Home theater setup under $1,000 in 2026 — the realistic build

I've upgraded my home theater three times in five years. The lessons compound. Here's the under-$1,000 build I'd recommend without caveats.
The TV: $400-500
The Hisense U7N 65" at $500-600 is the value king of 2026. Real Mini-LED, 144Hz refresh, decent HDR. It looks 90% as good as a Sony or Samsung at half the price. The TCL QM7 is a similar pick.
Skip OLED unless you have $1,500+ to spend. The risk of burn-in for a TV that's also used for gaming and news isn't worth it.
The soundbar: $250-300
Don't skip this. Built-in TV speakers in 2026 are still bad. The Sonos Beam Gen 2 at $400 is great. The cheaper Vizio M-Series Elevate at $250-300 has a real subwoofer and surround channels — better cinematic experience than a Sonos Beam alone for a third less.

The streaming box: $50
Skip the smart TV apps. They're slow and laggy. Get a Chromecast with Google TV or Apple TV 4K. The Roku Ultra is the budget pick at $100.
The remote: $50 you'll thank yourself for
A Logitech Harmony (used on eBay, since they discontinued) or SofaBaton U1 universal remote. Replaces 4 different remotes with 1.
Cables and mount
$50 for HDMI 2.1 ultra-high-speed cables (don't skimp here, 4K/120Hz needs them) and a full-motion TV mount ($60).
Total
TV $500 + soundbar $275 + streaming box $75 + cables/mount $110 = $960. Genuinely punches above its weight class.

Where to spend more if you have it
The TV. A 75" version of the same TV is the biggest upgrade you'll feel. Or step up to OLED for movies-focused viewing. Don't upgrade the soundbar before the TV.
Skip these
4K Blu-ray players (streaming is good enough). Receiver/AVR setups (modern soundbars rival entry-level AVRs). "Premium" HDMI cables over $30 — the spec is the spec, the gold-plated connectors are marketing.







