The Best Black Friday Projector Deals This Week*
*Deals are selected by our commerce team
Projectors have come a long way from the days when they were all essentially interchangeable for anything from business presentations to setting up a home theater, and the most useful way to categorize them was by their weight class. Today, you can break them down by any number of meaningful categories, including their imaging technology (LCD, DLP, LCOS, and even laser raster), light source (lamp, LED, laser, or hybrid), and most important, their intended use.
As projectors have become more widely used, they’ve also become more specialized. A model intended for showing business presentations in rooms with bright lighting, for example, needs higher brightness than one designed for watching movies in a dark room, but it doesn’t need the same level of contrast or color accuracy. In this guide, we’ll first cover our favorite picks, chosen from models we’ve tested, for a variety of needs. We’ll also explain why we picked each one for that specific use. Then, we’ll take you through the factors you should consider when shopping for a projector to help ensure you find the best match for whatever you plan to use it for.
Epson Pro Cinema LS12000 4K Pro-UHD Laser Projector
Best 4K Projector for Top-Quality Home Theater
Why We Picked It
The Epson Pro Cinema LS12000 is pricey, but it’s actually a near-bargain for the image quality it delivers. Epson is known for pixel-shifting LCD projectors whose images, thanks to lens quality and video processing, are virtually indistinguishable from a true 4K UHD picture while using only half as many pixels on screen. The LS12000 keeps the same emphasis on top-quality lenses and processing while boosting the pixel count to a full 3,840 by 2,160. The result is more detail than we’ve seen from any pixel-shifting 4K DLP projector.
And because the image is produced by three LCD chips, you won’t see any rainbow artifacts—the flashes of red, green, and blue that single-chip projectors can show. The LS12000 also offers top-tier color accuracy, contrast, and shadow detail, plus sophisticated features that include the ability to adjust the lens easily to give you the same image height when switching between movies with different aspect ratios.
Who It’s For
The LS12000 will tantalize serious videophiles who plan to put it in a home theater with dark walls, ceiling, and seating to minimize reflections back to the screen. However, the image quality is good enough that even less-demanding viewers will notice, making it a good home theater projector for anyone. It’s also bright enough to serve in a family room, particularly if you plan to watch movies with all the lights off at least occasionally. It doesn’t support 3D, however, so if 3D movies are your thing, you’ll need to look elsewhere.
PROS
- Delivers a full 3,840 by 2,160 pixels on screen
- 2,700-lumen laser light source rated to last the life of the projector
- Supports HDR10, HDR10+, and HLG HDR
- Good color accuracy, contrast, and shadow detail, plus dark blacks for a laser model
- Easy to maintain image height for different aspect ratios
- Three-chip LCD design guarantees no rainbow artifacts
Read Our Epson Pro Cinema LS12000 4K Pro-UHD Laser Projector Review
Optoma UHD55
Best 4K Projector for Gaming
Why We Picked It
All colors and no lag make a brilliant 4K projector: That’s the Optoma UHD55 in a nutshell. Designed for both gaming and home entertainment, the Optoma UHD55 offers 4K resolution (3,840 by 2,160 pixels, via DLP technology and TI’s fast-switch pixel shifting), superb color output, and the short input lag that gamers demand. It delivers a faster response at 4K than most projectors can manage, putting it within the range that a serious gamer would consider acceptable. Even better, the lag dropped by roughly half, to 8.6ms, for 1080p/120Hz input.
Who It’s For
Gamers and serious esports types will be interested in this model, but the color output is good enough that it would be wasted on just casual play: This model is ideal for users who mean to do equal parts gaming and home entertainment enjoyment on their big screen. For movies, its 4K HDR output is especially worth putting eyes on.
PROS
- 4K UHD resolution
- Full HD 3D
- HDR10 and HLG HDR support
- Bright enough for a room with ambient light
- Good out-of-box color accuracy
- Short input lag
CONS
- Only one of the two HDMI ports offers the short input lag
- Limited number of streaming apps
Epson EpiqVision Ultra LS500 4K Pro-UHD Laser Projection TV
Best Ultra Short Throw (UST) 4K Projector
Why We Picked It
Available with or without a bundled ALR screen, the Epson EpiqVision Ultra LS500 can give you what amounts to a 4K, giant-screen smart TV ranging from 100 to 130 inches (depending on the screen size) for far less than a flat-screen TV of that size. It’s pricier than most competing DLP-based UST projectors, but it also offers more, starting with the highest brightness by far of any laser TV projector we’ve tested.
At 4,000 ANSI lumens, the LS500 can throw a 130-inch image that’s bright enough to stand up to the moderate ambient light of a typical family room. It also delivers top-tier color accuracy, contrast, shadow detail, and black level for the category straight out of the box, while menu options allow for professional calibration for your room, should you want to pay for it. And because it’s built around three LCD chips, rather than one DLP chip, it’s guaranteed not to show rainbow artifacts.
