
As I get older, smaller screens and fonts are becoming my enemy as my eyesight is visibly strained. I’m actually scared that someday I would need a humongous screen to do all my work and tasks, or at least something that can enlarge the font to something I can comfortably read. We’ve seen huge screens like the Amazon Echo Show 21 and the Skylight Calendar Max for those who need larger displays, but this new one from Cozyla takes the cake. Or rather, takes the screen.
The Calendar Plus Max is a massive 55-inch 4K touchscreen that serves as a smart home command center, a calendar for your entire household, and even as a smart TV so you can watch together. Cozyla announced this at the ongoing CES 2026 and it’s considered to be the largest smart calendar display on the market right now. I don’t have a household to manage and I don’t have the space, but the idea of having this huge screen in my place seems like a dream.
Designer: Cozyla

This huge display comes with a wheeled stand for portability, so you can bring it around your house wherever you need it. It’s Wi-Fi enabled, so you get seamless connectivity as well. Imagine wheeling it into the kitchen during the morning rush when everyone’s trying to figure out their day, then moving it to the living room for family planning sessions, or even into your bedroom for a movie night. The mobility factor is something most smart displays don’t offer, and it’s honestly a game-changer.

Instead of having different devices to manage your home or various sticky notes if you’re still analog, you can use this display so that everything’s in just one huge place. It has a large touchscreen, so kids, adults, and grandparents can all easily manage it without squinting or fumbling. You also get a sleek, contemporary design that makes it look like premium tech and not just a utility device. At 55 inches, it’s the same size as a standard household TV, which means it commands attention without looking out of place in a modern home.

Since “calendar” is in its name, one of the main features of this device is its CalendarOS Smart System. You can create up to 8 family member profiles, and you can even personalize the color coding for each person. You can sync calendars from various services like Apple, Google, Outlook, and others, so you get one unified view instead of checking multiple apps across different devices. No more “I didn’t see that on my phone” excuses from the family. You can also create a customizable dashboard with widgets, shortcuts, and lists that make sense for your specific household needs.

As your “home mission control” device, you can add meal planning features to prep your weekly menus, create chore charts so everyone knows their responsibilities, manage to-do lists, and keep shopping lists updated in real-time. It centralizes all the tiny organizational tasks that usually get scattered across phones, refrigerator magnets, and forgotten notebook pages. Since the display runs on full Android OS, you can also use it as a smart TV for family movie nights, play YouTube videos as you cook or do chores, play games with the kids, and basically do any other thing that you use Android features and apps for.

It’s a device that can be used for both productivity and entertainment, whatever your family needs at the moment. The 4K resolution means whether you’re viewing your calendar details or watching your favorite show, everything looks crisp and clear. For those of us with aging eyes, being able to see text and images clearly from across the room is an absolute blessing. The Cozyla Calendar Plus Max represents a new category of home technology, one that acknowledges that families need centralized, visible, and accessible information hubs. It’s not trying to be another device you check occasionally; it’s meant to be the family communication center that everyone naturally gravitates toward.

While Cozyla hasn’t announced official pricing for the Max model yet, their smaller calendar displays typically range from around $165 to $400 and up, so expect this premium 55-inch version to be positioned as an investment piece. But for families drowning in scheduling chaos, or for anyone who appreciates having technology that actually simplifies life rather than complicating it, this could be worth every penny.