Working from a single laptop screen gets old fast — especially once you’ve had a taste of dual monitors. Portable monitors close that gap without locking you to a desk. The five options below cover different priorities: some are built for maximum portability, others for screen real estate or everyday simplicity. Here’s a quick breakdown to help you figure out which one fits your setup.
The adjustable stand is the headline feature here — it actually lets you dial in the angle instead of propping things up with a notebook or coffee cup. The IPS display is easy on the eyes during long sessions, and the plug-and-play setup means zero driver headaches. Lightweight enough for a backpack without adding much noticeable bulk.
The stand can wobble a bit on softer surfaces, and the build isn’t designed for rough handling. But for coffee shop work sessions or hotel rooms? It’s a genuinely practical pick.
This one earns points for the included protective cover — it doubles as a stand and keeps the screen scratch-free in transit without needing a separate sleeve. Slim enough to slide into a laptop compartment alongside your machine. Display is solid for documents and video calls, though color accuracy isn’t its strongest suit.
If you’re primarily using it for productivity tasks rather than photo editing or design work, the image quality is more than adequate. Simple to set up, reliable day to day.
Borderline tablet-thin, which makes it the most packable option on this list. Connects to most laptops without adapters, and the image is sharp enough for spreadsheets, slides, or a movie at the end of a long travel day. Controls are minimal — basically just the essentials — which keeps the learning curve flat.
The bundled case does the job but won’t win any awards. If you want something that disappears into your bag and just works when you pull it out, this delivers on that promise.
Straightforward in the best possible way. One cable, bright display, slim body — and that’s really the whole story. No complicated menu systems, no bloated feature list to wade through. It handles different lighting conditions reasonably well, so it works whether you’re near a window or in a dimmer room.
Not built for heavy travel wear, and it doesn’t offer much in the way of adjustability. But if you want something dependable that you don’t have to think about, this is the one.
The extra inch and a half over the 15.6″ options makes a noticeable difference once you’re running two windows side by side. Bright, clear display, stable stand, and still light enough to carry without grumbling about it. The setup is quick and the size feels justified once you’re actually working on it.
It takes up more bag space than the others — that’s the honest trade-off. But if you’ve ever felt cramped staring at a small screen all day, the additional room here is genuinely worth it.
Which one to actually buy
- → Want flexible angles and easy setup? Go with the Ingnok.
- → Commuting daily and need a built-in cover? The InnoView makes sense.
- → Packing light and flying often? The Yodoit is your bag-friendly option.
- → Just want something simple that works? cocopar keeps it clean.
- → Need real screen space for side-by-side work? The ARZOPA 16.1″ delivers.
