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(Credit: Bob Al-Greene)
Staring at the grocery-store shelf these days, prices rise seemingly before your eyes. Your utility bills, too, tick upward every month. Nothing’s getting cheaper, so hidden bargains have more appeal than ever…but you have to know where to look for them.Let us help with personal tech. Some of our favorite products and services—out of the more than 1,500 that we review every year—are completely free. Others do far more than you’d expect for their bargain-basement prices. We’re not talking about bandwidth-limited VPNs, or $50 printers that require many times that in yearly ink costs (though we review those, too). We perk up when we find products that deliver both performance and value. Elegance and affordability. Features and frugality. Below, check out the most outstanding values of the moment across categories we test: from hardware to software, home entertainment to health, big PCs to slim smartphones. Keep this list of the latest bargains on your radar. Good tech doesn’t always have to be hard on your budget. (If you’ve had an especially good year so far, though, be sure to also check out the absolute best products we’ve tested, regardless of cost.)
Cheap Laptops
Best Cheap General-Use Laptop
If you’re looking for a top budget laptop, consider the Acer Aspire 3 (A315-24P), a lower-power machine that can still handle basic web browsing and light office tasks with surprisingly little difficulty. It has a plain design, but its battery runs for ages, thanks in part to an efficient processor. Your priority in the entry-level segment should be to find a laptop that does what it says on the tin, and this Acer model does exactly that.
MSRP $399.00
Best Cheap Tablet Detachable
Although it runs Windows 11 with an optional keyboard, Microsoft’s Surface Go 3 competes more directly with Chromebooks and Apple’s iPad than traditional laptops. A compelling starting price, paired with top-notch styling and build quality, make this the best inexpensive Windows 2-in-1 tablet you can buy. It’s not exactly a major leap over its predecessor, but Microsoft’s rivals haven’t been able to consistently provide worthy competitors.
Base Configuration Price $399.99
Best Cheap Chromebook
Asus Chromebook Plus CX34
Asus is among the laptop-making leaders partnering with Google on its “Chromebook Plus” initiative (which aims to deliver better Chromebooks for under $500), and its Chromebook Plus CX34 brings more performance, longer battery life, and even better features than ever to budget ChromeOS models. The snazzy CX34 represents a standout value in this category, making it an easy recommendation and worthy of our Editors’ Choice award. If this is the new direction Chromebooks are heading, we are all for it.
MSRP $399.00
Best Cheap Gaming Laptop
MSI’s Cyborg 15 minimizes compromise while delivering steady performance, which is exactly what you want out of an entry-level gaming laptop that’s just $999. Its 13th Gen Intel Core i7 CPU and GeForce RTX 4050 GPU proved capable of smooth 1080p gaming in our testing, staying at or above the 60fps mark. The build quality is good for the price, too, and the two main downsides (a somewhat dim display and 512GB of storage) are acceptable at this price.
Starts at $999.99
Cheap Phones & Tablets
Best Cheap Voice Phone
The TCL Flip 2 offers excellent 4G call quality, up to 14 hours of talk time per charge, and reliable connectivity for a very affordable price. It’s the cheap phone to get if you want a clamshell design and don’t need to download third-party apps. Just keep your expectations in check for the 2MP camera.
MSRP $79.99
Best Cheap Android Phone
For under $200, Samsung’s Galaxy A15 5G offers everything you need from a phone. Highlights include excellent battery life, a decent set of cameras, and a bright screen with a fast 90Hz refresh rate. Moreover, Samsung promises four OS upgrades and five years of security updates, meaning you can confidently use the phone for a long time. A microSD card slot for expandable storage and a 3.5mm headphone jack for wired playback round out the wallet-friendly package.
MSRP $199.99
Best Cheap iPhone
Apple’s 2022 iPhone SE keeps the crowd-pleasing small design and Touch ID fingerprint sensor of the previous model. It also now has 5G, which gives it better reception than its predecessors, especially as T-Mobile and Verizon expand their 5G networks. Of course, if you can find a 2020 model of the SE around, you can get similar app performance for even less money.
MSRP $429.00
Best Cheap Android Tablet
Amazon Fire HD 8 (2022 Release)
This simple 8-inch slate isn’t a powerhouse, by any means, but it offers easy access to gobs of media at a price that most competing 8-inch tablets can’t match. A clear step up from Amazon’s extremely entry-level Fire 7, it’s an appealing option for Amazon Prime subscribers, first-time tablet buyers, or anyone seeking a robust spare slate to carry on adventures.
MSRP $99.99
Best Cheap iPad
Apple iPad (10th Generation)
Apple’s 10.9-inch iPad, starting at $349, is all the tablet most people need. Its A14 Bionic processor runs the latest iPad OS apps speedily, and its landscape-mounted, wide-angle front camera is perfect for Zoom calls. It also works with the Apple Pencil (USB-C), supports Wi-Fi 6, and has a USB-C port.
MSRP $349.00
Cheap Desktops, PC Components, & Upgrades
Best Cheap Tower-Style Desktop
Replacing an earlier Aspire desktop in our list, Acer has produced another excellent deal with its Aspire TC-1780-UA92 tower. Equipped with a 13th Gen Intel Core i5 processor, our review configuration is light on memory, at just 8GB, but accessing the desktop’s internals to upgrade that RAM (or the 512GB SSD) is easy. Acer has crammed in everything we look for in a basic tower: modern Wi-Fi 6E, USB Type-C, a flash-card reader, and two HDMI ports. For all of that, the Aspire TC-1780-UA92 is our current Editors’ Choice award winner for budget home desktops.
MSRP $549.99
Best Cheap All-in-One Desktop
Affordable all-in-one (AIO) desktops continue to be a shrinking portion of the PC market, and really good ones are hard to find. In our recent tests, we found the Lenovo IdeaCentre AIO 3i to be one of the sleekest-looking budget AIOs of recent memory. For the money, the IdeaCentre delivers in the screen department, backed up by decent speakers for an all-around enjoyable multimedia experience in the low-cost category. With reliable day-to-day productivity performance in our test model, the IdeaCentre AIO 3i gets enough right to top this small class.