Who It’s For
The LS500’s high brightness makes it the clear choice if you want a 130-inch screen, particularly if you plan to watch in a family room with lots of sunlight streaming through the windows. The three-chip design also makes it the obvious choice if you, or anyone in your family, sees rainbow artifacts easily and finds them annoying. Beyond that, it’s a strong contender if you insist on top-tier image quality, or simply want to buy a projector bundled with an appropriate screen, and know that the default settings were chosen for that screen.
PROS
- Laser-phosphor light source rated at 4,000 ANSI lumens
- Epson’s Pro-UHD matches the ability to resolve detail of true 4K resolution
- Price includes 100-inch ambient light rejection (ALR) screen
- Three-chip LCD design means no rainbow artifacts
- Android TV dongle includes Netflix app
CONS
- More costly than DLP-based competitors
- Android TV not fully integrated
- Dongle supports Wi-Fi connection only
Read Our Epson EpiqVision Ultra LS500 4K Pro-UHD Laser Projection TV Review
Hisense 100L5G-Cine100A
Best Ultra Short Throw (UST) 4K Projector With a Bundled Screen
Why We Picked It
Billed as a smart laser TV and priced at what passes for entry level for its category, the Hisense 100L5G-Cine100A bundles a 100-inch ambient light rejection (ALR) screen with a projector (the LG5) that offers the best image quality we’ve seen in its price range. Hisense aims the LG5 at first-time buyers of ultra short throw (UST) projectors, and also sells it as the 120L5G-Cine120A, which comes with a 120-inch screen.
With either version of the bundle, the projector offers a fixed focus designed for the screen size, so positioning the projector to fill the screen automatically gives you optimum focus. Even better, there’s no need to customize settings for the screen material, because the default settings are chosen with the bundled screen in mind. In our tests, the projector-plus-screen combo delivered good color accuracy, contrast, black level, and shadow detail straight out of the box. You don’t have to be a first-time projector buyer to appreciate that.
Who It’s For
Just about anyone who doesn’t already own a UST ALR screen and is looking for a low-price UST laser model to serve as a big screen TV should at least consider the L5G. Keep in mind that any projector in this category should be paired with an ALR screen, so when you’re comparing prices to models that aren’t bundled with screens, add the screen cost in the comparison. When you do, you’ll quickly see why the L5G counts as “entry level.”
That said, note that it’s built around a single DLP chip, which means it can exhibit rainbow artifacts. We didn’t see many in our tests, but if you’re particularly sensitive to them, be sure to buy the projector from a source that allows easy returns, even if you’ve already assembled the screen.
PROS
- 4K (3,840-by-2,160) resolution using TI’s XPR fast-switch pixel shifting
- Good color accuracy, contrast, and shadow detail
- 100-inch ambient light rejection screen included
- Integrated Android TV and built-in TV tuner
- Laser-phosphor light source, rated at 2,700 ANSI lumens
CONS
- No 3D support
- Fixed focus means you can’t upgrade to a larger screen
BenQ TH685P
Best Mainstream 1080p Projector for Home Entertainment
Why We Picked It
Sheer specs don’t tell the whole story of the TH685P. This 1080p projector has almost identical specs to those of its BenQ predecessor, but the TH685P delivers an obviously better image with HDR input. That is a big thumbs-up in a gaming and home entertainment projector at this price. It also surprised us with its onboard audio quality; the sound from the internal 5-watt chamber speaker is quite usable and pumps out high enough volume to fill a large family room.
Who It’s For
This unit is a top choice for users who aren’t prone to seeing rainbow artifacts, and who both will benefit from its low input lag and its good handling and downconverting of 4K content. (Ideally, you’ll operate it in a darkened room.) Also, if attaching an external sound system or headphones isn’t an option where you will play or watch, this model’s speaker output is a plus.
PROS
- Bright 3,500 ANSI lumen rating
- Short input lag
- Accepts and downconverts 4K input to native 1080p resolution
- Good color accuracy, contrast, and shadow detail
- Supports HDR
CONS
- Can’t read files from USB memory
- Shows rainbow artifacts (red-green-blue flashes)
Vankyo Leisure 495W Dolby Audio Projector
Best Budget 1080p Home Entertainment Projector
Why We Picked It
The Vankyo Leisure 495W Dolby Audio is far from the only home entertainment projector in strictly bargain-basement territory, but it’s the best we’ve seen in that price range, at $299 list and selling on Vankyo’s website for $179.99 at this writing. It delivers 1080p (1,920 by 1,080) native resolution along with more-than-acceptable color accuracy and contrast for casual viewing. And its design guarantees that it can’t show rainbow artifacts.
