Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors (2024)

Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors (1)

Jump to:

  • The best projectors
  • Best for gaming
  • Best value
  • Best mid-range
  • Best for flexibility
  • Other projectors tested
  • Benchmarks compared
  • What to look for
  • How we test

The best projectors should bring the cinema into your living space, inviting a world of change to your home cinema with improved immersive qualities. Many projectors can hit upwards of $1,000, making this an upgrade that might be costly — but oh so worth it in the long run. You can always check out our best TVs under $1,000 to get the right display in your price range.

Projectors are a tough gamble. There's a lot to contend with, most especially in terms of ambient lighting and an avid surface to project the picture on. But, they offer arguably the largest picture without taking too much room space and deliver some fantastic imagery to boot.

With out knowhow in projectors and TVs, we've got ample enough qualifications to recommend some of the best projectors around. We've tested everything from Ultra Short Throws, like the Epson EpiqVision Ultra LS800, to far throw models as seen with the Xgimi Horizon Ultra.

Whether you're looking to snag a major deal, or spend big and get the best possible image around, these following picks among the best projectors will net you a quality home entertainment setup worthy of the Cinemaplex. You may not ever need a movie theater again with these models, especially when you throw in one of the best soundbars for impeccable audio immersion.

The best projectors

Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors (2)

1. JMGO N1 Ultra

Best overall

Specifications

Price: $2299

Resolution: 4K

Lumens: 4,000 ANSI / 2200 CVIA

Audio: 2x10W

Light: RGB Laser

Projection: 0.47" DLP

Screen size: 60-150 inches

HDR: HDR10

Refresh Rate: 60Hz

Ports: 1x HDMI 2.1, 1x USB

Smart TV Software: Android TV 11.0

Size: 9.44 x 7.99 x 9.29 inches

Weight: 9.9 lbs.

Lifespan: 30000 hours

Reasons to buy

+

Strong brightness and color

+

Wonderfully flexible in setup

+

Great value with discounts

Reasons to avoid

-

Few ports

-

Slow operating system

The JMGO N1 Ultra is a heavyweight — not literally, though. This compact projector dishes out surprise after surprise. The star of the show is its triple-laser light source, which uses separate red, green, and blue lasers to deliver not only exceptional brightness but staggering color gamut as well. The projector uses that to blast a stunning 4K picture wherever you want it, as it sits on an easily adjustable pedestal.

For its size, the JMGO N1 Ultra even has surprisingly potent speakers, which will more than do the job in a small room. For serious audiophiles, there’s an eARC port, but that leaves only one HDMI port left over for external sources. And you’ll probably want an external source. Even though the projector offers Android TV, it’s a little slow and buggy.

Read our full JGMO N1 Ultra review.

Best for gaming

Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors (3)

2. BenQ HT2060

Best for gaming

Specifications

Price: $999

Resolution: 1080p

Lumens: 2,300 ANSI

Audio: 2x5W

Light: LED

Projection: DLP

Screen size: 30-300 inches

HDR: HDR10, HLG

Refresh Rate: 120Hz

Ports: 2x HDMI 2.0, 1x USB

Smart TV Software: n/a

Size: 14.4 x 9.6 x 4.6 inches

Weight: 7.9 lbs.

Lifespan: 30000 hours

Reasons to buy

+

Strong contrast

+

Respectable audio

+

Responsive gaming

Reasons to avoid

-

Brightest setting is hideous

-

No smart TV platform

-

Fairly large

BenQ has what gamers need: speed. And with the BenQ HT2060, it doesn’t come with big sacrifices in other departments. In fact, the BenQ HT2060’s biggest shortcoming is that it’s only a 1080p projector, but the tradeoff is that it can run at 120Hz for even faster, smoother gameplay and nigh imperceptible input latency. Its brightness is enough for use in a lightly lit room, but it’s a stunner in a dark room thanks to its exceptional contrast ratio. It even has a wide color gamut, which can do a lot to bring game worlds to life — arguably more than a 4K resolution.