Base Configuration Price $529.00
Best Cheap CPU
AMD’s Ryzen 5000-series CPUs have been around for a while and are often steeply discounted, which maintains them as solid budget options. You can find the Ryzen 5 5600, in particular, for around half of its introduction price, which puts it right around $130 to $140 and solidly below all of AMD’s latest Ryzen 7000-series processors. We don’t recommend the Ryzen 5 5600G based only on the price; it also delivers solid CPU performance and capable integrated graphics powerful enough to run most games with the settings turned down (and possibly dropping the resolution to 720p). Titles a few years old might even run at 1080p, or with higher settings, but results vary game to game.
MSRP $259.99
Best Cheap PC Case
Thermaltake View 270 TG ARGB Matcha Green
You can get the View 270 TG in one of a few distinctive colors (the unique Hydrangea Blue alternative is striking in its own way), but our pale green sample gets you more PC-case whimsy for your dollar than just about anything on the market for its price. Two sides of glass, dust filters at all points of entry, speedy USB-C on the top panel, and three RGB fans make this midtower chassis a super value for a spiffy-looking mainstream build. It’ll leave money in your pocket for those other components hit by recent price hikes.
MSRP $79.99
Best Cheap Motherboard
ASRock’s B760 Pro RS is the best budget Intel motherboard that we’ve reviewed recently. Based on Intel’s B760 chipset, this board features support for Intel 12th Gen “Alder Lake” and 13th Gen “Raptor Lake” processors, as well as DDR5 memory. Plus, it has a solid feature set for just $179.99 MSRP, and it retails for lower than that during frequent sales.
MSRP $179.99
Best Cheap Internal SSD
The relatively affordable Addlink AddGame A93 PCI Express 4.0 internal SSD tallied above-average scores in our benchmark tests and comes in capacities of up to 4TB. Its lack of DRAM could affect its performance in sustained large-file transfers, but that won’t be a problem for many users. The A93 also meets Sony’s requirements for use with the PlayStation 5 thanks in part to a compact heatsink that fits the M.2 expansion slot of the console.
Starts at $65.44
Best Cheap Graphics Card
ASRock Intel Arc A580 Challenger 8GB OC
Intel’s Arc A580 is rare thing in today’s graphics-card market: a purpose-built budget card that still offers reasonable gaming performance. Shipping with 8GB of GDDR6 RAM, it’s well-suited for 1080p play. We tested an ASRock version (the Challenger 8GB OC), and it handily ran most of our test games at playable frame rates at max settings and 1080p. The card also has a modern feature set, with built-in ray-tracing hardware for running cutting-edge games. This card’s performance varies more than average from one game to the next, due to Intel’s graphics drivers, and it’s definitely not the fastest graphics card money can buy. But you’ll also have a hard time finding a card with this much performance for less than its $169 asking price.
MSRP $179.99
Cheap PC Peripherals & Networking Gear
Best Cheap Productivity Monitor
The Philips 221V8LB is remarkably affordable even for a budget monitor. Its image quality beats that of many slightly more expensive screens we’ve seen, thanks to full sRGB color coverage and an astoundingly high contrast ratio. That makes it suitable for light photo editing and working with line art or diagrams, and the monitor also does well in playing back movies with verve. Light and compact, the 221V8LB can fit in cramped environments such as a desk in a dorm room. Add a 100Hz refresh rate and adaptive-sync support, and you get an exceptional value.
MSRP $69.99
Best Cheap External SSD
The Crucial X9 Pro is an excellent all-around external SSD with no significant shortcomings. It is lightweight and compact, available in capacities up to 4TB, and produced good scores on all our benchmarks. The X9 Pro provides 256-bit AES hardware-based encryption and some basic ruggedization features, and is backed by a five-year warranty. Reasonable even at its list price, it is often available at a substantial discount, especially at its higher capacities.
MSRP $129.99
Best Cheap Inkjet Printer (for Offices)
The $159.99 Brother MFC-J4335DW offers paper handling suitable for a micro/home office or personal use and stands out for its speed and low cost per page (0.9 cent for monochrome pages, 4.7 cents for color ones). As a four-function all-in-one or multifunction printer, the MFC-J4335DW prints, copies, scans, and faxes. It offers a 150-sheet input tray, plus a single-sheet bypass feeder, and it has a 20-sheet ADF for copying or scanning multipage documents. It can connect to your computer via USB, Wi-Fi, or Wi-Fi Direct, and it prints from iOS and Android mobile devices using the Brother mobile app. (See more cheap printers.)
MSRP $159.99
Best Cheap Inkjet Printer (for Homes)
Epson Expression Home XP-5200 All-in-One Printer
This low-cost all-in-one inkjet model is suitable for both homes and home offices, so long as your emphasis is on the printing side of things, not scanning or copying multipage documents. (It has a flatbed scan surface, but no automatic document feeder.) You get impressive output quality for just a bit over $100, and the printer itself is compact for what it is. We’d opt for this model over some closely matched, similarly priced competitors if your print jobs tend to include some photos in the mix.
MSRP $129.99
Best Cheap Laser Printer
Canon imageClass MF264dw II
Canon’s $230 imageClass MF264dw II mono laser printer offers fast print speeds, clean page quality, and roomy paper handling, making it an all-in-one workhorse option for small and home offices. Text quality is merely a half-step down from top-tier competitors, with characters showing crisp edges and all of the business-friendly fonts we test appearing legible. The MF264dw II is missing the ability to scan in duplex, but if you don’t need this feature, it could be the ideal budget choice.
MSRP $229.00
Best Cheap Snapshot Printer
Kodak Step Instant Mobile Photo Printer
Kodak’s line of snapshot printers is a solid-value budget photo-printing option, and the Step Instant Mobile Photo Printer cranks out quick, high-quality snapshots using Zero Ink (Zink) paper, which uses crystals embedded in the surface to generate the image. Zink printers can’t match the image quality of dye-sublimation models, but this Kodak is a small-format pocket photo printer that’s easy to like primarily because of its extraordinary value, at just $70. Or, you can opt for a $120 starter bundle that includes a 20-pack of paper, a carrying case, a small photo album, markers, thousands of stickers for a host of occasions, and even an improvised clothesline for drying your creations. An optional battery lets you print on the go, too—it’s rated for up to 25 prints on a charge.