The 495W was bright enough in our tests to light up a 70-inch, 16:9 aspect ratio, 1.0-gain screen with nicely saturated color in a dark room and remain watchable at that size, though a little washed out, with lights on at night. It doesn’t offer built in streaming, but it can mirror mobile devices. Stream to your phone or tablet, and you can view the image at large size using the 495W while taking advantage of its Dolby sound system, which offers surprisingly robust audio.
Who It’s For
Anyone looking to spend as little as possible for a home entertainment projector should consider the 495W. It’s also a potentially good second projector if you already have a more capable model installed in a home theater or family room and are looking for one to use for ad hoc setup elsewhere. The compact size and light weight—just 3.1 pounds—makes it easy to pack for a weekend trip, move to the backyard to watch a movie, or take to a Thanksgiving dinner to watch football, while the low price makes it easy to justify buying for occasional use.
PROS
- Inexpensive
- Robust audio
- Good color accuracy for the price
- Includes HDMI cable
- Supports Windows Cast, DLNA, and Android/iOS screen mirroring
CONS
- Cumbersome picture settings adjustment
- Doesn’t handle dark scenes well
Epson EpiqVision Mini EF12 Smart Streaming Laser Projector
Best 1080p Room-to-Room Portable Projector for Home Entertainment
Why We Picked it
The EpiqVision Mini EF12 offers a native 1080p resolution and pairs a 1,000-lumen laser-phosphor light source with a three-LCD chip design. In our tests, the 1,000 ANSI lumens was enough to light up an 80-inch screen with nicely saturated color in a family room at night even with lights on and also delivered a watchable image in daytime. The three chips, which project all three primary colors at once, guarantee that it can’t produce rainbow artifacts. Two other important pluses are integrated Android TV and a 4.7-pound weight, which makes the EF12 surprisingly light for a laser projector.
Who It’s For
For anyone who sees rainbow artifacts easily and considers them annoying, the EF12 is a prime candidate for a 1080p room-to-room portable. Many will also consider it preferable to any current 4K model, by that same note. We found the EF12 delivered good image quality in our tests, and when compared with many competitors that offer higher maximum brightness, it had a brighter image for the picture modes that you’ll actually want to use.
PROS
- Long-lived laser-phosphor light source
- Native 1080p resolution; supports 4K UHD (3,840-by-2,160) input and HDR
- Three-chip LCD engine (3LCD) for equal color and white brightness and no rainbow artifacts
- Integrated Android TV
- Wi-Fi and two HDMI ports
- Impressive audio options
CONS
- No 3D support
- Only moderate brightness
Read Our Epson EpiqVision Mini EF12 Smart Streaming Laser Projector Review
BenQ X1300i
Best 1080p Room-to-Room Portable Projector for Gaming
Why We Picked It
The BenQ X1300i delivers the expected gaming-projector optimizations of a short input lag and high brightness, but it doesn’t stop there. It also offers three game modes—first-person shooter, role playing, and sports—that adjust both audio and video for the best settings for each type of game simply by pressing a button on the remote to switch between them. When you’re not gaming, it can serve nicely for watching movies and video, thanks to the bundled Android TV dongle, good color accuracy, and more-than-acceptable overall image quality by most people’s standards.
Note that we measured the lag at 16.3ms for 1080p/60Hz input, which is consistent with the 8.33ms rating for 1080p/120Hz. We also found the brightness consistent with the 3,000 ANSI lumen rating.
Who It’s For
Whether you’re serious about gaming and want a native 1080p room-to-room portable gaming projector with the shortest possible input lag, or are a more casual gamer who doesn’t demand a short lag, but would love to have it, the X1300i will give you that advantage, along with the multiple game modes. Whichever group you’re in, you’ll appreciate that the same button on the remote that switches game modes also switches to the best picture modes for movies or video. Even those who aren’t interested in gaming may want to consider the X1300i it for its combination of image quality for movies and video plus its high brightness, which is helpful for 3D viewing or a backyard movie night.
PROS
- Super-bright LED rated at 3,000 ANSI lumens
- Low input lag
- Excellent speakers and onboard audio processing
- Video/audio presets for three categories of gaming
- Android TV dongle included
- Accepts 4K UHD and HDR input
CONS
- Relatively light black level
- Some rainbow artifacts
BenQ GV30
Best Budget Room-to-Room Projector
Why We Picked It
The BenQ GV30 offers both lower resolution (720p, or 1,280 by 720 pixels) and lower brightness (300 ANSI lumens) than most room-to-room portables, meaning streaming projectors with good enough audio so you don’t need to lug an external sound system with you. It’s also less expensive than most, and at just 3.5 pounds, it’s the most portable as well, with a finger-size loop that makes it easy to carry. It’s shaped pretty much like a 7-inch wheel of cheese, and it offers an innovative magnetic stand that stays in place when you pick up the projector but also lets you rotate the GV30 freely on the stand to adjust image height. The streaming is handled by a bundled Android TV dongle that fits in a hidden compartment.