The projector itself is fairly large, so you’ll want to find somewhere to set it permanently. Thankfully, there’s a lot of flexibility in that department, as the projector has hardware zoom, focus, and vertical lens shift adjustments. You’ll need your own video source for streaming and gaming, but you can get by on the decent built-in speakers if you don’t want to deal with too many cables coming from the projector. While all of that is good, it’s made better by this projector only costing $1,000.

Read our full BenQ HT2060 review.

Best value

Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors (4)

3. Xgimi Horizon Pro

Best value

Specifications

Price: $1100

Resolution: 4K

Lumens: 2200 ANSI

Audio: 2x8W

Light: LED

Projection: 0.47" DLP

Screen size: 40-200 inches

HDR: HDR10, HLG

Refresh Rate: 60Hz

Ports: 2x HDMI, 2x USB, 1x LAN

Smart TV Software: Android TV

Size: 8.6 x 8.2 x 5.4 inches

Weight: 6.4 lbs.

Lifespan: 30000 hours

Reasons to buy

+

Bright and colorful for the price

+

All-in-one package

+

Portable and quick to setup

Reasons to avoid

-

Contrast is a little lacking

-

Sound isn’t cut out for serious home theaters

If having the very best in every category isn’t vital to you, and you prefer to get something that’s good enough as long as it means saving some bucks, then the Xgimi Horizon Pro is the one thanks to its new low price (originally $1,699 but now down to $1,199 to make way for the Horizon Ultra). It’s not the brightest, the most colorful, or the loudest. But it’s not trailing at the rear of the pack either. The Xgimi Horizon Pro puts on a good show. It’s decently bright, though you’ll want to dim the lights and draw the curtains for anything but light cartoons. And it has respectable color performance.

Its 4K picture provides sharp detail that’s not so easy to find at the price. And when you want to game, it provides surprisingly low input lag. With a built-in Android TV platform, the projector is effectively an all-in-one solution for home entertainment, and its portable size means you can bring it just about anywhere you like to enjoy TV and movies on the big screen.

Read our full Xgimi Horizon Pro review.

Best mid-range

Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors (5)

4. Dangbei Mars Pro 4K

Best mid-range

Specifications

Price: $1799

Resolution: 4K

Lumens: 3200 ANSI

Audio: 2x10W

Light: ALPD Laser

Projection: 0.47" DLP

Screen size: 40-200 inches

HDR: HDR10, HLG

Refresh Rate: 60Hz

Ports: 2x HDMI, 2x USB, 1x LAN

Smart TV Software: Dangbei Smart OS

Size: ‎9.68 x 8.22 x 6.81 inches

Weight: 10 lbs.

Lifespan: 30000 hours

Reasons to buy

+

Respectable picture

+

Ample, full sound

+

OS runs smoothly

Reasons to avoid

-

Some issues with dark scenes

-

Signal upscaling varies

-

Color saturation issues

The Dangbei Mars Pro 4K can be a little more expensive than we’d like, but it often has discounts that bring to a much more palatable level. For the money, you get a capable 4K projector that relies on a laser light source. It’s a laser phosphor system, which means it can get plenty bright but doesn’t have as much color as systems using tri-color laser systems. Still, it makes for a reasonably attractive image, and its high brightness and contrast let you stretch it plenty large for home cinema use.

While the Dangbei Mars doesn’t have Android TV built in like some of its competitors, it comes with a speedy streaming stick and works well without other external sources. Crucially, the built-in operating systems runs quickly and smoothly, making it easy to power up, select the source you want, and get watching. Where many projectors run a slow operating system that can make it tedious to start watching, Dangbei avoids this, providing a little extra convenience.

Read our full Dangbei Mars Pro 4K review.

Best for flexibility

Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors (6)

5. Epson Home Cinema 3800

Best for flexibility

Specifications

Price: $1699

Resolution: "4K" with Two-Phase Pixel-Shift Technology

Lumens: 3000 CLO

Audio: 2x10W

Light: UHE bulb

Projection: 3LCD

Screen size: 0-300 inches

HDR: HDR10, HLG

Refresh Rate: 60Hz

Ports: 2x HDMI 2.0, 2x USB

Smart TV Software: n/a

Size: 16.1 x 6.5 x 13.0 inches

Weight: 15.2 lbs.

