The MagGo 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Station (Foldable) has been sitting on my desk for about six weeks now, and I keep waiting to find something wrong with it. I haven’t.

Anker charges around $55 for this thing depending on where you buy it, which puts it well below competitors from Belkin and Apple’s own MagSafe Duo. The pitch is simple: a foldable pad that charges your iPhone via MagSafe at 15W, plus a spot for AirPods and a small Apple Watch puck on the side. Nothing revolutionary. The execution, though, is cleaner than it has any right to be at this price.

What Actually Works

The MagSafe alignment is stronger than I expected. Anker uses actual MagSafe-compatible magnets rather than Qi2-adjacent approximations, and the iPhone snaps into place with the same satisfying thunk you get from Apple’s own accessories. I’ve tested it with an iPhone 15 Pro and an iPhone 16 Plus - both hit the full 15W without complaint.

The fold mechanism deserves credit too. It’s stiff enough that the stand holds its angle under the weight of a phone, but not so stiff that adjusting it feels like you’re fighting it. A lot of folding stands get this wrong in one direction or the other.

Cable management is a single USB-C input, which means one cable running to your power brick. Tidy.

Where It Falls Short

The Apple Watch charger is slow. Anker quotes standard charging speeds here, not fast charging, so if you’ve gotten used to the faster speeds on Apple Watch Series 7 and later, this will feel like a step back for overnight top-ups. It’s fine for nightstand use, less fine if you’re trying to squeeze charge into a watch during a lunch break.

The pad’s surface - a soft-touch matte finish - also picks up oils from your hands faster than you’d want. After a few weeks it looks slightly grimy in certain light. A wipe-down with a microfiber cloth fixes it, but it’s a maintenance note worth flagging.

The Honest Assessment

Most 3-in-1 charging stations either overpromise on speed, underdeliver on build quality, or cost so much that the value calculation stops making sense. Anker’s MagGo avoids all three. It’s not trying to be premium hardware - it’s trying to be reliable, compact, and priced correctly. On those terms, it succeeds without reservation.