MSRP $69.99
Best Cheap 3D Printer
The Bambu Lab A1 mini is a top-notch 3D printer for beginners or hobbyists seeking an affordable option. It’s easy to get going, fast, and even capable of four-color printing. Most important, it makes great-looking prints. Priced at $249 but offered with an add-on module (bringing the price to $399) that can print with any or all of four different-colored filaments, the A1 mini makes multicolor creations easy. It’s the lowest-cost four-color fused deposition modeling (FDM) printer currently on the market. And with ease of use that rivals pricier models from other vendors, it’s a nearly perfect device for someone new to 3D printing.
MSRP $249.00
Best Cheap Photo Scanner
The Epson Perfection V39 II is an excellent budget flatbed photo scanner with robust software that makes it especially suitable for creative types and hobbyists. A high-resolution 4,800dpi scan engine, top-notch OCR accuracy, and streamlined task processes help it outclass the competition.
MSRP $119.99
Best Cheap Home Projector
Vankyo’s Performance V700W is a 1080p projector that’s designed for home entertainment. It delivers surprisingly robust audio and high brightness for its price class, plus good input lag for casual gaming. Plus, its use of a single LCD and a white-LED light source guarantees an image that’s free of rainbow artifacts, which will be a big deal for those users who are prone to seeing them. (Not everyone is.)
MSRP $299.99
Best Cheap Portable Projector
Kodak Luma 75 Portable Pocket Projector
The Kodak Luma 75, at around $180, is a tiny, finely crafted yet minimalist take-anywhere portable projector. Weighing just 5 ounces and measuring 0.8 by 3 by 3 inches, it easily slips into a coat pocket. Its native resolution is 640 by 480 pixels, though it can display 1080p input without introducing scaling artifacts. A built-in battery lets you project for 90 minutes between charges. This easily focused projector handles photo and video content well and can mirror PowerPoint presentations; its 1-watt speaker is adequate for a small room. Its rated 30 lumens of brightness limits your image size, but for such a tiny device it does a more than credible job.
MSRP $189.99
Best Cheap Keyboard
Affordable mechanical keyboards are a rare breed. Even rarer are ones as good as the Keychron C1. With 87 keys across its compact frame, the Keychron C1 packs everything you’d expect from a wired mechanical keyboard at a fraction of the cost. Its retro aesthetic will add a pop of color to any office setup, and it offers support for both Windows and Mac layouts. Equipped with your choice of Gateron Blue, Red, or Brown switches, the C1 provides satisfactory feedback for gaming and office use. However you use it, you can rest easy knowing that the Keychron C1 stands tall among its peers in the bargain bin and earns our recommendation.
MSRP $49.00
Best Cheap Mouse
Just because it’s a gaming mouse, it doesn’t need to look like one. In fact, this five-button wired mouse has more in common with a general-purpose productivity mouse than a superlight esports clicker. That doesn’t mean it’s not ready for battle, though. While its DPI ceiling is lower than expected, it still sports a comfortable grip and a lightweight body, which is essential for first-person shooters and other action games. And for $30, this mouse is easy on the wallet. Whether you’re getting some work done or settling in for a few rounds of online combat, the Cherry MC 2.1 is an affordable, dependable tool.
MSRP $29.99
Best Cheap Wi-Fi Router
TP-Link Archer AX10 (AX1500) Wi-Fi 6 Router
The TP-Link Archer AX10 is proof that you don’t have to spend hundreds of dollars to upgrade your network with Wi-Fi 6 technology. This reasonably priced dual-band router delivered solid throughput on the 5GHz band and good signal range in our performance tests. Though it lacks features typically found on more expensive models, including link aggregation and USB connectivity, you’d be hard pressed to find these features on any sub-$100 router. If you want to take advantage of the faster connection speeds, decreased latency, and more efficient client battery life that you get with Wi-Fi 6, but need to keep costs down, it’s an excellent choice.
MSRP $79.99
Best Cheap Wi-Fi Mesh System
Yes, it’s possible to cover your entire home in a blanket of Wi-Fi for a little more or less than $100. We know this because the Vilo Mesh Wi-Fi system can do it. (The price depends on the discounts of the moment.) This ensemble isn’t the fastest mesh system on the market, but it significantly undercuts any other three-piece mesh network we’ve tested on price. The Vilo kit is sure to eliminate any dead spots a midsize house could have, and it’s an unbeatable value as long as you’re not looking to stream 4K video or download huge amounts of data. (See more budget routers and mesh systems.)
MSRP $59.99
Best Cheap NAS Drive
The TS-233 packs some nice features into its stylish white enclosure, including two hot-swappable drive bays, a quad-core CPU, and a pair of USB ports for connecting external drives. It’s easy to manage using the Windows-like QTS operating system, and it offers one-touch backups. Installation was easy, and the NAS turned in very respectable file-transfer scores in our testing. Moreover, it offers a nice selection of QNAP-branded and third-party apps that turn the TS-233 into a multifunction server. Overall, it’s an affordable two-bay NAS designed for budget-conscious home users who’d rather store data in their own personal cloud than pay for a subscription-based cloud service.
MSRP $199.00
Cheap Cameras & Gear
Best Cheap Mirrorless Camera
You’re not going to find any ultra-affordable cameras these days, at least none worth buying—if that’s the type of camera you want, you’re better off with a smartphone. Swappable lens models are going strong, though, and there’s still value to be had in shopping for an older, but still available option, like the Panasonic Lumix DMC-G7. Its 16MP Micro Four Thirds sensor supports 4K video recording, is compatible with a wide array of lenses, and offers speedy 8fps burst capture. True, you miss out on some modern creature comforts—the sensor isn’t stabilized—but it’s hard to turn up your nose at the G7’s current price of around $700 with a starter lens.
MSRP $799.99
Best Cheap Full-Frame Camera
With smartphone cameras as good as they are, there’s little reason for budding photographers to grab a compact. If you want to get started with a full-frame model, the same type of sensor format the pros use, we recommend starting with the Canon EOS RP. It’s the best way for beginners and price-sensitive shoppers to get started with a full-frame sensor, either for $999 as a body only or $1,299 with the RF 24-105mm STM kit lens. Additional lenses start at $199.99 if you want to expand your kit.