The GV30 also offers a built in battery, which is unusual for a room-to-room portable, and a drop-proof rating of up to 27.6 inches—the distance from tabletop to floor, or hand to floor when you’re carrying it—which is unusual for any projector.
Who It’s For
If you want maximum portability in a value-priced room-to-room portable, the GV30 is the obvious choice. There are plenty of smaller, lighter projectors, but they can’t match the full-bodied sound coming from the GV30’s two 4-watt tweeters and 8-watt woofer, and few include built-in streaming. Although the 720p resolution is low for the category, the low brightness level means you probably won’t notice any sense of soft focus or loss of detail at the image sizes you’re most likely to use.
PROS
- Clever design and outstanding portability
- In most modes, delivers neutral color and acceptable or better color accuracy
- Impressive audio quality and volume
- Includes Android TV dongle for streaming and Chromecast
- Rugged enough to withstand drops from table height
CONS
- Does not support HDR or the copy protection on 4K UHD discs
- No 3D support
- Brightest mode shows a noticeable green tint
Epson Pro EX7280 3LCD WXGA Projector
Best Business/Education Projector for Presentations
Why We Picked It
If you need to make presentations regularly in midsize or large rooms, and may not have control over the lighting in them, the Epson Pro EX7280 3LCD WXGA brings on the brightness. Plus, this 1,280-by-800-pixel unit delivers vibrant, saturated color and a high-quality image guaranteed free of rainbow artifacts (the latter thanks to its tri-LCD design). Even if you’re in a room with lots of ambient light, it should do the job: It lit up a 90-inch screen with a suitably bright image in our tests under such conditions. It’s also borderline portable, at just under 6 pounds, and comes with a carry case.
Who It’s For
Business users and educators who need a bright image above all, and maybe the ability to move the unit from place to place now and then. They’ll also project a relatively basic menu of material, given the native resolution. If you never show anything more demanding than PowerPoint presentations with big fonts, and you don’t need a widescreen aspect ratio, a lower-resolution projector like this one can serve just as well as a 1080p model.
PROS
- Bright enough for a large room with ambient light
- Vibrant, saturated color
- WXGA (1,280-by-800-pixel) resolution
- 1.2x zoom
- Three-chip LCD design guarantees no rainbow artifacts
CONS
- Only one HDMI port
- No 3D support
Epson EX3280 3LCD XGA
Best-Value Compact Business/Education Projector
Why We Picked It
The Epson EX3280 pairs a low price with high-enough brightness to throw a suitably large picture for a midsize conference room or classroom with ambient light. And because it’s built around three LCD chips, it can’t be plagued by the rainbow artifacts that some people see with single-chip projectors and find annoying. The three-chip design also guarantees that color images will be fully as bright as you would expect from the 3,600-lumen white brightness rating.
Other important pluses include a crisp image to help make text more readable and show more detail in photorealistic images, vibrant color for graphics, and even good color accuracy and color saturation for photorealistic images. The last isn’t true of many business projectors.
Who It’s For
The EX3280 is aimed at offices and schools on tight budgets. Its XGA resolution (1,024 by 768 pixels) is a little low by today’s standards and will necessarily limit its appeal if you need to show complex line drawings with fine detail, for example. And its 4:3 aspect ratio makes it a poor choice for showing widescreen movies very often. But if you simply need readable text in documents and presentations, vibrant color in graphics, and highly watchable film and video on a strictly occasional basis, the EX3280 can handle the job.
PROS
- 3,600 lumens; suitable for a midsize to large room with lights on
- Vibrant, eye-catching color
- No rainbow artifacts, thanks to three-chip LCD design
- Light, compact, and easy to set up
CONS
- Relatively low 1,024-by-768 native resolution and 4:3 aspect ratio
- No optical zoom
- Only one HDMI port
Anker Nebula Solar Portable Projector
Best Portable Mini Projector (Battery Powered)
Why We Picked It
The Anker Nebula Solar Portable is our top pick for mini projectors, a category defined by weighing about two to four pounds, being small enough to fit in a briefcase or backpack, and still offering a reasonably bright image. Rated at 400 ANSI lumens, the Solar Portable was bright enough in our tests to light up a 90-inch diagonal, 16:9, 1.0 gain screen in a dark room. Its native resolution is 1080p (1,920 by 1,080), but it behaves like a 4K model with soft focus, connecting at 4K by default and downconverting the image to 1080p. Its home entertainment features include Android TV 9 for streaming over a Wi-Fi connection to your network, the ability to mirror mobile devices, and a built-in battery that’s rated to last long enough on a charge to watch a full-length movie.
