Maximum output in minimum volume—that's the bet UGREEN is making.
Nexode Air 65W charger is 70% smaller than conventional units while maintaining full power output for phones, tablets, and laptops. MagFlow Air power banks offer Qi2 wireless charging in slim designs (5,000 and 10,000 mAh), with the 10,000 mAh model including integrated USB-C cable.
- Nexode Air 65W is 70% smaller than conventional 65W chargers
- MagFlow Air power banks: 5,000 mAh (8.6mm thin) and 10,000 mAh (with integrated USB-C)
- Qi2 wireless charging at 15W on both power bank models
- Nexode Air 65W Slim launching end of June 2026
- Designed to meet air travel carry-on luggage requirements
UGREEN unveiled its Air series featuring ultra-compact Nexode Air chargers and MagFlow Air power banks designed for travel and confined spaces, utilizing GaN technology and Qi2 wireless charging.
UGREEN is betting that travelers and people living in tight spaces are tired of choosing between power and portability. The company has just unveiled its Air series—a line of chargers and power banks engineered around a single principle: maximum output in minimum volume.
The centerpiece is the Nexode Air 65W, a wall charger that achieves what sounds like a contradiction. It delivers the same 65 watts of charging power as a conventional power supply, but occupies roughly 30 percent of the space. The trick lies in two technologies working in tandem: UGREEN's proprietary GaNInfinity technology and something called Airpyra stacking architecture. Together, they pack more power density into a smaller footprint. That 65-watt output means you can charge not just phones and tablets, but also many modern laptops—all from a single adapter small enough to slip easily into a backpack or carry-on.
For people whose outlets live behind nightstands or in the narrow gaps between furniture, UGREEN has engineered a variant called the Nexode Air 65W Slim. It trades the standard model's compact cube for a flat profile with a foldable plug, designed specifically to fit into spaces where ordinary chargers simply won't reach. This version is scheduled to arrive in stores at the end of June 2026.
The Air series extends beyond wall chargers into mobile power. The MagFlow Air power banks lean heavily on wireless charging as their defining feature. Both models—a 5,000 mAh version and a 10,000 mAh version—support Qi2-certified wireless charging at up to 15 watts, with magnetic alignment that keeps compatible phones positioned correctly during charging. The smaller model measures just 8.6 millimeters thick, thin enough that your phone remains reasonably comfortable to hold even while the power bank is attached. The larger 10,000 mAh model includes an integrated USB-C cable, eliminating the need to pack a separate charging cord for many users.
Safety appears to have been a serious consideration. UGREEN equipped both power banks with ATL lithium cells—a premium battery chemistry—along with 13 distinct protection mechanisms and active temperature monitoring and heat regulation systems. The company has also designed them to meet air travel regulations for carry-on luggage, a practical detail for anyone who travels frequently by plane.
To mark the launch, UGREEN is running a campaign across Europe called "Find Style in the Little Things," positioning these devices as design objects rather than mere utilities. The company is organizing creative workshops and events, with particular focus on universities in Berlin during June 2026. The message is clear: in a world where people carry more devices than ever, the ability to charge them all without sacrificing space or style has become its own kind of luxury.
Notable Quotes
The charger is around 70 percent smaller than conventional 65 W power supply units and is therefore suitable for use on the go as well as for everyday use.— UGREEN (manufacturer statement)
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does a charger need to be 70 percent smaller? Isn't a wall charger already pretty small?
It's about what you're actually carrying. A 65-watt charger is bulky enough that many people leave it at home or in the office. Make it small enough, and it becomes something you actually throw in your bag without thinking.
So this is really about changing behavior—making people want to carry one charger for everything?
Exactly. If you can charge your phone, tablet, and laptop from a single adapter the size of a lighter, you're not making trade-offs anymore. You're just traveling smarter.
The power banks have wireless charging. Isn't that slower than plugging in?
It is, but the Qi2 standard is fast enough for most people—15 watts is respectable. And if your phone is already sitting on the power bank magnetically aligned, you're charging without fumbling with cables. For travel, that convenience matters.
Why include an integrated cable on the 10,000 mAh model but not the smaller one?
Capacity. The 5,000 mAh is meant to be a thin companion—you want it light and pocketable. The 10,000 mAh is for longer trips where you're already carrying more, so adding a cable makes sense. Different use cases, different designs.
They mention air travel regulations. That's a real constraint?
Absolutely. Lithium batteries have strict limits on planes. By designing these to meet those requirements from the start, UGREEN is saying: this is genuinely built for how people actually travel.