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Anker 140W Multi-Port Charger Drops to $65 in Limited-Time Deal

Anker’s 140W multi-port wall charger has dropped to $65, giving Users Who run multiple devices overnight a single-outlet solution with enough output to handle phones, tablets, and laptops simultaneously.

The charger delivers up to 140 watts of total output across multiple USB-C and USB-A ports, enough to fast-charge a MacBook, an Android flagship, and a tablet at the same time.

What the Hardware Offers

Anker built the unit around GaN (gallium nitride) technology — a semiconductor material that runs cooler and packs more power into a smaller footprint than traditional silicon-based chargers.

At full load, power distribution shifts automatically depending on how many devices are connected, prioritizing the port drawing the heaviest demand.

The charger supports USB Power Delivery 3.1, the current top-tier wired charging standard, which enables the 140W ceiling required to fast-charge USB-C laptops that previously needed a proprietary brick.

The Case for Consolidating Chargers

Keeping all devices in one location overnight reduces the number of wall outlets and charging blocks a household needs in active use.

By contrast, running three separate chargers — a 65W laptop brick, a 30W phone charger, and a 20W tablet adapter — typically occupies three outlets and adds up to more than $65 in combined retail cost.

A single multi-port unit at this wattage covers all three loads simultaneously From One outlet.

Pricing and Availability

The $65 price represents a discount from Anker’s standard retail listing. The deal is available through Amazon while stock lasts.

Anker ranks among the top-selling third-party charging accessory brands in the U.S. Market, with its products stocked across major retailers including Best Buy, Target, and Walmart.

The company has faced scrutiny in past years over inflated watt claims on lower-tier products, but its premium GaN line — which includes this unit — has drawn consistently strong marks from independent hardware reviewers for accuracy in power delivery specifications.

USB Power Delivery 3.1, ratified by the USB Implementers Forum in 2021, raised the ceiling for wired charging to 240 watts, making 140W chargers mid-range by the standard’s own scale.

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