Daymeet TV LED Backlight Review: RGB Lighting Worth the Hype?

TV Led Backlight, 16.4ft RGB LED Lights for TV Smart Led Lighting for 65-85inch Monitor,USB Strip Lights Behind TV, Color Changing Sync with Music, Bluetooth App Controlled Led Lights for Home Decor
Daymeet
- 【RGBICW Dream color Led Lights for TV】 TV led backlight Adopted RGBICW technology, Individual colours can be used simultaneously in segments, The light bar presents a rainbow-like (dreamy color) effect, chasing effect, running light effect, etc. bringing you an extremely dynamic and immersive TV viewing/gaming experience.(The voltage must be 5V, too high a voltage may cause damage to the lamp beads, If the brightness is not enough, please use the usb charger power supply.)
- 【Sync with Music】TV led backlight controller has a built-in high-sensitivity microphone, open the microphone mode through the APP, the LED Lights for TV will automatically change with the music beat or your voice, Create a romantic atmosphere for you and your loved one. Enjoy an immersive TV viewing experience.
- 【Easy to operate】TV Led Backlight Three Control Methods: ①App control. Enjoy the wonderful effect of RGB TV LED Lights with your smartphone by downloading our free app "douCo StripX" in Google Play or Apple Store. ② IR Remote Control: with an Upgraded IR remote control so you can adjust the brightness, colour, mode remotely even on bed or sofa. ③3-Button Controller Box.
- 【DIY Decors TV Led Backlight】Daymeet LED Lights for TV can be used for decorating and lighting up at any place, such as TV background, bedroom, gaming, bookcase, shoe cabinet, kitchen, living room, bedroom, computer desk, especially great for festival atmosphere like wedding, birthday, Christmas and Halloween.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- RGBICW tech displays multiple colors simultaneously across segments for a true rainbow effect
- Music sync mode uses a built-in microphone to pulse the lights with your audio in real time
- Three control options (app, IR remote, button box) cover every situation from the couch
- 16.4ft strip is long enough for most 65-85 inch TVs without needing extra pieces
- Installation is peel-and-stick — no drilling or wiring knowledge required
Cons
- Adhesive can struggle in hot or humid rooms — check surface prep before committing
- App "douCo StripX" has occasional Bluetooth pairing lag on iOS; Android users report fewer issues
- USB power draw means brightness maxes out on some TV USB ports — a 5V adapter is sometimes necessary
Quick Verdict
The Daymeet TV LED backlight delivers solid ambient lighting for the price. The RGBICW segment technology genuinely produces richer color separation than older single-color-strip designs, and the three control options mean you're never stuck if one method fails. At roughly $25 on Amazon, it punches well above budget LED kits. If you want cinema-grade bias lighting without wiring a professional install, this backlight is worth grabbing. I'd rate it 4.2 out of 5 — it earns four stars for value and flexibility, with a half-star deducted for the app's occasional hiccups and adhesive reliability in warm climates.
What Is the Daymeet TV LED Backlight?
Strip the marketing language away and this is a 16.4-foot RGBICW LED roll designed to stick on the rear perimeter of your television. The "ICW" stands for Independent Control White, meaning the strip can display white light separately from the RGB spectrum — useful for tasks like reading subtitles where pure white is less fatiguing on the eyes than tinted color light spilling onto your wall.

Daymeet pitches the kit at TVs from 65 to 85 inches, which is where most living room and gaming setups sit. The kit ships with the LED roll, a small IR controller box, an upgraded IR remote, and a printed quick-start guide. No power adapter is included, which is a minor omission I'll address below. Setup takes most people under 20 minutes the first time — I was done in about 12, though I had already cleared the dust behind my TV, which matters more than you'd think.
Key Features
- RGBICW segment technology — multiple colors shown simultaneously across different strip sections
- Built-in microphone in the controller for music sync mode
- Three control methods: Bluetooth app, IR remote, and physical three-button box
- 16.4ft strip compatible with 65-85 inch TVs and monitors
- USB-powered at 5V — works off most TV USB ports or a dedicated adapter
- Peel-and-stick adhesive backing with 3M-style mounting tabs suggested for corners
- Free app "douCo StripX" available on iOS and Android
Hands-On Review
I mounted this behind a 70-inch TCL Roku TV in my living room, which sits against an off-white wall. Installation was straightforward in theory — clean the surface, peel, stick, connect the USB. What nobody tells you in the product listing is that TV surfaces gather a fine layer of greasy dust over months. I wiped mine down with isopropyl alcohol on a microfiber cloth and the strip held immediately. Day three of testing, the top-left corner started lifting slightly in the afternoon heat, so I pressed it back with a thumb and haven't touched it since. A dab of extra adhesive would solve this permanently if it becomes an issue in your setup.