MSRP $1,299.00
Best Cheap Drone
The DJI Mini 2 SE is a good drone for beginner pilots thanks to its ease of use, registration-free 249g takeoff weight, and stabilized 2.7K video camera. Safety features include an integrated GPS, an automated return-to-home function, and a geofence to keep you out of trouble. For photography, the lens snaps 12MP photos in DNG or JPG format. At $339 with a remote control, it’s DJI’s most affordable camera drone.
MSRP $339.00
Best Cheap Vlogging Mic
For less than $100, the Sennheiser MKE 200 mic seriously enhances your camera’s audio quality. It’s a worthwhile upgrade for everything from vlogs to home movies and easily attaches to your camera’s shoe accessory mount. Just make sure your camera has a 3.5mm mic input before purchasing it.
MSRP $99.95
Best Cheap Instant Camera
Instant cameras are always a hit at parties, and a breath of fresh air from the smartphone photos that dominate our social feeds. The $80 Fujifilm Instax Mini 12 is the latest in a long-running series that prints glossy, high-quality instant photos on either color ($7.50 for a 10-shot pack) or black-and-white ($8.25 for a 10-shot pack) Instax film. It couldn’t be easier to use—there’s just one button and a nifty twisting lens collar for mode selection.
MSRP $79.95
Best Cheap Action Cam
Among other welcome upgrades, the Hero10 Black offers more resolution and faster frame rates than the Hero9, while supporting all of the same add-on accessories. Its slim design and wide lens make it a favorite for both POV action shots and live streaming, and you can even use it as a webcam.
MSRP $349.99
Cheap Smart Home Devices
Best Cheap Smart Speaker
The Echo Pop is Amazon’s sub-$50 smart speaker. It’s half the size and $10 less than the Echo Dot, and it can serve as an Eero mesh Wi-Fi node. The Dot sounds a bit better and has a few extra tricks, but the Pop is one of the most economical ways to add Alexa to any room in the house.
MSRP $39.99
Best Cheap Smart Display
Amazon Echo Show 5 (3rd Gen, 2023 Release)
The third iteration of the Echo Show 5 continues to be the best smart display available for less than $100. It’s loaded with useful features like Amazon Alexa support and a 5-inch touch screen, and it sounds good for the size. It’s ideal for nightstands and bookshelves.
MSRP $89.99
Best Cheap Smart Light Bulb
Smart light bulbs used to cost a lot, and almost all of them relied on a hub to connect to your home network. But newer options, including the Roku Smart Bulb SE Color ($9.88 for one, $17.99 for a pack of two) don’t suffer from either downside. This LED bulb offers a full spectrum of hues, supports voice and app controls, and conveniently pairs with other Roku products.
MSRP $9.88
Best Cheap Robot Vacuum
The iRobot Roomba 694 is an excellent value at under $300. It can detect and focus on heavily soiled areas, while Wi-Fi connectivity enables app control, scheduling, and voice commands. The robot missed a few spots and ran a bit loud in testing, but it rarely got stuck and has good battery life.
MSRP $274.99
Best Cheap Smart Plug
TP-Link Kasa Smart Wi-Fi Plug Slim With Energy Monitoring (KP125M)
We’ve reviewed scores of smart plugs over the years, but none quite as versatile as the TP-Link Kasa Smart Wi-Fi Plug Slim With Energy Monitoring. This small plug works with nearly every available smart home platform, is a breeze to install, and even tells you how much energy it supplies to any appliance you connect. A four-pack costs $49.99, which works out to $12.50 per plug, a very reasonable price for all of the features you’re getting.
MSRP $39.99
Best Cheap Video Doorbell
Toucan Wireless Video Doorbell
If you’re in the market for a smart wireless doorbell, this Toucan model is an excellent value. It runs on a rechargeable battery, installs in minutes, and comes with a wireless remote chime that you can place anywhere in your home. Additionally, the camera delivers sharp 1080p video, works with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant voice commands, and offers free cloud storage for video recordings.
MSRP $119.99
Best Cheap Smart Home Security Camera
Don’t let its affordable price and diminutive size fool you, the TP-Link Tapo Indoor/Outdoor Home Security Wi-Fi Camera C120 is a full-featured model with 2K video, color night vision, intelligent alerts, and built-in spotlights. It can store video recordings locally or in the cloud, and supports Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant voice control. We can forgive its lack of mechanical pan and tilt controls since the camera works just as well indoors as outside.
MSRP $39.99
Best Cheap Smart Thermostat
A smart thermostat can cost upward of $250, but the Amazon Smart Thermostat lets you remotely control and monitor your home’s heating and cooling system for just $79.99. It’s a joint effort between Amazon and Resideo, which has been making traditional and smart Honeywell Home thermostats for ages. You don’t get all the features of pricier alternatives, such as remote sensors and multi-platform integrations, but it does support Alexa voice control for easy smart home device management.
MSRP $79.99
Cheap TVs & Media Streamers
Best Cheap TV
Hisense 65-Inch U6 Series ULED TV (65U6K)
You might be able to find something cheaper than the Hisense U6K ULED TV, but it won’t have picture quality nearly as good. This model offers fantastic color range and accuracy for its price, as well as better contrast than its excellent predecessor. Other highlights include a Google TV interface, Google Cast and Apple AirPlay support, and a far-field microphone array for hands-free control via Google Assistant.
MSRP $799.99
Best Cheap Media Streamer
Chromecast With Google TV
The Chromecast With Google TV offers an excellent 4K experience with a remote, an easy-to-use menu system, and all of the benefits of Google TV in a tiny $49.99 package. It easily rivals the Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K, with a sleek interface and loads of functionality. It’s our top pick among affordable media streamers.
MSRP $49.99
Best Cheap Soundbar
You shouldn’t expect a ton of power or a dozen audio channels from a cheap soundbar, but the Roku Streambar Pro proves you can still get quality sound and a great set of features for less than $200. Better yet, it doubles as a 4K media streamer, supports Apple AirPlay and Bluetooth, lets you search for content with your voice, and allows for private listening via the headphone jack in the remote. For deeper bass and wider sound, you can pair the soundbar with the similarly affordable Roku Wireless Speakers and the Roku Wireless Subwoofer.
