Consumer technology news and reviews website for buying guides, product testing, deals, phones, laptops, TVs, software, gaming, streaming, smart home devices, how-to advice, and everyday tech decisions

TechRadar

TechRadar is a consumer technology website known for news, reviews, buying guides, deals, how-to advice, and practical coverage of devices, software, gaming, streaming, and smart-home products.

Focus
Consumer technology news, product reviews, buying guides, deals, how-to articles, software, gaming, and entertainment tech.
Owner
TechRadar is part of Future plc's technology media portfolio.
Launch
TechRadar launched in January 2008 and later expanded its editorial presence internationally.
TechRadar covers technology news, reviews, buying advice, deals, software, gaming, entertainment, and everyday tech decisions.TechRadar logo on Wikimedia Commons

What TechRadar is

TechRadar is a technology publication for people trying to understand, choose, buy, and use digital products. Visit TechRadar.com to see its mix of news, reviews, buying guides, deals, explainers, and how-to advice. The site covers phones, laptops, TVs, audio gear, cameras, software, streaming, gaming, home technology, AI tools, wearables, and web services. Its practical angle is important: TechRadar is not only reporting what launched, but also asking whether a product or service is worth attention, money, or time.

Reviews and buying guides

TechRadar is especially visible in search results for product reviews and best-of lists. Its buying guides compare categories such as TVs, laptops, headphones, phones, cameras, VPNs, web hosting, smart-home devices, and streaming services. This review-and-guide format makes the site useful at the moment of decision. Readers often arrive with a concrete question: which laptop should I buy, which TV fits my budget, which app solves a problem, or which deal is actually worth taking.

News with practical context

TechRadar also publishes daily technology news, but the framing often stays close to real user impact. A platform update, device rumor, security concern, software launch, or streaming change is usually explained through what it may mean for readers. That practical context separates it from publications that focus mainly on industry strategy or technical engineering. TechRadar can cover those angles, but its center of gravity is the person living with the product.

Growth and global editions

TechRadar began in the United Kingdom in 2008 and grew into an international technology brand, with Future describing it as a site that helps millions of people find and use technology they love. The official site says expansions into the United States and Australia followed in 2012. That global footprint matters because technology products are often regional. Prices, models, release dates, carriers, streaming catalogs, warranties, and retail deals can differ by country, so a broad consumer-tech site has to balance global coverage with local usefulness.

TechRadar Pro and specialist coverage

TechRadar's name also appears in more specialist contexts, including TechRadar Pro, which focuses more on business technology, software, services, security, cloud tools, and small-business buying decisions. This gives the brand a wide range: everyday consumer guidance on one side, and professional technology decision support on the other. The overlap is natural because many tools now blur home, work, creator, and small-business use.

Why it matters

TechRadar matters because technology shopping has become difficult. Product names change quickly, subscription plans multiply, AI features arrive before norms are settled, and many devices look similar until real-world testing reveals differences. A large review and advice site can help readers move from confusion to a shortlist. Its broader role is to make consumer technology legible: what changed, what works, what is overhyped, and what tradeoffs matter before someone spends money.