Who It’s For
The built-in Android TV makes the Solar Portable of obvious interest to home users who want a small 1080p projector they can move easily from room to room to backyard, or bring along on a weekend getaway, while still being able to project a larger image than most large-screen TVs offer. Businesses can find it just as useful for a small conference room, while individual road warriors will find it light enough to carry without much effort and brighter than projectors that are smaller still.
PROS
- 1080p (1,920-by-1,080) native resolution; accepts 4K (3,840-by-2,160) input
- Supports HDR and copy protection standards used by 4K UHD discs
- Android TV 9 and Wi-Fi built in
- Battery life rated at 3 hours in Battery mode or 1.5 hours in Standard
- Capable autofocus
CONS
- Color accuracy is off by just enough to notice
- Does not deliver improved image quality with HDR material
Kodak Luma 75 Portable Pocket Projector
Best Pocket-Size Projector
Why We Picked it
The Kodak Luma 75 is literally small enough to lose track of if you accidentally cover it with a piece of paper. Basically the size of a 3-by-3-inch pad of sticky notes, it weighs just 5 ounces. But it’s big enough to have an HDMI port, which means it can connect to most video sources, including mobile devices to mirror the screen. It’s also bright enough to give you a 32-inch 16:9 diagonal image for short sessions in a dark room or an image size in typical office lighting closer to that of a letter-size page. Whether you’re showing a business presentation or watching a movie, that’s a lot bigger than you would get on your phone, and it comes from a projector that fits easily in a pocket.
Who It’s For
Anyone who has a more-than-occasional need to (or has simply wished they could) mirror their phone’s screen at a larger image size will find the Luma 75 worth considering. It takes no more effort to carry than a second phone, and it lets you show anything from photos to business presentations to movies without having to pass your phone around or crowd around it. And because you can also show files stored on a USB memory key, you can even use it without a phone.
PROS
- Compact
- Built-in battery rated at 90 minutes per charge
- Unusually sure focus control
- Supports up to 1080p input resolution
CONS
- No image adjustment settings
- Low native resolution (640 by 360 pixels)
- Low 30-lumen rated brightness
BenQ GS50
Best Rugged Outdoor Projector
Why We Picked It
Billed as an outdoor projector but perfectly useful indoors as well, the BenQ GS50 is designed to survive. Its IPX2 rating for water resistance translates to not having to worry about an unexpected light rain shower or minor splashes, while the drop-proof rating for up to a 2.3-foot fall means it’s more likely than most projectors to survive a tumble. It doesn’t hurt that it also delivers 1080p native resolution, was bright enough in our tests to fill a 90-inch screen in low levels of ambient light, and even comes with an Android TV dongle.
Who It’s For
The more often you plan to watch outside, whether on special occasions like backyard movie nights or regular TV watching by the pool on warm nights, the more appealing the GS50’s water and drop resistance will be. Double that appeal if you have big dogs or young children who may be running around where they can jar a table and send a splash of liquid the GS50’s way or send the projector itself to the ground. The same considerations about rambunctious toddlers and pets also apply, perhaps even more so, for ad hoc setups for casual watching indoors.
PROS
- 1080p resolution
- 500 ANSI lumen rating
- Acceptable color accuracy
- Impressive audio quality and volume
- Included Android TV dongle for streaming and Chromecast
- Durable and water-resistant
CONS
- No 3D support
- Brightest mode has an obvious green tint
- Awkward setup for Android TV dongle
Buying Guide: The Best Projectors for 2022
If you’ve read through our reasons above for why we picked each model, you’ve probably noticed that the reasons change depending on all sorts of factors, ranging from what you’re planning to use the projector for, to your budget, to purely subjective questions like whether you find rainbow artifacts annoying. You need to take all of these issues into account in any buying decision, but a good place to start is with what kinds of images you plan to show.
There are two basic kinds of images to consider: data (meaning text and graphics) and photorealistic (photos, video, and film). Games generally have some aspects of both. Any projector can show any kind of image, of course, but a projector may handle one kind of image well without necessarily doing a good job with the other. You’ll want a projector that’s optimized at least for the kind of images you plan to show most often, and ideally for every kind you expect to show.
(Credit: Epson)
Data projectors are designed to show images such as business graphics, line drawings, presentations, spreadsheets, and PDF files. They’re optimized for conference rooms and classrooms, throwing a bright enough image to stand up to ambient light on a large screen. Many can handle photorealistic images well enough to project short video clips in a presentation or even an acceptable image for, say, watching a movie in a classroom. But they are rarely good choices for full-length movies if you want anything approaching the quality you expect in a movie theater or when watching on an HDTV. They tend to favor brightness, which is important for standing up to ambient light, over contrast and color accuracy, which matters more for photorealistic images. They also tend to offer few or no options for adjusting color.