MSRP $179.99
Cheap Health & Fitness Gear
Best Cheap Smart Scale
Arboleaf Smart Fitness Scale
The Arboleaf Smart Fitness Scale tracks 14 metrics, including your body mass index (BMI), body fat percentage, body water percentage, muscle mass, protein level, and, of course, weight. It connects to your phone via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth for greater convenience than models that only support the latter, and its companion app keeps a record of your measurements so you can track your progress over time. The Arboleaf Smart Fitness Scale has been on the market for a couple of years, but remains an excellent option, and now you can commonly find it on sale for around $45.
MSRP $79.99
Best Cheap Fitness Tracker
With long battery life, a color touch screen, and all the basic activity and sleep features you need, the Fitbit Inspire 3 is the best fitness tracker you can get for less than $100. The tracker’s simple interface and well-designed companion app make it easy to monitor key fitness and health metrics, including your activity, blood oxygen saturation, breathing rate, sleep, heart rate, and more. Its Exercise app supports up to six activity shortcuts on the device at a time, and you can customize the list via the Fitbit app.
MSRP $99.95
Best Cheap Fitness Machine
Smart fitness machines can easily run you $1,000 or more. The Peloton Guide, by contrast, is a relatively affordable camera that connects to your TV and lets you see yourself on the screen, alongside the instructor, so you can check your form in real time. The Guide uses computer vision to track your strength training movements, gives you credit for staying active throughout each set, and gamifies the experience by awarding achievement badges based on your performance. It also keeps track of your workouts and offers personalized class recommendations to help you hit all of your major muscle groups each week.
MSRP $295.00
Cheap Headphones & Audio
Best Cheap Headphones
Anker Soundcore Space One
If you seek quality sound and decent active noise cancellation for under $100, the Anker Soundcore Space One headphones are a worthy choice. They come with a cable for wired listening, support the LDAC codec for hi-res streaming from compatible devices, and pair with a full-featured companion app that has customizable EQ. The button layout isn’t ideal, but the ear pads feel comfortable, and 40 hours of playback time with ANC is impressive.
MSRP $99.99
Best Cheap True Wireless Earphones
Just because the JLab JBuds Mini are tiny doesn’t mean they don’t offer a full set of capabilities. They sound punchy, include a highly effective transparency mode, work well for calls, and support a companion app with adjustable EQ. Best of all, they come in under $40 and are durable enough for workouts thanks to their IP55 rating.
MSRP $39.99
Best Cheap Headphones for Kids
The understated and comfortable EarFun K2 Kids headphones push out impressive bass for the price and support the AAC codec for quality Bluetooth streams. They also ship with a fabric-lined 3.5mm audio cable for passive listening and should last up to an impressive 40 hours of wireless operation per charge. As for volume limiting, you can restrict the headphones to an output of either 85dB or 94dB.
MSRP $24.99
Best Cheap Speaker
Anker Soundcore Motion 300
Anker’s Soundcore Motion 300 speaker gets impressively loud for its size, is fully waterproof, and even includes a speakerphone. As for audio quality, it supports the hi-res-capable LDAC codec and works with an adjustable EQ via its companion app. And even though the drivers already pump out stereo sound, you can pair a second unit for a better sense of separation.
MSRP $79.00
Cheap Gaming Gear & Games
Best Cheap Console
Years after its introduction, the Nintendo Switch remains an amazing game system that features excellent exclusives and a massive library of classic and indie games. The Switch Lite is the handheld-only version of the system that removes the dockable option and cuts the price by a third, to just $199.99. It’s an ideal device for playing games on the go, or even just kicking back on the couch.
MSRP $199.99
Best Cheap Gaming Keyboard
Graphics cards, fast monitors, $70 AAA games: PC gaming can get plenty expensive, and premium gaming keyboards can hit your wallet hard, too. But Corsair’s K55 RGB Pro can keep gamers competitive and their checkbooks in the black. With dedicated macro buttons, a detachable wrist rest, and RGB lighting, the K55 RGB Pro certainly looks the gamer part. It’s not a mechanical board, but it does offer comfortable-enough key action for typing, game mashing, or just surfing the web. Its plastic body signals its budget roots, but it’s a reliable gaming keyboard for just about any situation.
MSRP $59.99
Best Cheap Gaming Mouse
Introduced in 2020, the SteelSeries Rival 3 is a little older than some of the choices on this list, but that speaks to the enduring value of this bargain clicker. At just $29.99, this is a no-frills mouse with a quality sensor that delivers fast movements at a respectable DPI. The three-part RGB rim adds some flair to the mouse’s subtle curves, while the low weight and solid build quality ensure long gaming sessions without issues. It favors a claw grip over a palm grip, but its value proposition might just be enough to sway noobs and hard-core gamers alike.
MSRP $29.99
Best Cheap Gaming Monitor
ViewSonic Omni VX2728J-2K
When it comes to cheap gaming monitors, the ViewSonic Omni VX2728J-2K is easy on the eyes and the wallet. With surprisingly great color range and accuracy, the $199 gaming display sports a 2K resolution (2,560 by 1,440 pixels) at a refresh rate of 180Hz over a DisplayPort connection. It’s missing some of the finer additions newer, more expensive models enjoy, like HDMI 2.1 ports, but the affordable price makes up for that. It’s a perfect match for console and PC players looking to save a buck.
MSRP $199.99
Best Cheap Gaming Headset
Razer’s Barracuda X gaming headset produces enjoyable sound, has a clear boom mic, and feels comfortable to use for long gaming sessions. We also like that it lets you choose between 3.5mm, Bluetooth, and USB-C transmitter. Pricier alternatives might offer a more accurate surround sound mix or premium accessories, but the Barracuda X nails the basics for any gamer who doesn’t want to spend over $100 on their audio needs.
MSRP $99.99
Best Cheap Gaming Chair
Cheap gaming chairs are typically disappointing, but the Cooler Master Caliber X2 stands out from the pack. This sub-$400 chair offers the build quality and comfort you expect from more expensive options, with dense foam and sliding lumbar support.
MSRP $369.99
Best Cheap Action Game
Building upon the familiar and free-flowing Metroidvania template, Tales of Kenzera: Zau is a beautiful and emotional 2D sidescroller with a poignant perspective about life and death. You swap between sun and moon abilities in a world inspired by African mythology to vanquish foes that serve as metaphors for the creators’ experiences of overcoming grief. (See all of our favorite PC games.)
