Zbotic Logo Zbotic Logo
  • Home
  • Shop
  • Sale
  • 3D Print Service
  • PCB Service
  • B2B
  • Blogs
  • Contact Us
0 0

View Wishlist Add all to cart

0 0
0 Shopping Cart
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: ₹0.00

View cartCheckout

  • Shop
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Reseller
  • Blogs
020 69134444
1800 209 0998
[email protected]
Help Desk
Facebook Twitter Instagram Linkedin YouTube
Zbotic Logo Zbotic Logo
0 0

View Wishlist Add all to cart

0 0
0 Shopping Cart
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: ₹0.00

View cartCheckout

All departments
  • 3D Print Service
  • 3D Printer
  • Batteries & Chargers
  • Development Boards
  • Drone Parts
  • EBike parts
  • Sensor Modules
  • Electronic Components
  • Electronic Modules
  • IoT and Wireless
  • Mechanical Parts and Workbench Tools
  • Motors & Drivers & Pumps & Actuators
  • DIY and Robot Kits
  • Show more
  • Home
  • Shop
  • Sale
  • 3D Print Service
  • PCB Service
  • B2B
  • Blogs
  • Contact Us
Return to previous page
Home Display Modules & Screens

0.96 Inch vs 1.3 Inch OLED Display: Which Should You Buy?

0.96 Inch vs 1.3 Inch OLED Display: Which Should You Buy?

March 11, 2026 /Posted byJayesh Jain / 0

When browsing for a small OLED display for your next Arduino or ESP32 project, you’ll almost always come down to two choices: the 0.96 inch OLED and the 1.3 inch OLED. They look similar, cost roughly the same, and both use I2C. But the differences matter more than you’d think — especially when it comes to driver chips, library compatibility, and legibility. This 0.96 vs 1.3 inch OLED display comparison will help you pick the right module for your specific project so you don’t end up ordering the wrong one and waiting another week for delivery.

Table of Contents

  1. Quick Comparison: At a Glance
  2. How OLED Displays Work
  3. 0.96 Inch OLED — Features & Best Uses
  4. 1.3 Inch OLED — Features & Best Uses
  5. Driver Chips: SSD1306 vs SH1106
  6. Wiring & Library Compatibility
  7. Recommended Products from Zbotic
  8. Frequently Asked Questions

Quick Comparison: At a Glance

Feature 0.96 inch OLED 1.3 inch OLED
Screen Size 0.96″ diagonal 1.3″ diagonal
Resolution 128 × 64 pixels 128 × 64 pixels
Common Driver SSD1306 SH1106 (mostly)
Interface I2C or SPI I2C or SPI
Operating Voltage 3.3V / 5V 3.3V / 5V
Current Draw ~20mA typical ~25mA typical
Pixel Density ~132 PPI (very dense) ~100 PPI
Text Legibility Good with small fonts Better for larger text
PCB Size Smaller, compact Slightly larger
Best For Wearables, small enclosures Standalone gadgets, dashboards

How OLED Displays Work

OLED stands for Organic Light-Emitting Diode. Unlike LCD displays that require a backlight, each pixel in an OLED display generates its own light. This produces true blacks (pixels simply switch off), excellent contrast ratios, and — critically for battery-powered projects — power consumption proportional to what’s displayed. A screen showing mostly black draws far less power than one with white backgrounds.

Both the 0.96″ and 1.3″ modules use monochrome OLED panels (white, blue, or yellow-blue bicolor variants). The monochrome variants are simpler to drive and far cheaper than color OLED, making them perfect for data display overlays, status panels, and compact instrument clusters.

The modules communicate via I2C (just 2 wires: SDA + SCL) or SPI (4 wires, faster refresh). Most hobbyist modules default to I2C with address 0x3C (or 0x3D if the address jumper is bridged).

0.96 Inch OLED — Features & Best Uses

The 0.96″ OLED is the most popular OLED module in the Arduino community. Its small size, extremely wide library support, and affordable price (typically ₹80–120 in India) make it the default choice for quick projects.

Strengths:

  • Compact footprint — fits inside small enclosures, behind bezels, or on a breadboard without dominating space
  • Universal library support — Adafruit SSD1306 library works out of the box, no configuration needed
  • Low power — typically 20mA active, making it viable for battery-powered wearables
  • High pixel density — at 132 PPI, small text and icons look crisp up close
  • Wide availability — easiest to source in India with consistent quality

Limitations:

  • The physical size means text and icons look small from more than 30–40cm viewing distance
  • Not ideal when you need to show data to someone standing nearby

Best project applications: Wearable fitness trackers, smart watch faces, compact weather stations inside small boxes, status displays on robotics, USB-C power meter displays, and anywhere size is more important than legibility at a distance.