Home theater, home entertainment, and gaming projectors are all so similar to each other that one model is often marketed in two or three categories. These home-use projectors focus on color accuracy and contrast, usually adding controls to fine-tune color, reduce noise, sharpen images, and otherwise digitally enhance video and film.
Models listed as home theater projectors are typically optimized for traditional home theater viewing in a dark room. They tend to offer more-accurate color, better contrast, and lower brightness than home entertainment projectors. Most don’t include speakers. The assumption is that you’ll set up a better external audio system in your home theater than any projector can fit into its case.
(Credit: Xgimi)
Home entertainment models are usually optimized for viewing in a family room or other space with ambient light. Many are also compact enough so you can easily move them outdoors to create the perfect backyard movie night. Compared with home theater models, they tend to sacrifice some color accuracy and contrast in favor of higher brightness. Many include built-in speakers.
Until recently, it was a given for almost all projectors that even if they included speakers, you should plan on using an external sound system to get decent audio quality. However, that’s not always true today, largely thanks to two subcategories of home entertainment models. One is what we’ve dubbed room-to-room portables. There are defined in part by offering robust audio, so you can move them around for ad hoc setup without having to lug a sound system with you too. Most are nearly cubical in shape, about twice as high as traditional projectors. They use the extra height for good-quality speakers, which are often chamber speakers. Most offer high enough volume to fill a large family room with more-than-acceptable sound quality.
The second category with good audio is sometimes billed as the “laser TV” class. These are built around a laser light source; a Smart TV feature, which can either be integrated or supplied as a dongle; and an ultra short throw, which means they can throw a 100-inch or larger image with the projector just inches from a screen. Mount a screen on a wall, and the projector can sit on a table or entertainment center just below it. These laser TV models are wider than most projectors. Virtually all offer audio that’s at least comparable to what you would expect from a large-screen TV. Some take advantage of the width to add what amounts to a sound bar on the side facing away from the screen.
Gaming projectors are basically home entertainment models with greatly reduced input lag for speedier reaction time in gaming. Most are small enough to carry easily, and they usually include better-than-typical onboard audio for a projector. A few include separate gaming modes for first-person-shooter, role-playing, and sports games, with each mode automatically adjusting both audio and video settings to optimize both for each type of game.
Do You Need a Portable Projector?
Consider how portable the projector needs to be. You can find portable projectors with sizes and weights ranging from small and light enough to fit in a shirt pocket to large and massive enough to be suitable only for a permanent, usually mounted, installation.
(Credit: Anker)
If you want a data projector to carry to business meetings for presentations, or a home entertainment or gaming projector to take to a friend’s house or set up in your backyard for a movie night, be sure to pick an appropriate size and weight. If you’ll be away from power outlets, check that the projector’s battery life is long enough for your needs.
What Resolution Is Enough in a Projector?
Projectors can scale images up or down, but that’s best avoided, since it can distort the image. For any projector resolution up to and including WUXGA (1,920 by 1,200 pixels), you should match the projector’s native resolution (originally defined as the number of physical pixels in the projector’s display) to the source you plan to attach it to most often, whether that’s a computer, video equipment, or a game console. For projectors with 4K ultra-high definition (3,840 by 2,160 pixels), the calculation is a little different.
Current projectors built around 3,840-by-2,160 imaging chips are still too expensive for most applications. The affordable alternative takes advantage of a technique called pixel shifting. It uses a native 1,920-by-1,080 chip, generates more than one set of pixels for each frame in the video stream, and shifts the position for each set. The result is more pixels per frame on screen than are on the chip. Two sets doubles the number of pixels; four sets quadruples the number to a full 3,840 by 2,160. When done well, just doubling the number of pixels can deliver images that are indistinguishable from quadrupling them, at least at normal viewing distance from the screen.
Even 1080p projectors that can accept 4K UHD input handle it reasonably well. Thanks to the higher resolution having exactly four times as many pixels as 1080p, the only loss in quality from scaling the image down will be the equivalent of a slightly soft focus. If the projector also supports HDR10 (the high dynamic range, or HDR, version that’s on discs and some streaming services, including Netflix) or HLG HDR (also supported by some streaming services), it can give you the advantage of HDR for improving image quality, even with 1080p resolution.
If you plan to show data images, you should consider the level of detail in the images. For a typical PowerPoint presentation, SVGA (800 by 600 pixels) may be good enough, and an SVGA projector will be much less expensive than one with a higher native resolution. For very detailed images, however, you’ll want to go up to 4K UHD.
For video, 4K UHD is generally the best choice, assuming you have a 4K UHD Blu-ray player, a 4K-capable streaming device, or another 4K UHD media source. But odds are you’ll be watching a lot of 1080p material for the foreseeable future—particularly if you own a library of 1080p discs—and may occasionally be watching at even lower resolutions. So check how well the projector handles scaling up 1080p input.
Which Widescreen Format Is Most Important in Your Projector?
