If you want to show your phone, tablet, or computer screen on a TV, projector, or larger display, screen mirroring is one of the easiest ways to do it.

Screen mirroring lets you display everything from one device on another screen in real time. That means your photos, videos, apps, browser tabs, presentations, and even your on-screen actions can appear on a larger display.
In this guide, we’ll explain what screen mirroring is, how it works, how it differs from casting, how to screen mirror to a TV, whether it needs WiFi, and when it is useful.
What Is Screen Mirroring?
Screen mirroring means copying the screen of one device to another display in real time.
For example, you can:
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Show your phone screen on a TV
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Display your laptop screen on a projector
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Share tablet content on a meeting room display
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Mirror your computer desktop to a wireless display or smart TV
The key idea is “mirroring.” The larger display shows a live copy of your source device’s screen. If you scroll on your phone, open an app, play a video, switch windows, or give a presentation, the same action appears on the larger screen.
This is different from simply playing a video. Screen mirroring shows your entire screen, not just one media file.
How Does Screen Mirroring Work?
Screen mirroring usually involves two devices: a source device and a display device.
| Device | Role |
| Source device | Sends the screen content, such as a phone, computer, or tablet |
| Display device | Receives and shows the image, such as a TV, projector, or monitor |
The source device encodes the screen image and sends it to the display device. The display device then decodes the signal and shows the image. This can happen through a wireless network, a built-in system protocol, or a dedicated wireless connection.
Common screen mirroring technologies include:
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AirPlay: commonly used with Apple devices
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Miracast: commonly used with Windows and some Android devices
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Chromecast / Google Cast: commonly used with Android, Chrome browser, and some smart TVs
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Smart TV built-in mirroring: available on some TVs with wireless display features
Different brands and systems may use different names, such as Screen Mirroring, Wireless Display, Cast, AirPlay, or Smart View. The names vary, but the core purpose is the same: showing your screen on a larger display.
Screen Mirroring vs Casting: What’s the Difference?
Screen mirroring and casting are often confused, but they do not work in exactly the same way.
| Feature | Screen Mirroring | Casting |
| What appears on the display | The entire device screen | Usually a specific video, song, or app content |
| Device control | Your actions are mirrored on the display | Your phone or computer works more like a remote |
| Notifications | May appear on the larger screen | Usually does not show the full device interface |
| Best for | Presentations, teaching, app demos, desktop sharing | Watching videos, playing music, streaming media |
| Privacy | Requires attention to everything on your screen | Usually exposes less private content |
A simple way to understand it:
Screen mirroring = shows your entire screenCasting = sends selected media content to the displayIf you want to show a presentation, website, app workflow, or computer desktop, screen mirroring is usually the better choice.

If you only want to send YouTube, Netflix, or music to a TV, casting is often more convenient because the content can continue playing on the display while your phone or computer works more like a controller.
How to Screen Mirror to a TV
The exact steps vary by device, but the basic process is similar.

In most cases:
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Make sure your TV or display supports screen mirroring, AirPlay, Miracast, or Cast.
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Connect your phone, computer, or tablet to the same WiFi network as the display, unless your devices support direct wireless mirroring.
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Open the screen mirroring, cast, AirPlay, or wireless display feature on your source device.
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Select the target TV or display from the available device list.
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Confirm the connection, and your screen should appear on the TV.
Common entry points include:
| Device | Common Entry |
| iPhone / iPad | Control Center > Screen Mirroring |
| Mac | Control Center > Screen Mirroring or AirPlay |
| Windows PC | Display Settings or Win + K |
| Android phone | Cast, Smart View, Wireless Display, or Screen Cast |
| Smart TV | Screen Mirroring, AirPlay, Cast, or Wireless Display |
The exact name depends on the device brand and system version. If you cannot find the feature, search your settings for “screen mirroring,” “cast,” “wireless display,” or “AirPlay.”
Does Screen Mirroring Need WiFi?
Whether screen mirroring needs WiFi depends on your devices and the technology they use.
Many screen mirroring methods require the source device and display device to be on the same WiFi network. For example, AirPlay and Chromecast usually rely on a local network so your phone, computer, and TV can discover each other and send content.
However, some methods do not require a traditional WiFi router. Miracast, for example, can use Wi-Fi Direct to create a direct connection between two devices. Some devices also support peer-to-peer connections or dedicated wireless display modes.
In simple terms:
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AirPlay or Chromecast: usually needs the same WiFi network
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Miracast: may work without a router, but both devices must support it
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Smart TV built-in mirroring: depends on the TV brand and supported protocol
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Public networks: may block device discovery because of network isolation
If you want screen mirroring without WiFi, first check whether both the source device and display device support Wi-Fi Direct, Miracast, or another direct connection method.
Is Screen Mirroring Safe?
Screen mirroring itself is a common display feature and is not automatically unsafe. However, because it shows your entire screen, you should pay attention to privacy.
When screen mirroring is active, notifications, chat messages, browser tabs, file names, app content, or private information may appear on the larger screen.
A few useful safety tips:
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Turn off unnecessary notifications before mirroring
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Avoid opening sensitive content in public
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Connect only to trusted TVs, projectors, or displays
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In meeting rooms or classrooms, confirm you are connected to the correct screen
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Disconnect after you finish
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Avoid mirroring sensitive information on untrusted public WiFi
On a home network or trusted office network, screen mirroring is usually safe. The main thing to watch is what you are displaying and whether the device you connect to is trusted.
When Should You Use Screen Mirroring?
Screen mirroring is useful when you need to show your entire screen.
Common use cases include:
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Showing phone photos or videos on a TV
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Sharing a laptop screen in a meeting
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Demonstrating an app or website in a classroom
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Displaying a computer desktop on a projector
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Showing step-by-step actions to others
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Viewing documents, images, or presentations on a larger screen
If you only want to play one video or song, casting may be easier.
If you need others to see everything happening on your screen, screen mirroring is the better fit.
Conclusion
Screen mirroring is a simple way to show your phone, tablet, or computer screen on a larger display. It is useful for presentations, teaching, sharing photos, showing apps, or displaying a desktop view.
The key idea is simple: screen mirroring copies your entire screen in real time, while casting usually sends only selected media content.
If you want to screen mirror to a TV, check which technology your devices support, make sure they can discover each other, and pay attention to privacy before sharing your screen. For everyday use, screen mirroring is a practical and easy-to-understand way to move content from a small screen to a bigger one.