Quick comparison
Top picks at a glance
| Product | Best For | Rating | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anker Nano Power Bank 5K MagSafe | Best overall MagSafe battery pack | $30 | Check Price | |
| Baseus Picogo 10K Qi2.2 25W | Best high-capacity MagSafe pack | $56 | Check Price | |
| TORRAS MiniMag Power Bank 5K | Best ultra-slim design | $28 | Check Price | |
| Baseus Picogo Ultra Slim 10K | Best budget 10K option | $30 | Check Price | |
| TORRAS MiniMag 5K MagSafe | Best for iPhone Air compatibility | $33 | Check Price | |
| LISEN Qi2 15W MagSafe Battery Pack 5K | Best budget pick under $30 | $25 | Check Price |
Why MagSafe Battery Packs Still Win
There’s a reason magnetic battery packs have taken over: they just work. Snap one on the back of your iPhone, drop it in your pocket, and you’re charging. No cables to untangle, no awkward balance act, no hunting for a port while you’re walking through an airport.
In 2026, the ecosystem has matured considerably. Qi2 certification means third-party packs now charge at the same 15W speeds Apple designed into MagSafe. Newer Qi2.2 packs push that even further. And with the iPhone Air’s thinner profile driving demand for slimmer accessories, manufacturers have been in an arms race to shave every millimeter.
We spent weeks testing six of the most popular MagSafe battery packs across real daily use — commutes, travel days, long shoots, and just general pocket carry. Here’s what actually matters and which ones earned a spot in our bags.
Our Top Picks
Anker Nano Power Bank 5K — Best Overall
The Anker Nano 5K is the pack we keep reaching for. At just 0.3 inches thick and under 4 ounces, it’s genuinely pocketable — something you can’t say about most battery packs. The Qi2 certification means full 15W wireless charging with proper magnetic alignment, and the USB-C port on the bottom lets you recharge the pack itself quickly.
What sets the Anker apart isn’t any single spec — it’s how everything comes together. The magnets are strong enough that the pack stays attached during normal use but doesn’t require a wrestling match to remove. The frosted finish feels premium without being slippery. And at around $30, the price-to-quality ratio is hard to beat.
Capacity reality check: A 5,000mAh pack will add roughly 60-70% to an iPhone 16 or about 50-55% to an iPhone 16 Pro Max. That’s not a full charge, but it’s enough to get you through the rest of any day.
Pros:
- Qi2 certified 15W wireless charging
- Ultra-slim 0.3-inch profile
- Strong, well-calibrated magnets
- Clean design with minimal branding
- USB-C input/output
Cons:
- 5,000mAh won’t fully charge larger iPhones
- No built-in cable
- No kickstand or extras
Baseus Picogo 10K Qi2.2 — Best High-Capacity
If 5,000mAh isn’t enough for your usage, the Baseus Picogo 10K is where the value math starts to really work. Double the capacity of the slim packs, with Qi2.2 pushing 25W wirelessly — that’s noticeably faster than the standard 15W ceiling.
The 45W USB-C wired output also means this pack can charge more than just your iPhone. Throw an AirPods case on the magnets, or plug in a USB-C cable to charge a second device simultaneously. The alloy build keeps it slim at 0.6 inches despite the larger battery, though you’ll definitely feel the weight difference compared to 5K packs.
Pros:
- 10,000mAh — enough for 2+ full iPhone charges
- Qi2.2 at 25W wireless speed
- 45W USB-C wired output
- Slim alloy construction
- Can charge multiple devices
Cons:
- Heavier than 5K alternatives (around 7.5 oz)
- Pricier at ~$56
- Thicker profile at 0.6 inches
TORRAS MiniMag 5K — Best Ultra-Slim
TORRAS has been one of the most aggressive brands in the slim battery pack space, and the MiniMag 5K shows why. This pack is remarkably thin — thin enough that when attached to your iPhone, the combined thickness barely registers in a back pocket.
The built-in USB-C cable is a thoughtful touch. It wraps around the edge of the pack and gives you a wired charging option without carrying an extra cable. The magnetic alignment is solid, though the magnets aren’t quite as strong as Anker’s — we noticed occasional slipping when pulling the phone from a tight jeans pocket.
Pros:
- Extremely slim profile
- Built-in USB-C cable
- Light weight under 4 oz
- Good charging efficiency
Cons:
- Magnets slightly weaker than competitors
- Tends to run warm during charging
- USB-C cable adds slight bulk to one edge
Baseus Picogo Ultra Slim 10K — Best Budget 10K
This is the sleeper pick. At around $30 for a 10,000mAh pack with Qi2 wireless and 27W USB-C, the value proposition is almost unfair. Baseus somehow crammed double the battery into a pack that’s only half an inch thick.
The trade-off is that the 15W wireless charging is standard rather than the faster Qi2.2 found on its pricier sibling. You also don’t get the premium alloy build — this one is polycarbonate. But functionally, it works great. The magnets hold well, the LED indicators are clear, and the charging efficiency tested within a few percentage points of packs costing twice as much.
Pros:
- 10,000mAh at a 5K price point
- 0.5-inch slim design
- 27W USB-C wired charging
- Four LED battery indicators
- Exceptional value
Cons:
- Plastic build feels less premium
- Standard 15W wireless (not Qi2.2)
- Heavier than slim 5K packs
TORRAS MiniMag 5K MagSafe — Best for iPhone Air
This variant of the TORRAS MiniMag is specifically optimized for the iPhone Air’s thinner chassis. The magnetic alignment ring is calibrated to sit perfectly centered on the Air’s slightly different magnet array, which matters more than you’d think — misaligned packs charge slower and generate more heat.