Lifespan: 5000 hours

Reasons to buy

+

Fantastically bright and high contrast

+

Extensive picture adjustments

+

Low input lag

Reasons to avoid

-

Color is a little weak

-

Big and bulky

-

No smart TV operating system

Epson has considerable experience in the projector space, and it shows in the Home Cinema 3800 projector. This may not be boasting the latest, fanciest features, but you’ll find a high-utility projector here. It’s one of the brightest projectors we’ve tested, and it actually looks good running that bright (unlike the Optoma GT2100HDR). That’s paired with a high contrast ratio that keeps visuals looking great. It’s a little lacking in color, but doesn’t look bad. And with Epson’s 3LCD projection system, the rainbow effect that can prove distracting to some people is largely gone.

Epson’s system doesn’t have a great speaker system or a streaming operating system. So you’ll want to pair it with some other home theater equipment. Fortunately, it has a lot of tools to help you get your setup just right. Where many projectors will digitally manipulate an image to make it fit your setup, in turn throwing away pixels and often leaving some unsightly artifacts, Epson’s projector can make optical adjustments to move and resize the projection. So you can more easily set the projector where it’s convenient and still align the projected image with your screen or wall.

Read our full Epson Home Cinema 3800 review.

Other projectors tested

  • Optoma GT2100HDR: This little short-throw projector gets plenty bright and has a high contrast image, but it’s pretty lacking everywhere else.
  • Xgimi Horizon Ultra: Following up on the capable Horizon Pro, the Horizon Ultra was a bit of a disappointment. It’s bright and colorful, but lags behind JMGO in both departments, and its contrast was severely lacking no matter what we tried. As promising as it was, we just couldn’t get it to look as good as it should have at the price.

Projector Benchmarks Compared

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Row 0 - Cell 0 JMGO N1 UltraBenQ HT2060Xgimi Horizon UltraDangbei Mars Pro 4KEpson Home Cinema 3800Optoma GT2100HDRXGIMI Horizon Pro
Brightness (ANSI lumens):2143164512961812237530121270
Contrast:1577:13253:1250:11105:12055:12370:1757:1
sRGB coverage:100%99%100%92%91%90%100%
DCI-P3 coverage:96%87%90%75%76%74%83%
Input lag (default):144ms25ms145ms152ms24ms26ms144ms
Input lag (gaming mode):28ms25ms26ms27ms24ms25ms24ms
Lifespan:30,000 hours30,000 hours2,5000 hours30,000 hours5,000 hours30,000 hours30,000 hours
MSRP:$2,299$999$1,699$1,799$1,699$1,799$1,899
Street price:$1,899$999$1,699$1,299$1,699$1,549$1,199

What to look for when buying a projector

Brightness: One of the key factors in determining whether you’re going to be able to enjoy your projector is brightness, generally measured in lumens (though there are a few different ways companies measure lumens, and the advertised brightness is not easy to trust). In a very dark room, you can get away with a projector that only offers a few hundred lumens of brightness, but if you want to do some daytime viewing or don’t want to turn all the lights out, you’ll pretty much want to ignore anything that’s not breaking 1,000 lumens. As long as you have decent blinds and can dim the lights, you’ll probably find 1,000-2,000 lumens is enough for home viewing.

Color gamut: This is essentially how rich the colors will appear from the projector. It won’t matter how bright your projector is if all of the colors look faded as a result. For the home theater, you should expect good colors, which ideally means at least 90% coverage of the sRGB color space and all the better if you’re getting over 90% of the DCI-P3 color space.

Contrast: Contrast goes hand in hand with brightness. If you have a high brightness but low contrast, dark colors and shadow details are going to be washed out, ultimately marring the cinematic image you’re looking for.

