Raspberry Pi 7" Touch Screen Display








Key features
- •This 7" Touchscreen display for the Raspberry Pi is perfect for creating portable and embedded projects where a keyboard and Mouse would be in the way.
- •The full color display outputs up to 800 x 480 and features a capacitive touch sensing capable of detecting 10 fingers.
- •Only two connections from the Pi TO the Display are necessary; power from GPIO (or USB) connection to the DSI port. The adapter board handles power, Signal conversion, and touch input conversion.
- •Kit contents: 7" Touchscreen display adapter board DSI ribbon cable 4 x stand-offs and screws 4 x jumper wires
Raspberry Pi 7" Touch Screen Display
List Price: $119.54$107.59DEALYou Save: $11.95 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 23, 2026In Stock (6)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.2
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
70%
4★
10%
3★
20%
2★
0%
1★
0%
Awesome!
N. J. Schreiber•September 9, 2017
Awesome! Great size and great looking screen. Packaging was very protective and instructions were easy to follow. I was looking at a bunch of different screens to use with my Rasberry Pi 3 and I am so glad I went with the official 7.5-inch screen. I also ordered the Official Raspberry Pi 7" Touchscreen Display by Samrticase and wow, what a perfect pair. It can't be beaten. You will get your money worth with this one. I would fully recommend.
OK, but not great
M. Durkin•September 6, 2017
I like the screen, but the instructions leave a lot to be desired. I would say that this is something you may not want to tackle if you are not comfortable with tinkering around with computer components, though most likely if that's you, you are probably not interested in a Raspberry Pi. There was little to no documentation that came with my unit, I was able to find it online by Bing'ing 'Element 14 7" touchscreen documentation'. There you will find pretty good instructions, once you finally locate them. There are instructions for enabling the onscreen keyboard, which is pretty much useless if you ask me. I am used to keyboards that pop up contextually and disappear when you don't need them. In this case, you have to bring it forward and it isn't intelligent enough to adjust the windows you want to type into so that you can see what you are typing. I personally found the onscreen keyboard to be about useless as it becomes a foreground application and covers the screen you are typing into. I have found some ways to manually work around this, but then you have to manually adjust it when you are done typing, only to repeat the process at the next input field. In my opinion, while it's cool that you can do this, it's a clear example of poorly thought out implementation. BUT, the screen does work well and for the price, I guess I shouldn't complain. I would highly suggest an external keyboard, which thankfully I did consider before I bought this. The touchscreen works pretty much flawlessly. Sometimes the screen doesn't display the window properly, I believe that's a function of the Raspberry Pi OS not rendering properly to the screen size and resolution.
Finally a Plug and Play Raspberry Pi Display!
Bill•May 29, 2017
Finally a plug and play Toughscreen display for my Raspberry Pi. I have tried 5 other off brands and they all failed miserably. This one is large, gorgeous and best of all, PLUG AND PLAY!
Give me some Raspberry Pi Touching.....
John R. Pepp•May 17, 2017
I love the display for the Raspberry Pi, but I recommend buying a case to protect if you're not doing a special project with it . I would also recommend buying a small keyboard for the touchscreen will only go so far. This is case for the π that I would buy -
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01HV97F64/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o05_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1
The Touchscreen Display is easy to setup and configure. Just make sure you follow the video tutorial(s) and don't overtighten (this is plastic after all), for it will make your life so much easier. I recommend anyone wanting to learn the nuts and bolts of a computer to start off with the Raspberry Pi. Getting back to the case for the Raspberry Pi. All I can say is that you shouldn't be disappointed in buying this for the Raspberry π.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01HV97F64/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o05_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1
The Touchscreen Display is easy to setup and configure. Just make sure you follow the video tutorial(s) and don't overtighten (this is plastic after all), for it will make your life so much easier. I recommend anyone wanting to learn the nuts and bolts of a computer to start off with the Raspberry Pi. Getting back to the case for the Raspberry Pi. All I can say is that you shouldn't be disappointed in buying this for the Raspberry π.
Great display, easy to work with.
aj4mq•April 25, 2017
Built myself a Pi3 Touchscreen PC using this display and the new Raspberry Pi 3.. This display works as well as my Galaxy S4, and is more accurate with overscan turned off. When it boots, you may see a lightning bolt or a small icon like the boot screen (color chart).. this means this section is reporting a brownout.. the 2.5A power supply that comes in the Pi3 kit is not enough, but the 3A supply handles it just fine.
This unit fits perfectly into the tilting container that also holds the Pi. The only wires I have connected to the display is the ribbon cable (handles video and touch response) and the 5V splitter.. they've included the wires to go from the 40-pin connector, but it might be better to use the 5V MicroUSB power port for it's protection.
great color response, listed as 800x480, but I think it may be 720x480. Have even been able to scan barcodes from the screen. haven't played a video yet, though.
For the 3A power supply:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01L8DVOFM/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
This unit fits perfectly into the tilting container that also holds the Pi. The only wires I have connected to the display is the ribbon cable (handles video and touch response) and the 5V splitter.. they've included the wires to go from the 40-pin connector, but it might be better to use the 5V MicroUSB power port for it's protection.
great color response, listed as 800x480, but I think it may be 720x480. Have even been able to scan barcodes from the screen. haven't played a video yet, though.
For the 3A power supply:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01L8DVOFM/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
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