The pack maintains the same ultra-slim philosophy with a built-in USB-C cable and fast wireless charging. If you carry an iPhone Air, this is the one to get. For standard iPhone 16 users, the regular MiniMag or the Anker Nano are better value.
Pros:
- Optimized magnetic alignment for iPhone Air
- Ultra-slim form factor
- Built-in USB-C cable
- Fast wireless charging
Cons:
- Premium over the standard MiniMag
- iPhone Air optimization means less universal appeal
- Limited availability
LISEN Qi2 15W MagSafe 5K — Best Budget Under $30
If you just want a magnetic battery pack that works and doesn’t break the bank, the LISEN delivers. At around $25, it’s the most affordable Qi2-certified pack we tested, and it performs respectably against packs costing twice as much.
You won’t get the premium build quality or extra features of the Anker or Baseus options. The plastic shell is functional but plain, and the magnets are adequate rather than exceptional. But the charging speed matches the Qi2 15W standard, and the 5,000mAh capacity is honest — we measured within 5% of the rated capacity in our tests.
Pros:
- Lowest price of any Qi2 certified pack
- Honest 5,000mAh capacity
- Standard 15W MagSafe speed
- LED battery indicators
Cons:
- Basic plastic build
- Weaker magnets than premium options
- No built-in cable or kickstand
- Less efficient than top picks
Buying Guide: What to Look For
Capacity — 5K vs 10K
The 5,000mAh vs 10,000mAh decision comes down to how you carry. If the battery pack lives in your pocket magnetically attached to your phone, go 5K — the weight and thickness of 10K packs makes pocket carry uncomfortable for most people. If it lives in a bag and you attach it when needed, the 10K packs offer dramatically better value per milliamp-hour.
Qi2 vs Qi2.2
Qi2 charges at 15W wirelessly. Qi2.2 pushes that to 25W. In practical terms, the speed difference saves about 15-20 minutes on a full charge cycle. Nice to have, but not essential for most users who are topping up passively rather than speed-charging.
Magnet Strength
This is the spec nobody puts on the box but everyone notices. Weak magnets mean your pack slides off in your pocket, separates when you pull your phone out, or misaligns and charges slowly. Our top picks all have magnets rated at 1,200g+ pull force — enough to stay attached during normal use without being impossible to remove.
Built-in Cables
Some packs include a built-in USB-C cable for wired charging. It’s convenient but adds thickness to one edge. If you already carry a cable in your bag, you probably don’t need this. If the battery pack is your only emergency charger, the built-in cable is clutch.
Pass-Through Charging
Most modern MagSafe packs support pass-through charging — plug the pack into a wall charger and it charges both itself and your attached iPhone simultaneously. All six picks here support this, and it’s a feature you should consider mandatory in 2026.
FAQ
Do MagSafe battery packs work with cases?
Yes, as long as your case is MagSafe-compatible (has the built-in magnet ring). Most first-party and major third-party cases work fine. Very thick cases or cases without MagSafe magnets will prevent proper alignment and charging.
Can I take MagSafe battery packs on planes?
All the packs in this roundup are under the 100Wh / 27,000mAh limit that airlines typically enforce for carry-on lithium batteries. You’re fine for flights. Just don’t put them in checked luggage — that’s a universal rule for lithium batteries.
Will these charge Android phones?
Any phone with Qi2 support will charge wirelessly from these packs. The Samsung Galaxy S25 series and Google Pixel 10 Pro both support Qi2. Older Android phones without Qi2 won’t magnetically attach or wirelessly charge, though you can still use the USB-C port for wired charging.
How long does it take to recharge the battery pack itself?
Most 5,000mAh packs recharge in about 1.5-2 hours via USB-C. The 10,000mAh packs take closer to 2.5-3 hours. Look for packs with 20W+ input if recharge speed matters to you.
Is it bad to leave the battery pack attached all day?
Modern iPhones and Qi2 packs handle this well. The iPhone’s battery management system will stop drawing power once it hits 80% (if you have Optimized Battery Charging enabled), and the pack will enter standby. You won’t damage either battery with normal use.
What’s the difference between MagSafe and Qi2?
MagSafe is Apple’s proprietary magnetic charging standard. Qi2 is the universal standard that adopted MagSafe’s magnetic alignment technology. Functionally, they’re interchangeable for charging — a Qi2 certified pack charges an iPhone at the same speed as an Apple MagSafe charger. The “Qi2 certified” label is what you want to look for in 2026.
The Bottom Line
For most people, the Anker Nano 5K is the MagSafe battery pack to buy. It nails the fundamentals — slim, strong magnets, proper Qi2 speed, reasonable price — without overcomplicating things. Snap it on, charge up, move on.
If you need more juice, the Baseus Picogo 10K Qi2.2 is the high-capacity pick worth the premium. And if you’re watching every dollar, the Baseus Picogo Ultra Slim 10K at $30 offers nearly double the capacity of premium 5K packs at the same price point.
The MagSafe battery pack market is mature enough now that there are no truly bad options from established brands. The differences come down to how you carry, how much capacity you need, and how much you’re willing to spend. Pick the one that matches your carry style and stop worrying about it — that’s the whole point of a good daily carry setup.