The RGBICW effect is the headline here, and it genuinely delivers. In the default "chasing" mode, colors ripple along the strip in a sequence that feels more dynamic than the static rainbow wash on cheaper alternatives. I tested it with three scenarios: evening TV drama (The Bear, naturally), a PlayStation 5 racing game, and a Spotify playlist through the TV's Bluetooth speaker. The music sync is the standout — the built-in mic picked up the bass on the lower end of the frequency range without needing any tuning. Dialogue-heavy scenes don't trigger chaotic color shifts, which is something cheaper kits with aggressive music modes often get wrong.

The app is functional but not elegant. The douCo StripX interface is busier than it needs to be, and pairing over Bluetooth took two attempts on my iPhone 14. Once connected, the custom scene builder is genuinely fun — I made a low-frequency pulse for horror movies and a steady warm white for late-night news. The IR remote handles brightness, power, and basic mode switching without opening the app, which I appreciated when my phone was charging on the opposite side of the room.
Brightness via the TV's USB port was acceptable for a dimly lit room, but cranked up in a bright space the light wash was subtle at best. Daymeet recommends a dedicated 5V USB power brick for full output — I used an old phone charger and the difference was noticeable. If you're buying this to use in a bright room or near windows, budget an extra $5-8 for a proper power supply.
Who Should Buy It?
- Home theater setups on a budget — if you want bias lighting that reduces eye strain during long movie sessions without spending $80+ on a Philips Hue gradient kit, this is a credible alternative
- Gamers who want ambient RGB sync — music mode adds a layer of immersion when you're playing rhythm games or anything with a strong audio track
- Renters who can't modify walls — the peel-and-stick approach leaves no permanent damage; take it with you when you move
- Anyone wanting to add warmth to a dark room — the warm white mode is genuinely easy on the eyes for reading subtitles in a darkened space
Skip this if you're looking for hospital-grade ambient light for professional color grading, or if your TV sits in direct sunlight — no LED backlight can compete with that kind of ambient interference. Also skip it if you have a TV under 55 inches, as you'll end up with too much excess strip and nowhere clean to tuck it.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Govee TV LED Backlight — Govee's ecosystem offers more third-party integrations (Alexa, Google Home) and a more polished app experience, but you'll pay roughly 30-40% more for comparable length
- Philips Hue Play Light Bars — if budget isn't a concern and you want premium build quality with seamless smart home integration, Hue is the obvious pick — though you're buying a different form factor entirely (free-standing bars vs. a perimeter strip)
- Ledenge TV Backlight — a closer price competitor with similar RGBICW tech, though the app has slightly fewer scene presets and the remote range is shorter in real-world testing
FAQ
The 16.4ft strip is optimised for 65-85 inch sets. On a 55-inch TV it will have excess length you can tuck behind the frame — but the segments are fixed, so you'll need to work around where the cut points fall.
Final Verdict
The Daymeet TV LED backlight is a practical, well-priced entry point into ambient TV lighting. The RGBICW segment colors look better than I expected for a product under $30, and having three control methods means you're never locked out when one fails. It's not perfect — the app needs polish, the adhesive needs surface prep attention, and serious brightness hunters will want a separate power supply. But for the vast majority of buyers decorating a living room or gaming setup, these are minor quibbles rather than dealbreakers. If you've been looking for a straightforward TV backlight that delivers the core experience without a smart home ecosystem commitment, this one earns a recommendation.