Most projectors today offer native resolutions that qualify as widescreen formats. You’ll generally want to match the aspect ratio (ratio of image width to image height) of the projector’s resolution to the images you’ll be watching most often. You can always show material in narrower or wider formats, too. As long as the resolution is one that the projector can accept, which is something you can check in the projector specs, it will either scale the image to fit in the projector’s native aspect ratio, or keep the image’s aspect ratio to avoid distortion and add letterbox bars (black bars to the sides for narrower formats, or black bars above and below for wider formats). Almost all projectors today include aspect-ratio settings to let you choose which approach to use.
Note that the ability to show images with different aspect ratios than the projector’s native resolution gives you some flexibility in matching the projector to the images you plan to watch. For example, you can use a native WUXGA projector, with its 16:10 aspect ratio, to watch movies or TV with a 16:9 aspect ratio. Keep in mind that if you set up a 16:10 projector to fill your 16:9 screen with the picture, you’ll need a sufficiently wide black border at the edges to keep the letterbox bars from showing as brighter areas surrounding the screen.
How Bright Should the Projector Be?
There is no single best level for projector brightness, and brighter isn’t always better. For a home theater projector you plan to use in a dark room, for example, 1,000 lumens or even less can easily give you a large, bright image, while 2,000 lumens may be so bright that it’s hard on the eyes. On the other hand, for a portable data projector you expect to use in brightly lit locations or a home entertainment projector for your family room, 2,000 to 3,000 lumens is the right range in most cases. For large rooms, you’ll want something even brighter.
(Credit: Vankyo)
For any situation, the ideal projector brightness depends on the ambient light level, the size of the image, and the material in the screen you’re using. If you’re setting up a projector for permanent installation, whether at home or in your office, your best bet is to buy from a knowledgeable seller who can help you pick a projector and screen material that will give you the right image brightness for the lighting conditions in the room at the screen size you want.
If you’re trying to choose between two models, keep in mind that a small percentage difference in lumens—2,000 versus 2,200, for example—isn’t significant. The perception of brightness is nonlinear, which means a 10% difference is hardly noticeable, and you need far more than twice as many lumens for a projector’s image to appear twice as bright. Also, keep in mind that a projector’s true brightness is often a little less than its rated brightness, and image quality is generally best in modes that are often as little as 40% of the projector’s highest brightness.
Does Contrast Ratio Matter With Projectors?
Contrast ratio—the ratio between the brightness of the brightest white a projector can produce and the brightness of the darkest black—always matters, but the rating for the projector usually won’t. All other things being equal, a higher contrast ratio produces more vibrant, eye-catching color, more shadow detail in dark areas on the screen (most important for video and film), and a more dramatic sense of three-dimensionality in two-dimensional photorealistic images.
However, contrast ratings are based on measurements in a dark room, so they don’t tell you much about viewing in ambient light, where the darkest black you can get depends on how much light there is in the room. A projector that delivers a high contrast ratio in a dark room because of unusually dark blacks will deliver much lower contrast in ambient light, and a brighter projector that also has a higher black level in the dark will do poorly in a home theater but do well in a living room or office, where the high black level won’t be noticeable, while the higher brightness will let it stand up better to the ambient light.
Comparing contrast-ratio specs is somewhere between challenging and pointless. Different manufacturers use different approaches to measuring contrast, and some even measure it differently for different models. There are also other factors—including video processing and auto-irises that change image brightness based on the content of the image—that increase your subjective sense of how good the contrast is but don’t affect objective measurements. The best way to find out how good the contrast is for any given projector—short of seeing it yourself—is to look for reviews that discuss contrast in different settings.
How Do You Plan to Connect Your Projector?
To connect a projector to a video source, you obviously need to match the projector’s inputs with the source’s outputs. But given a choice, a digital connection is preferable to an analog connection.
Almost all current projectors include at least one HDMI port, which is the preferred choice for video sources and many computers, unless you plan to connect over a wired or wireless network. Many projectors still offer a VGA (analog) connector for computers and component video, but few new computers have VGA output ports, and few new video sources offer component video.
(Credit: Optoma)
Keep in mind that the HDMI version matters. Later versions support higher resolutions and more features than earlier versions. Make sure the HDMI version on the projector will let you take full advantage of the image sources you want to use, either by confirming it has the same HDMI version number as the image sources or that the manufacturer says it supports those specific features. You should also check the High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP) level. Virtually all 4K UHD HDR movies, for example, require HDCP 2.2 on both the player and the projector.
Note that some projectors’ HDMI ports support Mobile High-Definition Link (MHL), which lets you project from older Android devices. This is becoming less common, however, since most newer Android devices can connect directly to the HDMI port via a USB-C-to-HDMI cable. A more useful extra today is that many current projectors support eARC on one of their HDMI ports, for connecting to an external audio system.
