The bar for wireless charging accessories is depressingly low. Most of what’s on the market is either overpriced because it has an Apple logo adjacent to it, or cheap enough that it starts making crackling noises after three months. Anker’s MagGo lineup sits in the middle, and after using the 3-in-1 Qi2 stand as my daily bedside charger for the past few months, I’ve come to appreciate something rare in this category: competence without theater.

The stand charges an iPhone at the full 15W Qi2 rate, holds the phone at a readable angle for StandBy mode, and has a dedicated Apple Watch puck on a flexible arm plus a Qi pad at the base for AirPods or anything else you’re throwing down at night. Setup takes about four minutes. The cable management is handled by a single braided USB-C cable running to a 67W brick that Anker includes in the box - a detail competitors routinely skip to shave a few dollars off the listed price.

The build quality is matte plastic and aluminum, which sounds unimpressive until you notice that nothing flexes when you pull your phone off the MagSafe puck one-handed. The Watch arm holds position without creeping downward overnight, something I cannot say about two other stands I tried before this one.

What It Doesn’t Do

It won’t charge an Android phone at anything above standard Qi speeds unless your device also supports Qi2, which remains a shorter list than it should be in mid-2026. If you’re cross-platform household, this stand is not neutral - it’s designed around the Apple ecosystem and comfortable admitting that.

There’s no USB-A pass-through port, no LED brightness adjustment, and no app. Some people will call these omissions. I call them decisions.

The Price Argument

At around $80 USD at time of writing, the MagGo 3-in-1 Qi2 isn’t cheap for what amounts to a plastic stand. But Belkin’s equivalent charges more and has historically had worse build reliability. Apple’s own MagSafe Duo doesn’t include a Watch charger. The third-party field is full of units that meet the spec sheet and fall apart in practice.

Anker’s reputation here is built on volume - they’ve shipped enough of these to have refined the things that fail first. The MagGo stand feels like the beneficiary of that iteration. It’s not exciting, and if you buy it expecting to feel good about your purchase in an aesthetic sense, you’ll be mildly disappointed. If you buy it because you want your devices charged by morning without any surprises, it delivers without complaint.