Resolution (Native): As projectors offer a big image, the resolution can be a big factor. You’re stretching a lot of information out across your screen, so if there’s too little detail, it’s going to be that much more noticeable. In action, it can be a little harder to see the difference between 1080p and 4K, but if you’re looking at a lot of static content, the advantages of 4K will be more apparent. For a decent home theater, aim for 720p at a minimum and ideally 4K. There are plenty of 4K options out there, though 1080p or WUXGA are decent enough if you sit far back. It’s also important to look for “native” resolution on projectors, as many will prominently advertise a “supported” resolution. Long story short, “supported resolution” is just the signal the projector is capable of receiving, and “native resolution” is what it’s capable of displaying (e.g., a projector could receive a 4K signal but turn that into a 720p image if it has a native 720p resolution.

Light source: Not all light sources are created. Lamps are cheap and bright, but they’re hot, take some time to warm up and cool down, and they don’t offer as much longevity as others. LEDs can get fairly bright and provide good color while offering a long lifespan. Lasers have the brightness advantage and can outperform LEDs in color if they combine multiple lasers of different colors, but they’re more expensive.

Ports: How you’re able to use your projector is majorly impacted by its ports. If it doesn’t have some quality audio outputs, like eARC, you may have a hard time connecting it to a good sound system without also buying an AV receiver. Too few HDMI ports or lower bandwidth ports can also impact your ability to use the projector conveniently.

Speakers: Many projectors include their own built-in speakers, but not all do. And many that have speakers don’t offer ones that can compare to the image they provide. It’s worth taking a note of how well the speakers performed and what wattage they offer to get a sense of whether you’ll need to factor the price of a separate sound system into your purchase.

How we test projectors

We test projectors in the real-world conditions a buyer would use a projector in. That said, we do have a degree of control, with heavy, light-blocking drapes and an ambient-light rejecting projector screen to test on. But since not everyone will use such a screen, we also view the projection against a bare wall.

While some of our testing is subjective, observing the projectors’ capabilities as we watch movies and play games, we also take measurements that allow for comparison between projectors. Projector brightness is measured using each projector's brightest mode (and occasionally other modes if the brightest mode results in a worse overall image), using a light meter to measure the luminance of an all-white image at 9 points evenly spaced across the image and multiplying those by the projected area to derive an ANSI lumen measurement. Contrast is roughly estimated by comparing the average lux measurement of an all white image against a lux measurement of an all black image.

Color coverage is measured using a SpyderX Elite colorimeter and DataColor’s calibration software. The colorimeter sits a foot away from a 1.1-gain projection screen, angled to avoid seeing its own shadow, and then measures the color gamut of the projectors light reflected off the screen.

To measure input latency, we run a timecode displayed on a laptop and mirror the display to the projector over HDMI. We then take a high shutter-speed (over 1/1000th of a second) photo of the timecode on both the laptop display and projector to see how many milliseconds the projector is behind the laptop display.

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Mark Knapp

Over the last several years, Mark has been tasked as a writer, an editor, and a manager, interacting with published content from all angles. He is intimately familiar with the editorial process from the inception of an article idea, through the iterative process, past publishing, and down the road into performance analysis.

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    Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors (2024)

    FAQs

    Best projectors in 2024: the best long throw and laser projectors? ›

    The Epson Home Cinema 5050UB is the best all-around home projector we've reviewed. Take an excellent contrast ratio, paired with impressive brightness and accurate color, all with better detail than what's possible with a 1080p native resolution projector, and you've got all the pieces for a fantastic image.

    What is the best projector on the market right now? ›

    The Epson Home Cinema 5050UB is the best all-around home projector we've reviewed. Take an excellent contrast ratio, paired with impressive brightness and accurate color, all with better detail than what's possible with a 1080p native resolution projector, and you've got all the pieces for a fantastic image.

    Which is the number one projector brand in the world? ›

    Epson. Dating back to 1942, Epson is known for making some of the finest projectors in the world. Specialising in LCD projectors, Epson is also the inventor of the 3LCD concept.

    What is the longest lasting projector? ›

    Factors That Determine a Projector's Life Expectancy

    Different projectors utilize different light sources, such as traditional lamps, energy-efficient LEDs, or laser technology. Laser projectors tend to have the longest lifespans, often surpassing 20,000 hours.