1.3 Inch OLED — Features & Best Uses

The 1.3″ OLED module is the step-up sibling offering noticeably more screen real estate. Same 128×64 resolution but spread over a larger physical area — each pixel is about 35% larger, making text and graphics much easier to read at arm’s length.

Strengths:

  • Better legibility — text is comfortable to read from 50–80cm without squinting
  • Same resolution — all your existing graphics code works, just displayed larger
  • Dashboard-friendly — works well as a standalone instrument panel visible across a workbench
  • Good for demos — when showing a project to others, the larger display is far more impressive

Limitations:

  • Uses SH1106 driver on most modules — requires a different library or explicit driver selection
  • Slightly larger PCB footprint — may not fit compact enclosures
  • Less common than 0.96″, so may have more vendor variation

Best project applications: Desktop weather stations, lab instrument readouts, retro clock projects with large digits, Raspberry Pi status displays, workshop tool monitors, and any standalone gadget displayed on a shelf or desk.

Driver Chips: SSD1306 vs SH1106

This is the most important technical difference between the two modules and the most common source of confusion:

The SSD1306 (common in 0.96″ modules) has a 128×64 pixel frame buffer that maps directly to the display. Commands address columns 0–127 and pages 0–7 directly. The Adafruit SSD1306 library talks to it natively.

The SH1106 (common in 1.3″ modules) has a slightly larger 132×64 internal frame buffer. It supports page addressing but uses a 2-pixel offset, meaning commands to column 0 actually write to pixel column 2 of the internal buffer. If you use the SSD1306 library unchanged, you’ll see the display content shifted 2 pixels horizontally or see artifacts at the screen edges.

Fix for 1.3″ SH1106: Use a library that explicitly supports SH1106:

  • U8g2 library — supports both SSD1306 and SH1106; change the constructor to U8G2_SH1106_128X64_NONAME_F_HW_I2C
  • Adafruit SH110x library — Adafruit’s dedicated SH1106/SH1107 library
  • u8x8 library — text-only, ultra-low memory, supports both chips

Note: Some 1.3″ modules actually do use SSD1306 — check the product listing or read the markings on the driver IC with a magnifier. When in doubt, try the SSD1306 library first; if the image is offset, switch to SH1106.

Wiring & Library Compatibility

Wiring is identical for both modules in I2C mode:

OLED Pin Arduino Uno ESP32
VCC 3.3V or 5V 3.3V
GND GND GND
SDA A4 GPIO21
SCL A5 GPIO22

Basic code for the 0.96″ (SSD1306) using Adafruit library:

#include <Wire.h>
#include <Adafruit_GFX.h>
#include <Adafruit_SSD1306.h>

Adafruit_SSD1306 display(128, 64, &Wire, -1);

void setup() {
  display.begin(SSD1306_SWITCHCAPVCC, 0x3C);
  display.clearDisplay();
  display.setTextSize(2);
  display.setTextColor(WHITE);
  display.setCursor(10, 20);
  display.println("Zbotic!");
  display.display();
}

For the 1.3″ (SH1106) using U8g2:

#include <U8g2lib.h>
#include <Wire.h>

U8G2_SH1106_128X64_NONAME_F_HW_I2C u8g2(U8G2_R0, U8X8_PIN_NONE);

void setup() {
  u8g2.begin();
  u8g2.clearBuffer();
  u8g2.setFont(u8g2_font_ncenB14_tr);
  u8g2.drawStr(10, 40, "Zbotic!");
  u8g2.sendBuffer();
}

Recommended Products from Zbotic

Pair either OLED with these popular sensors for complete projects:

DHT20 SIP Temperature and Humidity Sensor

DHT20 SIP Packaged Temperature and Humidity Sensor

I2C temperature and humidity sensor — ideal companion for an OLED display project. Display live T&H readings in big text on either the 0.96″ or 1.3″ module.

View on Zbotic

GY-BME280-3.3 Pressure Sensor Module

GY-BME280-3.3 Precision Altimeter Atmospheric Pressure Sensor Module

Combine with a 1.3″ OLED for a full weather station displaying temperature, humidity, pressure, and altitude — four values in a clean four-line layout.

View on Zbotic

DS18B20 Programmable Resolution Sensor

DS18B20 Programmable Resolution Temperature Sensor

High-accuracy 1-Wire temperature sensor — display precise readings up to ±0.5°C on your OLED. Great for sous vide controllers, incubator monitors, and aquarium thermometers.

View on Zbotic

MQ-135 Air Quality Gas Detector Sensor Module

MQ-135 Air Quality/Gas Detector Sensor Module for Arduino

Build an indoor air quality monitor — display CO2, ammonia, and benzene levels on your OLED with a scrolling bar graph. The 1.3″ OLED shows the graph more clearly.

View on Zbotic

Frequently Asked Questions

Which OLED is better for Arduino beginners?

