What a Portable Display Under $100 Means for Everyday Users
A portable display under $100 is a compact, USB-powered screen that extends your laptop or device’s desktop, giving you extra workspace in a slim, travel‑friendly form at a price most budgets can handle. For years, portable monitors have been a premium gadget, often starting around $300 and climbing much higher, which kept many casual users, students and new remote workers from trying a multi-monitor setup at all. Laser is changing that equation by introducing its 14‑inch portable monitor at an initial price of $99, pushing portable screens into a new budget category. This screen delivers a 1920×1200 IPS panel with wide viewing angles and draws power over USB, so it can slide into a bag alongside a laptop and plug in wherever you work. For the first time, adding a second screen on the go feels like a realistic option instead of a luxury purchase.

Laser’s Budget Line-Up: 14-Inch and 15.6-Inch Options
Laser’s new range centers on three models that aim to cover the most common portable display needs without inflating the price. The headline grabber is the 14‑inch portable monitor with a 1920×1200 IPS panel, sold at an initial price of $99 before a planned increase to $149 when June ends. Above that, Laser offers two 15.6‑inch options based on the same portable concept: a touch version and a non‑touch version. The touchscreen model launches at $159 before rising to $199, while the non‑touch 15.6‑inch screen starts at $129 and is set to move to $169 at the end of the month. All three monitors are powered by USB, focus on easy portability, and are aimed at people who want more screen space without committing to a full-size desktop monitor.
Why Sub-$100 Pricing Could Change Multi-Monitor Setups
Portable displays have long been an expensive add‑on to a laptop, even though extra screen space is one of the simplest ways to boost productivity. With Laser pushing a portable display under $100, multi‑monitor setups become a realistic upgrade for people who previously had to make do with a single laptop screen. Remote workers can dedicate one screen to video calls and another to documents, students can keep research notes on one display and essays on the other, and travellers can recreate a desktop‑like layout from a hotel desk. The IPS panel and 1920×1200 resolution of the 14‑inch model promise a sharper, taller workspace than many budget laptops offer on their own. If the real‑world quality holds up, this kind of budget portable screen could set a new baseline for affordable dual‑screen productivity.
Who Benefits Most from an Affordable Portable Monitor?
Laser’s value-focused monitors target anyone who needs flexibility: remote workers clocking in from home and shared offices, students splitting time between campus and home, and travellers who work from cafés, trains or short‑term rentals. According to Laser Managing Director Chris Lau, people are moving more fluidly between work, study, travel and entertainment, and they want technology that fits into those shifts instead of anchoring them to a desk. A budget portable screen makes it easier to keep the same multi-monitor workflow wherever you open your laptop. Content creators can preview timelines or palettes on a second display, while everyday users can keep messaging apps and browsers off their main screen. The low entry price means experimenting with a multi‑monitor setup no longer demands a large upfront investment, which could push far wider adoption of portable displays.
