Set up a beamer in your living room: How to create a home cinema without a dedicated room

By Felix Brandner 4 min read

Set up a home theater in your living room without compromises — multi-purpose use, daylight, furniture. Practical tips for apartments and small spaces.

In 2 Minutes

  • Placement: Shelf, sideboard, or ceiling — not coffee table. Fixed position saves you daily adjustments.
  • Distance: Standard projectors need about 2.5 m for 100 inches. Small living room? Go short-throw or 180° projection.
  • Blackout: Blackout curtains for $40 double the perceived image quality.
  • Cable management: Cable raceway or flat cables under the rug — no living room mess.

You want a home theater — but no dedicated cinema room. Your living room has to stay a living room during the day and turn into a cinema at night. It works — if you follow five basic rules. In 6 minutes, you'll know how your setup functions without turning the room into a cinema chaos.

Placement: Three solid options

The coffee table is the worst idea — you adjust the projector every time, cables get in the way, and someone trips over them. Three better approaches:

  • Shelf behind the couch: Height around 1.2–1.5 m, fixed position, keystone set once.
  • Sideboard on the opposite wall: For long-throw projectors — distance to wall around 2.5–3 m.
  • Ceiling mount: Invisible, always ready, no cable clutter. One-time installation 30–60 minutes.

Distance and image size

Most living rooms are more cramped than you think. With a standard long-throw projector and 2.5 m distance, you get a 100-inch image. If your living room is smaller, there are two workarounds:

  • Short-throw projector: Get a 100-inch image from 1.2–1.5 m distance. More expensive, but space-saving.
  • 180° projection: Projectors like the PIXORA One project in almost any direction — overhead or at an angle to the wall. No precise alignment needed.
Image size Long-throw (2.0) Short-throw (1.0)
80 inches 2.0 m 1.0 m
100 inches 2.5 m 1.25 m
120 inches 3.0 m 1.5 m

Blackout: The cheapest image upgrade

No projector delivers a good image in bright sunlight — that's physics, not price. Blackout curtains are the most important living room accessory:

  • Thermal blackout curtain: $40–80 per side, dims daylight to evening levels.
  • Pleated shades: $100–200, more elegant, also insulate against summer heat.
  • Blinds with side guides: Block light gaps at the edges — essential for projector use.

Tech tip

The side walls of your living room play an underestimated role. Bright walls left and right of the screen reflect stray light and flatten contrast. A darker paint or wall hanging next to the screen reduces this effect significantly. Your projector stays the same — the image looks up to 20% more contrasty.

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PIXORA One

HD native · 180° · Android 11 · from $99.99

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Cable management: From chaos to clean setup

Three cables typically run from the projector: power, HDMI, maybe audio. Three ways to hide them:

  1. Wall cable raceway: Adhesive or screw-mounted, white or color-matched.
  2. Flat cables under the rug: Special HDMI flat cables lay only 1–2 mm down — no tripping.
  3. Ceiling mount with cable slot: Most involved, but cleanest solution. Usually during renovation.

Sound: The living room factor

A living room isn't acoustically optimized. Thick rugs, curtains, and upholstered furniture dampen reflections — that's good. A soundbar with subwoofer replaces the thin projector speaker and fits visually. Details in the home cinema budget guide.

The living room fallback

When the projector isn't running (software update, guests, tiredness): keep your TV as backup. Many setups combine both — TV for news and quick checks, projector for movies and series. That's not a compromise solution, it's real life.

Conclusion: Your next step

Living room home theater works when you focus on three things: fixed projector position, darkened room, and clean cable management. The PIXORA One from $99.99 is built for the living room scenario — compact, Full HD, Android 11, and 180° projection. For larger living rooms with more viewing distance, the PIXORA Max is the logical choice.

We've installed both models in real living rooms — not in labs, but with actual curtains and actual couch-chair setups. Find the full range in our projector collection.

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PIXORA One

HD native · 180° · Android 11 · from $99.99

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