The 0.96 inch OLED with SSD1306 driver is better for beginners. The Adafruit SSD1306 library is the most documented, has the most tutorials, and just works. You can find working code for nearly every sensor combination. If you choose the 1.3″ SH1106, add the U8g2 library to your toolkit and select the correct constructor.

Can I use multiple OLED displays on the same I2C bus?

Yes, with a limitation: each I2C device needs a unique address. Most OLED modules have address 0x3C, but many have a solder jumper to switch to 0x3D. This means you can run two OLEDs on one I2C bus (one at 0x3C, one at 0x3D). For more than two, use an I2C multiplexer like the TCA9548A, which gives you 8 independent I2C channels.

How long do OLED displays last?

OLED panels have finite lifetimes — typically 10,000–100,000 hours depending on brightness and usage patterns. Burn-in (static images permanently etched into the panel) is a real concern if you display the same content continuously at full brightness. Best practices: implement a screen saver (invert display or dim after 30 seconds of inactivity), reduce brightness, and rotate between display modes. For hobby projects that run a few hours a day, lifespan is not a practical concern.

What is the difference between white, blue, and yellow-blue bicolor OLED?

All are the same resolution and driver — only the emitting color differs. White is most versatile and readable in various lighting. Blue looks great in dark environments and has a retro aesthetic. Yellow-blue bicolor modules have the top 16 rows in yellow and remaining 48 rows in blue — useful for showing a title/label in yellow and data in blue, adding visual hierarchy without any extra code.

Do OLED displays work with 5V Arduino and 3.3V ESP32?

Yes — most OLED modules include a built-in voltage regulator and level shifter on the PCB, making them compatible with both 3.3V and 5V systems. The VCC pin typically accepts 3.3V–5V. However, the I2C lines (SDA/SCL) on some modules are not 5V tolerant — if you’re using a 5V Arduino, add 4.7kΩ pull-up resistors to 3.3V rather than 5V to be safe, or look for modules with onboard level shifting.

Need an OLED for your project?
Shop display modules, sensors, and Arduino accessories at Zbotic.in — India’s trusted electronics store with delivery across all major cities.
Tags: 0.96 inch oled, 1.3 inch oled, oled display arduino, oled module comparison, ssd1306 vs sh1106
Share Post
  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • Whatsapp
How to Desolder Components: Wi...
blog how to desolder components wick pump and hot air methods 597264
blog integrator and differentiator op amp circuits explained 597269
Integrator and Differentiator ...

Related posts

Svg%3E
Read more

Multi-Display Sync: Run Same Content on Multiple Screens

April 1, 2026 0
Table of Contents When You Need Multiple Synchronised Displays Communication Protocols for Display Sync I2C Multi-Display Architecture SPI Daisy-Chain Approach... Continue reading
Svg%3E
Read more

Display Brightness Control: Ambient Light Auto-Adjust

April 1, 2026 0
Table of Contents Why Auto-Brightness Matters Light Sensors: LDR, BH1750, TSL2561 PWM Brightness Control Basics Implementing Auto-Brightness for OLED Auto-Brightness... Continue reading
Svg%3E
Read more

LCD Menu System: Multi-Level Navigation with Encoder

April 1, 2026 0
Table of Contents Why Build a Menu System Hardware: LCD + Rotary Encoder Menu Architecture Design Implementing the Menu Engine... Continue reading
Svg%3E
Read more

LED Running Text: Single Line Scrolling Marquee

April 1, 2026 0
Table of Contents Applications for Scrolling Marquee Displays Hardware Options: Dot Matrix vs LED Panel Building with MAX7219 Cascaded Modules... Continue reading
Svg%3E
Read more

Prayer Time Display: Mosque and Temple Timer India

April 1, 2026 0
Table of Contents The Need for Automated Prayer Time Displays Calculating Prayer Times Programmatically Display Options for Places of Worship... Continue reading

Add comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Linkedin Youtube

Get the latest deals and more.

Download on Google Play Download on the App Store

Call us: 020 69134444 / 1800 209 0998

Monday - Saturday 09:30 AM - 06:00 PM
For Technical Supports Email: [email protected]
For Sales / Enquiries Email: [email protected]

  • My Account

    • Cart

    • Wishlist

    • Checkout

    • My Orders

    • Track Order

    • My Account

  • Information

    • FAQs

    • Blogs

    • Career

    • About Us

    • Contact Us

    • Payment Options

  • Policies

    • Privacy Policy

    • Terms & Conditions

    • GST Input Tax Credit

    • Shipping Return Policy

    • E-Waste Collection Points

    • Our Sitemap

© Zbotic.in is registered trademark of Moxie Supply Pvt Ltd – All Rights Reserved
Login
Use Phone Number
Use Email Address
Not a member yet? Register Now
Reset Password
Use Phone Number
Use Email Address
Register
Already a member? Login Now