. It's good. 9. BenQ, if you're reading this: - Keep making 3:2 monitors. - Also make 16:10 monitors with the same or better DPI at the 27/28" range. There are no serious 16:10 monitors on the market larger than the 24-inchers. I think most people would find 16:10 to be the sweet spot for general computing for work and entertainment. BenQ appears to have the only 24" 16:10 monitor with a higher resolution, also part of this "programming" product line: RD240Q. Great. Yet I've been using 24-inch 16:10 monitors for 17+ years. There's a crazy huge gap in the market that would buy every larger high resolution 16:10 monitor in sight. I'm not alone. - Remove extra stuff at the bottom of the monitor, the notch. Make rims uniform and black, not grey. I took a chance and found it's not a serious problem in practical use, but I prefer the cleanest look. If it means removing speakers, do so. Or do both. People are capable of choosing their own speakers or soundbars. - Linux. Hire Linux developers. Make all Linux software you produce open source. Take a serious presence in the Linux game. Calling yourself a "programming monitor" and not supporting Linux in your added software is a miss. You can run the monitor normally in Linux. It's just that the optional BenQ software (Display Pilot 2 and Display Quickit) that provides a GUI to tweak settings and firmware upgrades (settings you can still access through physical controls) doesn't run on Linux. Not a deal breaker. I hope to see more 3:2 monitors and larger 16:10 monitors in even higher resolution. Meanwhile, RD280U is a winner. Read more

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Great monitor for coding

A.C.β€”November 8, 2025

THE BEST coding monitor I have ever had. The text on this screen is extremely crystal clear. Uncanny. And tons of USB and USB-C ports under and back. Super convenient. Functions perfectly and great for the money. The only downside is the refresh rate. But again, this is a monitor for coding not gaming. Highly recommended. Read more

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A competent 3:2 monitor with some annoying flaws and anachronisms

Brian Rogersβ€”October 6, 2025

The RD280U is exactly what I need it to be. A competent 3:2 display, with excellent text rendering, decent color accuracy, and a menagerie of eye-care features. The moonhalo light is pleasant for my office late-night coding sessions. The software for my work Macintosh makes all the settings easily accessible. It isn't without some crucial flaws, however. First - It's quite bulky, almost gamer-esque level thickness. Perhaps an OLED version would help tame the beast here. Second - The display chaining support is terrible - only 30FPS 4K on a second panel makes it impractical without a separate KVM/Dock. Third - The HDMI mode maxes out at 50hz - USB-C or Displayport is required for the full 60hz at native resolution. Fourth - The speaker AND headphone jack are utterly tragic. Honestly, just fixing the display chaining and upgrading the HDMI port would earn a full 5 stars from me. Conclusion - It's a purpose-made monitor that's a bit more affordable than the business class heavyweights from Dell and LG. I wouldn't call it a "good value", but it's not a terrible one either. There are much better bang-for-the buck monitors for code monkeys. Read more

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It's great! Just not perfect.

W. H.β€”July 25, 2025

I have an M2 MacBook for work, and for some reason they only support one external display. I thought if I could only have one it may as well be a good one, and here we are. The Good: - It reeks of effort and thought, which is very nice to see for a change. - It's just a good monitor – the colors are vivid, the contrast is sharp, resolution is lovely, the menu isn't a chore to operate, the speakers are pretty ok, and 5ms response time is good when it's other weird-shaped competitor – the DualUp – is only 1440p, more expensive, and has a like 12ms response time iirc. - Of course I __adore__ the 3:2 aspect ratio. - Benq support is very helpful and responsive. - The most I have to say against it are nitpicks from the rather steep price. The Nitpicks: - This is the best monitor ever made... for $500, $550 even I'd genuinely have zero complaints. $660+tax? Not so much. The price is rather steep, and while some of that can be excused for its unique nonstandard ratio, they stop it from being "perfect". - Refresh rate: Why 60hz? I get not having a super high refresh rate, but I feel at this price a solid 90 hz for smoother animations would be nice. - The light on the back of the device is probably great if you're up against a wall, but my setup has the back of my monitor facing into the living room. The light kinda hurts to look at directly when it's on. This would be 'whatever', but it's easy to accidentally turn it on when futzing with the thing. I'd love an option to just disable it outright. 3. The KVM is kinda jank. Computers still detect it as a display even when the monitor is switched to a different input. Support says this isn't expected behavior though so hopefully this won't be an issue after I find time to go through the debugging ordeal. On the whole, very good monitor and as I upgrade the rest of my workstation I'll probably be getting at least one more Benq item if this is anything to go by. If you're doing a lot of text heavy stuff day-in and day-out, this still is probably the best youre gonna get. Read more

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