MSRP $19.99
Best Cheap Action RPG Game
Cassette Beasts is an awesome indie homage to Pokémon that builds on some of the best aspects of Nintendo’s monster-catching juggernaut. In it, you explore a pixelated open-world island at your leisure, taking on quests and battling rivals with in-depth combat mechanics. You use your mystical tape recorder to transform into monsters and use their powers to take down opponents.
MSRP $19.99
Best Cheap Sports Game
Thunder Ray updates the classic Punch-Out!! formula. In this intergalactic boxing tournament, you slug your way through towering alien challengers, each with bizarre abilities. Winning requires studying their attack patterns and fighting back with the correct timing. There aren’t many challengers, but they’re brought to life through such gorgeous illustrated visuals and animations that you’ll want to replay them again and again.
MSRP $14.99
Best Cheap Beat-‘Em-Up Game
En Garde is a 3D beat ‘em up that trades vulgar urban fisticuffs for elegant European swordplay. This $20 PC romp takes you across vibrant 17th-century Spanish locales as you slice your way to victory with precise and satisfying rapier attacks. En Garde is short, but full of personality. Randomized bonus modes put your slashing skills to the test after the credits roll.
MSRP $19.99
Best Cheap Adventure Game
Pentiment is a Renaissance-style whodunit set within the beautiful confines of an illuminated manuscript. The $19.99 game forgoes conventional action in favor of an engaging narrative, branching dialogue options, and character relationships. Centering on the life of Andreas Maler, an artisan living in the town of Tassing at the start of the game, you investigate a murder, gather evidence, and make long-reaching decisions. Over three acts and 25 years, it highlights the consequences of your actions and how time and perspective alter the meaning of truth.
MSRP $19.99
Best Cheap VR Game
Angry Birds VR: Isle of Pigs
For more than a decade, the Angry Birds games dominated mobile gaming with their simple, addictive physics-based puzzles. That same entertaining gameplay translates shockingly well when you add another dimension. Angry Bird VR: Isle of Pigs isn’t a new game; in fact, it’s an update to the PS4 release from a few years ago. However, that doesn’t mean it’s not worth exploring on new hardware. Featuring improved controls, better graphics, and more than 100 brain teasers (plus user-created content), Isle of Pigs is a VR game packed with value.
MSRP $19.99
Cheap Antivirus & Security
Best Cheap Entry-Level Security Suite
When you graduate to a full security suite, you get much more than basic antivirus protection. In addition to the firewall, vulnerability scan, and other bonus features found in K7 Antivirus, K7 Total Security adds spam filtering, parental control, system tuneup, ransomware protection, and more. Listing for $27 per year, it costs considerably less than most competitors. Its features don’t all perform on par with the best, but if its strengths match your needs, it can be a good choice.
Per Year, Starts at $27.00
Best Cheap Antivirus
At $60 per year, Sophos Home Premium doesn’t sound like a cheap antivirus solution—until you realize that that subscription lets you install and manage protection on up to 10 PCs or Macs. That brings the price per device down to $6, undercutting even K7 Antivirus Premium’s discounted price. Only one of the testing labs we follow includes Sophos in its regular reports, but that lab awards it AAA certification. And the program earned an excellent score in our own hands-on malware protection test. Best of all, you can manage your installations remotely, even from your smartphone. No more driving across town to sort out an aging relative’s antivirus woes.
Per Year, Starts at $59.99
Best Cheap Security Suite for Many Licenses
Bitdefender Internet Security
Bitdefender Internet Security has many of the same protections you get from Bitdefender’s excellent antivirus software, plus firewall protection, spam filtering, parental control, and more. This entry-level suite includes so many protective components that it rivals the top-tier mega-suites of some competitors. It is a PCMag Editors’ Choice winner for the best entry-level security suite. A 10-license subscription goes for $94.99.
Per Year, Starts at $59.99
Best Cheap Ransomware Protection
Data443 Ransomware Recovery Manager
A movie director who doesn’t like how a scene is playing out can yell “Cut!” and roll back to the beginning. Likewise, if Data443 Ransomware Recovery Manager detects ransomware activity, it can roll back your system to before the attack. Every time you reboot, it restores your PC to a previous malware-free state, wiping out any changes except your own documents, pictures, and so on. The tool can’t claw back any data that malware has already exfiltrated from your system—it only reverts your PC, not the outside world. In testing, it detected and disabled all our real-world ransomware samples, though its file recovery wasn’t always perfect.
Per Year, Starts at $8.99
Cheap VPNs & Streaming Services
Best Cheap VPN for Flexible Pricing
IVPN is one of two VPNs we know that use a special account system that builds in privacy while doing away with cumbersome passwords. If you want to use it truly anonymously, you can pay for it in cash by sending your dollars to IVPN’s headquarters. It also has incredibly flexible pricing: Standard plans start at $2 per week and top out at $140 every three years, with numerous levels in between. The IVPN Pro tier, which adds port-forwarding and multi-hop connections, is more expensive but still very affordable, starting at $4 weekly and going up to $220 for three years.
Per Month, Starts at $6.00
Best Cheap VPN for Privacy Hawks
All VPNs do essentially the same thing: They encrypt your web traffic so your ISP can’t see what you’re up to, and they make it harder for snoops to track you as you move around the web. Mullvad is no different. It uses a privacy-protecting account system and accepts cash deliveries if you don’t want to use an online payment method. Mullvad also takes a strong stance on privacy and transparency. This VPN service stands apart with its flat, cheap pricing: Five euros ($5.48) per month gets you access to all the service’s features, including multi-hop connections. It’s close to half the price of what most competitors charge while offering most, if not all, of the same functionality.
Per Month, Starts at $5.46
Best Cheap Video Streaming Service
With Peacock, you can watch a Bel Air reboot featuring a sinister Carlton reimagining that must be seen to be believed. Or you can just rewatch The Office. NBC’s video streaming service ditched its previously excellent free tier, but now has one of the best low-cost tiers we’ve tested. The $4.99-per-month Premium plan lets you watch many entertaining, ad-supported TV shows and movies. Upgrading to the $9.99-per-month Premium Plus tier kicks the ads to the curb.
