Most multi-device chargers exist to sell you the idea of a cleaner desk while delivering the opposite. They wobble, they run warm, they top out at 5W on the device you actually care about. Anker’s MagGo Qi2 charging station - the 3-in-1 foldable model that’s become something of a staple recommendation over the past year - breaks that pattern in ways that are specific enough to be worth naming.

The Qi2 standard matters here more than the hardware itself. Because Qi2 locks in at 15W magnetic charging for iPhones without requiring an Apple-licensed chip, third-party manufacturers can now deliver the same peak speed as MagSafe without the MagSafe tax. That’s the structural reason this charger works where earlier Anker attempts didn’t.

The MagSafe puck on this unit has genuine snap. Not “close enough” snap - actual magnetic pull that seats your phone with the satisfying click that used to be Apple-exclusive. The Apple Watch module charges at the fast-charge rate for Series 7 and later, which not all third-party stations bother to support correctly. AirPods sit in a small Qi pad at the base that’s slightly awkward to position but functional.

Where It’s Still Imperfect

The folding hinge design, meant to make the unit portable, introduces a small amount of flex that makes the whole thing feel less premium than the price suggests. At around $90, you’re paying for convenience and speed, but the build doesn’t feel like $90. A competing unit from Belkin covers similar ground with a sturdier feel, though it lacks the fold and costs more.

The cable is USB-C to the base, which is correct. But Anker includes a 30W adapter in the box that can’t actually drive the station at full output for all three devices simultaneously - you’ll want a 40W or higher brick if you’re running phone, watch, and AirPods at the same time. That omission should be disclosed on the box and isn’t.

The Actual Verdict

This is the charger to buy if you’re on iPhone 14 or later and tired of managing three separate cables. It does what multi-device chargers have promised for years without requiring you to forgive obvious flaws. The adapter situation is a minor nuisance that a firmware note won’t fix - you’ll need to spend another $15 on a better brick. Factor that in and the value proposition still holds.