Many models also have Wi-Fi connectivity built-in or can provide it through an included or separately purchased wireless dongle that plugs into a USB or HDMI port. Many support projecting directly from USB memory or memory cards.
A growing number of projectors include internet streaming features, either built-in or through an included streaming HDMI dongle. You can also buy third-party dongles to add streaming to virtually any projector with an HDMI port. Some models, most often portables, offer USB-C ports, which can (but don’t always) support DisplayPort and HDMI protocols. Here also, check before buying to make sure you know what video support—if any—the USB-C connector offers.
Which Imaging Technology Is Best in a Projector?
Today’s projectors are based on one of four imaging technologies: digital light processing (DLP), liquid-crystal display (LCD), liquid crystal on silicon (LCOS), and laser raster. (Don’t confuse laser raster projectors, which actually draw the images using lasers, with the much more common models that simply use lasers as a light source for another imaging technology, like DLP or LCD chips.)
Most DLP projectors and some LCOS-based pico (aka pocket-size) projectors—including both data and video models—project their primary colors sequentially rather than all at once. This can lead to rainbow artifacts, in which bright areas on the screen break up into little red-green-blue flashes for some people when they shift their gaze or when something moves onscreen. Those who are sensitive to this effect can find it annoying, particularly for long viewing sessions.
LCD projectors are free from rainbow artifacts, but they tend to be bigger and heavier than comparable DLP models. Standard-size LCOS projectors, also rainbow-free, offer the best-quality images, but they tend to be bigger and heavier than either DLP or LCD projectors, as well as far more expensive. There aren’t many laser raster projectors, so it’s hard to make general statements about them. But the one clear advantage of using a laser is that the image doesn’t require focusing.
What Kind of Light Source Is Best in a Projector?
There’s a growing trend in projectors of moving from using lamps as light sources to using LEDs and lasers. For the moment, at least, there are advantages to each choice.
LEDs and lasers maintain a higher percentage of their initial brightness for longer. All light sources lose brightness over time, but lamps generally lose a large percentage in the first 500 hours of use, and decline slowly after that. LEDs and lasers tend to lose brightness more evenly over their entire lifetimes.
(Credit: Optoma)
The initial price for a lamp-based projector will be lower, but the total cost can be higher if you keep it long enough to need a replacement for the lamp. If you plan to replace your projector with every new jump in resolution or other image technology, buying a series of lamp-based projectors will be more cost-effective. But if you plan to keep your projector as long as it works, the better buy will be an LED, laser, or hybrid model that won’t need an expensive lamp replacement.
What Is a Short-Throw Projector? Do You Need One?
If you want to cast a large image at a short distance from the screen, either because the room itself is a little small or to minimize the bother of people getting in front of the projector and casting shadows, you’ll need a short-throw or ultra-short throw projector. There are no universally accepted definitions for what counts as “short” or “ultra-short,” but most short-throw projectors can cast an image about 6.5 feet wide from 3 to 6 feet away, while ultra-short-throw projectors generally need less than a foot. By comparison, most projectors with standard throws need to be roughly 9 to 13 feet away from the screen for the same image size, and long-throw projectors have to be even farther away.
(Credit: Epson)
The downsides of short-throw (and especially ultra-short-throw) projectors are that they are more expensive than traditional models with standard-throw lenses, and they are more likely to have noticeable variations in brightness or focus across the image. Ultra-short-throw models also require a particularly flat and stable screen. Even slight variations in the surface can distort the image and affect focus.
Does Your Projector Need Built-In Audio, or 3D Support?
Not all projectors have audio capability, and for those that do, the audio is sometimes all but useless—particularly with highly portable models. If you need sound for your presentations or for watching video, make sure that the projector has built-in audio that’s clear enough and loud enough to meet your needs. If not, consider using a separate sound system—often a good idea for home theater or home entertainment in any case—or powered external speakers. If you already have Bluetooth speakers, check whether the projector supports Bluetooth.
(Credit: BenQ)
Then there’s 3D. Showing images in 3D for educational, business, and home applications seems well past the boomlet it enjoyed a few years ago. But if you’re a fan of 3D movies or have an application that requires 3D, it’s still easy to find projectors that support it.
Several 3D technologies are available, so make sure any 3D projector you consider will work with the 3D source you want to use. A “3D-ready” designation usually means it will work only with 3D generated by a computer. If you have a collection of 3D Blu-ray discs, the designation to look for is usually Full HD 3D. And before you go shopping for 3D glasses, be sure to check which kind the projector supports. There are several types, including some proprietary versions.
So, What Is the Best Projector to Buy?
The summary up top, and the spec breakout below, outline our choices for some of the best projectors on the market for the most common situations and use cases. For full projector reviews and our latest coverage of the category, also check out our top models for home use, our picks for 4K projectors, and our favorite portable projectors.
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