Per Month, Starts at $5.99
Cheap Content Creation Software & Services
Best Cheap Video Editing Software
When you don’t have a lot to spend on video editing software, Filmora by Wondershare is the app to use. For just about $50 per year, you get the trimming, transitions, overlays, and effects you’ve come to expect in enthusiast-level software. The company continues to add advanced and modern features like those you find in more established competitors, such as motion tracking, keyframing, and speech-to-text. It’s blazing fast at rendering, too.
Per Year, Starts at $49.99
Best Cheap Photo Editing Software
Photopea is a surprisingly capable online clone of Adobe Photoshop. The free version is quite usable, though a mere $5 per month gets you online storage, generative AI tools, and no ads. It doesn’t offer the most advanced features from Photoshop or other expensive photo editing apps, but it includes vector editing and works right within your web browser.
Per Month, Starts at Free
Best Cheap Audio Editing Software
Digital audio workstations (DAWs), which let you record, edit, mix, and master music, tend to cost hundreds of dollars. And although Apple’s GarageBand is free, it works only on Macs, and it lacks a proper mixing board (among other things). Enter Cockos Reaper, a full-blown, cross-platform DAW with multichannel recording, mixing, music notation, scoring for video, plenty of customization options, and other facilities normally associated with software that costs much more than its paltry $60. For that price, Reaper offers nearly all of the features and flexibility, if not the ease of use or visual appeal, of powerhouse digital audio workstations like Avid Pro Tools and Apple Logic Pro.
MSRP $60.00
Best Cheap Graphic Design Software
The $54.99 Affinity Designer from Serif costs just a little more than you’d pay for a single month’s use of Adobe’s Creative Cloud suite. Sure, it’s not the industry standard that Illustrator is, but it’s a full-featured vector image editor with a familiar-feeling interface that’s snappy to use. You do lose some pattern-making ability, and you don’t get perfect compatibility with non-Serif software document formats. But for basic and intermediate use, you’ll find a tremendous amount of value here among graphic design packages.
MSRP $69.99
Best Cheap Screenwriting Software
If you write movie and TV scripts, you need a writing app that can help you appropriately format your work. The screenwriter’s fave Final Draft is the one you’ll hear mentioned most often, but Fade In’s $79.95 is a lot more palatable than that app’s $249 (even if Final Draft is often discounted to around $200). Despite its bargain price, Fade In is a competitive screenwriting package that helps scriptwriters work efficiently and in an organized fashion. It helps you keep track of all the details of your scripts, such as locations, character names, and scene numbers. Fade In is available for macOS, Windows, and Linux, and you can use the same license to install the software on as many personal desktops as you own. Once you pay for the software, you get free upgrades to any new versions. And you can add the mobile apps for just $4.99.
MSRP $79.95
Best Cheap Cloud Storage
IDrive is one of the fastest and most full-featured online backup players around. It’s also among the cheapest. Clear interfaces in the IDrive apps for all major platforms let you store, sync, and share cloud files easily. You also get a significantly higher storage quota than any major competitor, with plans starting at 5TB for under $80 per year (and that’s frequently discounted). IDrive also offers full disk-cloning software and remote web-based backup management.
Per Year, Starts at $2.95
Best Cheap Web Hosting
You don’t need to spend a lot of money to get high-quality web hosting. AccuWeb Hosting offers thriftier clients a fantastic selection of low-cost hosting options, particularly its shared and WordPress plans. The longer you commit to a plan (12, 24, or 36 months), the cheaper the rate. You can even select plans for the Linux or Windows operating systems, which is a great option depending on your project.
MSRP $3.36
So Cheap, It’s Free! (Games)
Best Free Fighting Game
Brawlhalla proves that Super Smash Bros. doesn’t have a monopoly on fun and frantic platformer fighters. You choose from a cast of colorful characters and try to smack them off the stage using your fists or wacky weapons—as they do the same to you. As a free-to-play game, Brawlhalla tempts you to spend real money to quickly unlock everything, but it costs nothing to start throwing some hands, unlike Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
Best Free MOBA
The free League of Legends combines role-playing stat progression, tower defense, and real-time strategy to produce one of the most revered games in the genre. Every playable champion is rich and varied, and new ones get added regularly to shake up the meta. To top it off, the League’s competitive ranking system is perfectly designed to fire up your tier-climbing addiction.
MSRP Free
Best Free MMO
Featuring fantastic combat, great visuals, and expansive endgame content, Lost Ark will fuel your loot-grinding obsession for months to come. The game launched in other regions in 2019, so the Western release comes with years’ worth of polish, content updates, and balance adjustments. The game uses a top-down, Diablo-esque camera perspective that’s different from other MMO titles, but once you get used to the look, there’s no shortage of brawl-heavy gameplay. And it’s free, unlike the $9.99 Black Desert Online.
MSRP Free
Best Free Card Battle
A free mobile multiplayer card game based on Marvel superheroes sounds like something most serious gamers can safely ignore. However, the designers behind Hearthstone turned Marvel Snap into a deckbuilding masterpiece thanks to sublime strategy mechanics. Once you annihilate your opponent with Hulk or ruin their day with Hobgoblin, you’ll be ready to dive into another matchup. You can battle for free and unlock cards at a steady clip, too. Of course, you can turbocharge the experience by purchasing a battle pass that lets you quickly receive cards and bonus goodies.
MSRP Free
Best Free Action RPG
Honkai: Star Rail is a love letter to anime, space westerns, and turn-based RPGs. As the Trailblazer, you must track and seal the dangerous, planet-corrupting artifacts called Stellaron that have cropped up across the universe. Take up arms in snappy battles that feature rich elemental synergies and turn-skipping super attacks. Story scenarios are a fantastic mix of comedy, spectacle, and melodrama, and it only gets more expansive as new chapters are added. Honkai: Star Rail is free to play, but it features gacha elements for character recruitment.
So Cheap, It’s Free! (Software & Services)
Best Free VPN
Not only is Proton VPN among our top picks for best cheap VPN for everyone, it’s also the best free VPN you’ll find. Flexible pricing and low overall cost make it a great choice for cash-strapped shoppers. Proton VPN also boasts a great set of privacy tools, including multi-hop connections and access to Tor via VPN. Its free subscription tier is really impressive: While you can only access 75 servers across three countries and connect just one device at a time, unlike most free VPNs, Proton VPN places no limit on how much data you can use. That alone is worth the price of admission (which is zero).
