Buy a projector in 2026: The ultimate guide for your home cinema

By Felix Brandner 5 min read

Full HD, 4K, or laser projector? This guide helps you find the right beamer for your home cinema — with tips on lumens, resolution, and throw distance.

In 2 Minutes

  • Resolution: Full HD (1080p) works for 9 out of 10 cases. 4K only makes sense in darkened rooms with a screen 2.50 m or larger.
  • Brightness: 1,500–2,500 ANSI lumens for living rooms, 3,000+ only for bright spaces.
  • Distance: Standard projectors need about 2.5 m for 100 inches. Short-throw models do it from under one meter.
  • Smart TV: Built-in Android TV saves you an external Fire TV Stick. Netflix, YouTube, Prime — straight from your projector.

You want a projector. Choosing between 200 models is overwhelming. Every spec sheet reads the same, every review contradicts the next. In 8 minutes, you'll know what really matters — and what budget you should start with.

The 3 Questions That Decide Everything

Forget lumen values and contrast ratios for now. Before you open any spec sheet, answer these three questions:

  1. How dark is your room? Dark = 1,500 lumens is enough. Bright = 3,000+.
  2. What screen size do you want? 80 inches work at 2 m distance. 120 inches need 3 m or short-throw technology.
  3. Do you need streaming built-in? Modern Android TV projectors save you a Fire TV Stick and cable mess.

Once you have these three answers, you've filtered out 80% of all models. The rest is fine-tuning.

Resolution: Is Full HD Really Enough?

The honest answer: Yes — in 9 out of 10 cases. Netflix, Prime Video, YouTube, and Disney+ stream most of their catalog in Full HD (1080p). 4K streaming often requires 25 Mbit/s stable download, a premium subscription, and a 4K-capable HDMI cable — and even then, the visible difference at 100 inches and a 3 m seating distance is minimal.

When 4K is worth it

  • Your screen is larger than 2.50 m diagonal (120 inches+)
  • You sit under 2.5 m away (small rooms, big pictures)
  • You mainly watch 4K Blu-rays (not streaming)
  • Your budget allows at least €1,200 for the projector alone

Expert tip: "Fake 4K" vs. native 4K

Tech tip

Many budget "4K" projectors use pixel shifting — a DLP chip with a 1080p panel that simulates pseudo-4K through high-frequency vibration. That's not wrong, but it's not native 4K either. When retailers write "Supports 4K input," that's often just input resolution — the actual output stays at 1080p or buffered pixel shift. Native 4K projectors (3840×2160 true pixels) rarely cost less than €1,500.

Lumens: The Most Misunderstood Spec

Lumen claims are a marketing minefield. Manufacturers distinguish between ANSI lumens (industry standard, realistic), LED lumens (softer, often listed 3–5× higher than the ANSI value), and peak lumens (peak brightness only in the brightest image areas). Always compare ANSI to ANSI — anything else is marketing smoke.

What brightness you really need

Room Situation Recommended ANSI Lumens For Whom
Completely darkened (home theater room) 1,000–1,500 Evening movies, late-night sessions
Living room with curtains drawn 1,500–2,500 The mainstream case
Bright living room with daylight 2,500–4,000 Sports + gaming during the day
Outdoor / bright garden 4,000+ Pro projectors only

Practice: Our PIXORA models deliver 600–900 ANSI lumens. In a darkened room, the cinema experience is uncompromised. For bright living room use in the afternoon, you'll need more — or blackout curtains.

Short-Throw, Long-Throw, Ultra-Short-Throw

The throw ratio tells you how much distance you need per meter of image:

  • Long-throw (1.5–2.0): Classic projectors. 2.5 m distance = 1.5 m image width.
  • Short-throw (0.5–1.0): From 1.5 m, you get a 2.5 m wide image — ideal for small living rooms.
  • Ultra-short-throw (0.2–0.4): From 30 cm from the wall, you get a 2.5 m image. Expensive, but minimalist.

Use our throw ratio calculator to find the right projector for your room.

Smart TV: Android Integration vs. External Sticks

A projector without streaming capability is a step backward in 2026. Two paths lead to the goal:

  • Android TV / Google TV built-in (e.g., PIXORA One + Max): Netflix, Prime, Disney+, YouTube straight from the projector. One cable, one power socket, done.
  • External streaming stick (Fire TV, Apple TV, Chromecast): More flexibility for updates and apps, but requires an extra HDMI port and additional cable.

Budget Reality: What You Get for Your Money

Budget What You Get For Whom
€100–200 Full HD, 600–800 lumens, Android, compact Entry-level, occasional movie nights
€200–500 Full HD, 1,000–1,500 lumens, better contrast, auto-focus Frequent use, solid living room cinema
€500–1,200 4K pixel shift, 2,000+ lumens, laser light source Film enthusiasts with large screens
€1,200+ Native 4K, 3,000+ lumens, premium optics Pro home theater, high-end setup

Bottom Line: Your Next Step

The sweet spot for most households is €100–250: Full HD, Android TV, enough brightness for a darkened living room. This is where the PIXORA One from €99.99 shines — compact, quiet, Android 11 built-in, 180° projection. For larger living rooms and more demanding screen sizes, the PIXORA Max is the logical choice.

We've tested both models ourselves — in a real living room, not a lab. You'll find the full product overview in our projector collection.

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PIXORA One

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

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