Best hardware for digital signage in 2026
The hardware question is usually the first one operators ask — and it is the one most signage vendors quietly turn into a recurring bill. This guide walks through the realistic options for 2026, what each is good at, and where each falls down. The short version: if your player runs a modern web browser, it can run Vewport, because there is no proprietary box to buy and no per-device license to pay.
The one rule that decides everything
Most signage platforms ship their own media player — a dedicated stick or box you buy per screen, often with a per-device license stacked on top. That single design choice drives a surprising amount of the total cost, because every new screen means another piece of hardware and another line on the invoice.
Vewport takes the opposite approach. The player is a web page. You open the player URL in any modern browser, pair it with a 6-character code, and the screen is live. That means the "best hardware" is frequently hardware you already own, and your shortlist is simply "things that run a current browser."
A few practical consequences:
- No proprietary player box. Nothing to source, image, or RMA.
- No per-device license. Pricing is flat per workspace with screens bundled, not a charge that grows with every panel you plug in.
- Offline-tolerant playback. A paired screen keeps running its cached schedule if the internet drops and resyncs on reconnect, so a brief outage does not become a blank "no signal" screen.
With that established, here are the four hardware classes worth considering.
Smart TVs (built-in browser)
Many commercial and consumer TVs ship with a usable web browser. If yours does, it can be the entire signage stack on its own — no external player at all. Open the player URL in the TV's browser, enter the pairing code, and you are done.
Good for: the lowest possible parts count; single-screen sites; anywhere you are buying the display new and can pick a model with a capable browser.
Watch out for: browser quality varies a lot between brands and model years. Older or budget smart-TV browsers can be sluggish or stop receiving updates. Test the actual model before you standardize on it, and prefer commercial/professional display lines where the browser and the auto-power scheduling are better supported.
Mini-PCs (the workhorse)
A small fanless mini-PC running Chrome or Edge in kiosk mode is the most predictable option for serious deployments. You get a current browser, real GPU-accelerated video decoding, wired Ethernet, and an OS you control.
Good for: video walls, high-resolution or video-heavy content, sites where you want every screen to behave identically, and anywhere reliability matters more than saving a few euros on the player.
Watch out for: it is the most expensive option up front per screen. The payoff is consistency and a long service life. Set the browser to launch full-screen on boot and point it at the player URL so a power cycle brings the screen straight back.
Raspberry Pi (cheap and capable)
A Raspberry Pi is a popular signage player for good reason: it is inexpensive, sips power, runs a full Chromium browser, and is small enough to hide behind the display. For static layouts, menu boards, and standard 1080p content it is more than enough.
Good for: rolling out many screens on a tight budget; menu boards and promotional loops; anywhere a mini-PC would be overkill.
Watch out for: heavy 4K video and very busy animated layouts can push a Pi harder than a mini-PC. Use a quality power supply and a microSD card rated for sustained use (or boot from USB/SSD), and keep Chromium updated. For most content, none of this is a problem.
Kiosk tablets
An Android or iPad-class tablet is a tidy answer for small, eye-level, or interactive placements — a counter display, a check-in screen, a wayfinding panel. The browser is current, the screen is integrated, and mounting hardware is plentiful.
Good for: retail counters, reception desks, and any spot where a tablet-sized screen is the right size and a single integrated unit beats a separate display plus player.
Watch out for: make sure the device stays awake and the browser stays in the foreground (kiosk/guided-access modes handle this). Battery-only tablets should be powered continuously for always-on signage.
Reusing hardware you already have
Because the player is just a browser, an old laptop on HDMI, a spare desktop, or a Chromebook can drive a screen today at zero hardware cost. This is the fastest way to pilot signage: pair whatever you have, prove the content and the workflow, then decide whether to standardize on mini-PCs or Pis for the rollout.
A simple way to choose
- One or two screens, buying the TV anyway: try the TV's built-in browser first.
- Tight budget, many standard screens: Raspberry Pi.
- Video walls, 4K, or "must look identical everywhere": mini-PC.
- Counter, reception, or interactive: kiosk tablet.
- Just piloting: reuse a laptop or desktop you already own.
Whatever you pick, the pairing flow is the same — open the player URL, enter the 6-character code, assign content. And because Vewport is EU-hosted with flat per-workspace pricing, adding the next screen never adds a per-device license to the bill.
Where to go next
- See the Screens & pairing guide for the exact pairing steps and the security model.
- Compare what each plan includes on the pricing page — screens are bundled, not billed per device.