Price as Tested $11.49
Best Free Antivirus
For many years, Avast has been a mainstay of free antivirus protection. With Avast One Basic, you get Avast’s powerful antivirus protection, along with some elements of the Avast One security suite. All the testing labs we follow test Avast, and it regularly posts perfect or near-perfect scores. This free tool extends protection to macOS, Android, and iOS devices, though not at the same level as its Windows protection. It earns excellent scores in our own hands-on tests, and its features include ransomware protection, a simple firewall, and a bandwidth-limited VPN.
MSRP Free
Best Free Email Encryption
Sending a message using traditional email is about as private as sending a postcard or thumb-tacking it to a community bulletin board. Even when your email travels over HTTPS channels, it’s still exposed to the email provider. With PreVeil, you get full-scale, business-grade email encryption at a cost of exactly zero. You don’t have to spin up a new email address, and the service integrates automatically with Apple Mail, Gmail, and Outlook. Forgot your all-important encryption password? A unique and sophisticated key recovery system lets you get it back with a little help from your friends.
MSRP Free
Best Free Password Manager
Bitwarden is an open-source password manager with a generous free tier and inexpensive premium plans. Under the free personal plan, you can store an unlimited number of passwords and sync them across all your devices. Bitwarden offers native apps for Windows (including a Microsoft Store app), macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS. Bitwarden’s browser extension supports Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Opera, and Safari, as well as the less common Vivaldi, Brave, and Tor browsers. The free version also lets you enable multi-factor authentication via an authenticator app.
Per Month, Starts at Free
Best Free Audio Editing Software
It’s hard to beat free, and if you’re looking to start a podcast or record music, or just need a tool to assemble and convert some audio samples, Audacity is your program. Now owned by Muse Group, this venerable software started life as an open-source, two-channel stereo editor, but it has grown and expanded to include multitrack recording, many effects, and spectral and spectrogram views for sample-level editing. Despite unlimited undos and redos and a new clip editor, Audacity is destructive at heart, with no support for VSTs or other real-time plug-ins. But if you’re careful with your edits, Audacity will get you where you need to go with no money down—or ever, in fact.
MSRP Free
Best Free Photo Storage
If you need a place to store your photos online for free, use Google Photos. It’s a complete consumer photo workflow app for mobile and web that lets you automatically back up, organize, edit, and share your images. It no longer gives you unlimited storage (free users get a respectable 15GB), but its capabilities remain impressive. And if you want more storage, a $1.99-per-month Google One subscription includes 100GB.
MSRP Free
Best Free Online Learning Site
Where can you go to learn the basics of something from school you’ve since forgotten? For most academic subjects, the best place is Khan Academy. Khan Academy is a free online learning service with course material covering math, science, art history, and other subjects. The lessons contain videos, readings, and interactive components, which are sequenced so you can start from square one with any subject and slowly build your knowledge. The site focuses on kindergarten through early college courses, making it an ideal help source for students. Given what it offers and the fact that it’s entirely free to use, Khan Academy is the best learning site for academic subjects. If you want to pursue more university-level courses or develop your professional skills, Coursera is another excellent resource.
MSRP Free
Best Free Language Learning Software
Duolingo is one of the best apps for learning a language, and it just happens to be free. You’re unlikely to become fluent using only Duolingo, but it’s an excellent way to learn the ins and outs of a language that’s new to you or to improve your grasp of a language you’ve studied before through practice and exposure. Because it offers close to 40 languages, there’s a good chance it includes the one you want to learn. It’s appropriate for adults and children alike, with mobile apps and a web app that works more like a short video game than what you might expect of a language app.
MSRP Free
Best Free To-Do List App
Considering that to-do list apps are a dime a dozen, it’s downright shocking that so few of them are truly helpful, well designed, and affordable. Todoist, however, is all that. Whether you use the wonderful free version or pay to upgrade to an inexpensive Premium account, Todoist is clearly the best to-do list app on the market. It works on all your devices, tracks your productivity, and lets you geek out on organizing and analyzing your life. If you need an app to organize your tasks, either by yourself or in collaboration with others, you need Todoist.
Per Month, Starts at Free
Best Free Dating App
A dating app like Tinder, which prioritizes fast hook-ups over drawn-out relationship analysis, needs to have as many users as possible. That’s why it costs you nothing to sign up and instantly start swiping to let people know whether you find them hot or not. If you want to pay money for perks such as profile boosts and Super Likes, you can do that, too. Still, free Tinder promises plenty of potential romantic rewards, unlike eHarmony’s no-cost tier.
Per Month, Starts at $19.99
Best Free Website Builder
Wix is an excellent website builder—and unlike many of its competitors such as Gator or Squarespace, you can use it for free. You won’t get a custom domain, and you’ll need to be okay with ads appearing on your site, but in return you’ll enjoy powerful tools for building fantastic desktop and mobile sites. Besides, there’s nothing stopping you from upgrading later on.
Per Month, Starts at $17.00
Best Free Streaming Music
An extension of Google’s entertainment arm and an offshoot of the enormous YouTube platform, YouTube Music lets you enjoy its many ad-supported offerings without spending a dime (though you can upgrade to a premium account to ditch the ads). YouTube Music’s community uploads, music videos, podcasts, scrolling lyrics, and recently added Samples (a music discovery tool) all make for an excellent package. It lacks hi-res audio, but YouTube Music is hard to beat for recommendation-based listening.
MSRP $10.99
Best Free Streaming Video
Tubi doesn’t offer a limited free tier that simply acts as a teaser for a premium video streaming plan. Instead, it serves up its entire library of major studio releases—for free! Sure, it has ads, and certain movies and TV shows may come and go without warning. Still, Tubi proves you can enjoy great streaming video content without paying for a subscription.
Best Free Video Conferencing App
Zoom has remained relevant by pivoting from a simple video meeting app to a more comprehensive business communication tool. Now known as Zoom One, the service features an AI-powered assistant and new collaboration tools that you can use outside of meetings. Its robust free tier still offers 40-minute meetings, basic whiteboard features, team chat, and a 100-person attendee capacity, too.
Per User, Per Year, Starts at $199.00
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