    Are laser projectors better than other projectors? ›

    As compared to lamp-based projectors, a laser projector offers brightness that lasts longer, truer colors, improved contrast, almost zero maintenance, and no generation of heat. With these features, you can experience fine viewing for many years without having to change the lamp frequently.

    Which company makes the best projectors? ›

    The best 4K projectors in 2024
    1. Epson Pro Cinema LS12000. The best 4K projector for most home theater fans. ...
    2. BenQ TK700STi. A great budget 4K projector for gaming. ...
    3. JVC DLA-NZ8. ...
    4. Hisense L9G TriChroma Laser 4K TV. ...
    5. Samsung The Premiere. ...
    6. Epson EpiQVision Ultra LS800. ...
    7. Samsung The Freestyle 2nd Gen.
    Mar 25, 2024

    How many lumens is a good projector? ›

    If you'd like to watch movies using a projector on a 100”~120” screen without ambient lighting, around 2,000 lumens of projection brightness is ideal. If you need to turn on ambient lighting or if there are bright light sources in the room, a projector with 3,000 lumens or more will display clear images.

    What are the top 5 projector manufacturers? ›

    Full Line Projector Manufacturers
    • ASUS.
    • Canon.
    • Epson.
    • Epson Europe.
    • LG.
    • Panasonic Europe.
    • Vivitek.
    • XGIMI.

    What are the best 5 projector companies? ›

    Brands such as WZTACO, Epson, BenQ, XGIMI and WANBO offer some of the best projectors for all your requirements.

    How to choose a good projector? ›

    Projectors are usually compared using three main factors: brightness, resolution and lens ratio. Once these factors have been considered, you can narrow down your choice further with secondary factors such as light source, lamp life, warranty, connectivity etc.

    How many years do laser projectors last? ›

    A laser projector has the potential to last between 20 000 - 30 000 hours if it's well taken care of. That's approximately 12 years if you use it for 8 hours a day, five days a week. Without the proper care, you'll need to replace the laser projector before the end of its estimated lifespan.

    Do laser projectors last longer? ›

    Laser projectors come with a much longer lifespan and unlike their lamp counterparts you will not need to regularly change the lamp. A lifespan of 20,000 hours is common for laser projectors, whereas the lamp life on a lamp projector can be as low as 2,500 hours; more on the costs of lamp replacement later.

    What has replaced projectors? ›

    Projectors used to rule the roost in all sorts of commercial display applications, but the new boss is the LED wall. In meeting rooms, classrooms, lobbies, retail showrooms and even government command centers, LED walls like Samsung's All-in-One LED IAC have rapidly replaced projectors as the display of choice.

    What are the disadvantages of laser projectors? ›

    Cons of Laser Projectors:

    Complex Maintenance: While laser projectors require less frequent maintenance compared to lamp projectors, servicing them can be more complex and costly due to the intricacies of their internal components.

    Why are laser projectors so expensive? ›

    All projectors rely on light to display an image, whereas other models use lamps or LEDs to do so a laser projector instead fully relies on lasers. Laser technology is in general of higher quality which means the resulting image and color quality is improved and the system will last longer than its counterparts.

    Do you need a special screen for a laser projector? ›

    You don't need a special screen - but if you are going to spend money on a laser projector - make sure you budget for the best screen you can afford. Also, if you want to watch the projector in a semi-lit room, make sure you get an ALR (Ambient Light Rejecting) Screen.

    Are 4K projectors worth it? ›

    The deepest natural colors pop out while watching sports using a 4K projector. Complaints about projectors often used to be centered on hazy visuals or faded images, but modern 4K models are effectively free of these. 4K is currently the resolution with the most realistic look.

    What projector do movie theaters use? ›

    The most common theater installation would use dual gauge 35/70 mm projectors. 70 mm film is also used in both the flat and domed IMAX projection system. In IMAX the film is transported horizontally in the film gate, similar to VistaVision.

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