Amazon just made a serious move into your living room – and this time, it’s not just about what’s on screen.
The Amazon Ember Artline, the company’s first-ever lifestyle TV, officially started shipping to customers in the United States and Canada on April 22, 2026, with prices starting at $899.99 for the 55-inch model and $1,099.99 for the 65-inch version. It’s a TV that doubles as a gallery wall, and for a lot of people, that distinction alone changes the entire calculus of what a TV can be in a home.

For years, Samsung’s The Frame has more or less owned the lifestyle TV category – a space where TVs are designed to look like art pieces when nobody’s watching Netflix. Samsung’s version retails at $1,299.99 for the 55-inch, though it frequently goes on sale. Amazon is undercutting that at full price, while also going head-to-head with other newer entrants like the Hisense CanvasTV ($999.99) and the TCL Nxtvision TV ($1,299.99) in the same 55-inch size. On paper, the Ember Artline is the most affordable option in this increasingly crowded category, and Amazon is betting that value-plus-ecosystem is a tough combination to beat.
What immediately stands out about the Ember Artline is its matte 4K QLED display. It’s a panel designed specifically to reduce glare so that artwork displayed on it doesn’t look like a flat screen sitting in a room – it looks more like something you’d find hanging in a gallery. The TV is just 1.5 inches thick without the frame, and 1.8 inches with it, and when mounted on the wall, it sits only 1.15 inches away from the surface. That near-flush wall mounting is a huge part of the illusion, and it’s the kind of thoughtful detail that separates a TV meant to disappear into a room from one that just sits there.
One of the boldest moves Amazon made with the Artline is the art library itself. The TV ships with access to more than 2,000 curated art pieces at absolutely no extra cost and no subscription required. That’s a direct and deliberate jab at Samsung, which offers only 20 free artworks per month and charges $5 a month for its full Art Store subscription. The Ember Artline’s collection spans Impressionist classics by Monet, Degas, and Renoir, alongside contemporary street art, murals, mixed media, and photography. Amazon even commissioned 60 exclusive motion video pieces from documentary filmmaker Sam Nuttmann, who traveled the world capturing wildlife and landscape scenes that loop beautifully as moving art.
The AI feature called “Match the Room” is where things get genuinely interesting for design-minded shoppers. You upload photos of your living space, and the TV’s AI analyzes the room’s colors, overall style, and any recurring themes in your decor to suggest artwork from the collection that would actually complement the space. It’s the kind of feature that sounds gimmicky until you consider how many people buy art based on vibes and then realize it clashes with everything they own. For personal photos, the Artline connects directly to your Amazon Photos account, automatically arranges family photos into collages, and displays them in full resolution without any manual cropping or resizing.
The customizable frame is another area where Amazon took a swipe at the competition. The Artline comes in 10 frame colors – four wooden tones and six contemporary metallic shades – and, importantly, one frame is included with your purchase. Samsung charges extra for its customizable bezels, which has long been a complaint from Frame TV buyers. If you redecorate down the line and want a different look, replacement frames start at $65 for the 55-inch model. The snap-on magnetic design makes swapping them out easy enough that it takes seconds, not a trip to a hardware store.
Beyond the art features, this is a fully capable smart TV powered by Fire TV’s redesigned 2026 interface. The updated UI is faster and cleaner, organizing content into categories for movies, TV shows, news, live content, and sports. A new Shortcut Panel lets you check who’s at your front door via Ring devices, control smart home settings, and adjust audio without interrupting what you’re watching. Alexa+ is baked in, and Amazon says customers have been engaging with the updated AI assistant more than 2.5 times as often as they did with the original Alexa since its launch on Fire TV. You can ask it contextual questions mid-show – “Who is that actor?” or “What else are they in?” – and it handles them fluently.
A new feature rolling out this month lets U.S. customers tell Alexa to move a show or sports game from one Fire TV device to another in the home. Started a movie in the kitchen while doing the dishes? Just say “Alexa, move this to the living room,” and it picks right back up on the big screen. Amazon says the feature is launching with Prime Video first, with plans to expand to more streaming services over time.
The Ember Artline also comes with its own wall mount in the box, a power cord, and an Alexa Voice Remote Enhanced with batteries included. Most U.S. customers will be able to add discounted wall-mounting services – 50% off for a limited time – at checkout starting later in May. The TV is also available in the UK and Germany starting May 7, with UK pricing beginning at £949.99.
It’s worth zooming out to see what this launch means for Amazon’s broader TV strategy. The company recently rebranded its entire smart TV lineup under the Amazon Ember name. The family now ranges from the affordable 2-Series entry point all the way up to the Artline at the top, with the 4-Series and QLED Series sitting in between. But Amazon isn’t just selling its own TVs – Fire TV is the world’s most popular streaming media player family, and the company works with major manufacturers including Hisense, Panasonic, TCL, Toshiba, and Xiaomi. In 2026, Fire TV is being built into three times as many premium TV models from these partners compared to last year – a sign of just how much momentum the platform has.
Samsung essentially created the lifestyle TV category, but Amazon clearly studied what buyers loved about The Frame and what frustrated them – the art subscription fees, the costly bezels, the price. The Ember Artline addresses all three out of the gate. Whether it can truly dethrone The Frame remains to be seen once long-term reviews come in, but for a first attempt at the lifestyle TV space, Amazon’s entry is confident, well-priced, and backed by one of the most powerful smart home ecosystems on the planet.
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