Three months in, the Anker MagGo 3-in-1 Charging Station (the foldable version, model A2557) is still sitting in the same spot on my desk, which is a better endorsement than anything I could write about its specs.

What It Actually Does

The MagGo foldable charges an iPhone via MagSafe at up to 15W, an Apple Watch via a built-in puck, and AirPods on a Qi pad at the base - all from a single cable routed to one wall plug. The folding mechanism is the real sell: it collapses flat enough to drop in a laptop bag without catching on anything. Unfolded, the iPhone arm tilts to landscape orientation, which matters if you use StandBy mode on iOS 17 or later.

Anker rates it at 15W for MagSafe, and in practice it charges an iPhone 16 Pro from dead to full overnight without complaint. That’s the whole test, honestly. It either works reliably or it doesn’t.

Where It Falls Short

The build quality is good but not premium. The hinge feels firm, not solid - it’ll hold up to daily folding, but it’s not the kind of mechanism you’d use as a proof point in a product demo. The Apple Watch puck is permanently fixed at one angle, which is fine for nightstand charging but slightly awkward in landscape desk orientation.

At around $90 retail, it’s not cheap for what amounts to three charging coils and a hinge. Belkin’s BoostCharge Pro equivalent sits at a similar price point with arguably better materials, though it lacks the folding form factor.

The Unglamorous Part

The cable management situation is non-existent. One USB-C cable goes in; nothing else is hidden. If you want clean routing, that’s your problem to solve.

Why I Kept It

One cable. One spot. Everything charged in the morning. The desk space it occupies is smaller than a paperback book.

Charging accessories are the category where people over-research and under-commit - endlessly reading reviews but defaulting back to a pile of mismatched cables. The MagGo foldable doesn’t ask much of you, and I’m not sure what a meaningfully better version of this product looks like at this price tier. Something probably exists, but I’m not convinced I’d notice the difference.