Anker’s MagGo 3-in-1 Charging Station (the foldable version, model A2557) has been on my desk for about six weeks now, and my main takeaway is that it is aggressively competent. That sounds like faint praise, and honestly it is - but in a product category riddled with cheap pads that throttle at 7.5W and stands that tip over if you sneeze, “reliably does what the box says” clears a higher bar than it should.
The setup is straightforward: a MagSafe-certified pad for your iPhone, a dedicated spot for AirPods, and a watch charger that swings out from the base. It folds flat, which makes it genuinely useful for travel rather than just technically portable. The whole thing runs off a single USB-C cable. No brick included - Anker sells that separately, which is a petty move for a product in this price range.
Where It Actually Earns Its Price
The MagSafe puck hits 15W on iPhone 13 and newer, which is the ceiling Apple allows third-party chargers to reach. I timed it against Apple’s own MagSafe puck on an iPhone 15 Pro and couldn’t find a meaningful difference. The magnetic alignment is strong enough that the phone hasn’t slipped once, even when I’ve dropped it on the pad at an angle.
The Apple Watch charger supports fast charging for Series 7 and later. That’s not a given on multi-device stands at this price - several competitors quietly include slow-charge-only watch pads.

What It Won’t Do
There’s no Android fast wireless charging support worth mentioning here. If you’re in a mixed household with a Pixel or a Samsung on the nightstand, this isn’t built for you. The Apple ecosystem lock-in is total.
The hinge mechanism on the watch arm feels slightly plasticky in a way that the rest of the device doesn’t. It works, but it’s the one spot where you feel the margin.
The Honest Assessment
At around $90 street price, this sits in a bracket where you’re paying for the MagSafe certification and Anker’s build quality over a generic import - and you do get both of those things. It’s not a redesign of what a charging station can be. It’s just a well-executed version of a product type that usually disappoints. For anyone deep in the Apple ecosystem who wants one cable on their nightstand, that’s enough.