AnkerDirect via Amazon has Anker 6-Port 112W Max Fast Charging USB-C / USB-A Desktop Charger Station (A2154) on sale for $29.99. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.
Anker Official Store via eBay also has Anker 6-Port 112W Max Fast Charging USB-C / USB-A Desktop Charger Station (A2154, Black) on sale for $29.99. Shipping is free.
This collaborative space allows users to contribute additional information, tips, and insights to enhance the original deal post. Feel free to share your knowledge and help fellow shoppers make informed decisions.
AnkerDirect via Amazon has Anker 6-Port 112W Max Fast Charging USB-C / USB-A Desktop Charger Station (A2154) on sale for $29.99. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.
Anker Official Store via eBay also has Anker 6-Port 112W Max Fast Charging USB-C / USB-A Desktop Charger Station (A2154, Black) on sale for $29.99. Shipping is free.
Model: Anker Desktop Charger, Fast Charging USB C Charger, 112W Max 6-Port Charging Station, for iPhone, iPad, MacBook, Samsung and More (Cable Not Included)
Deal History
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
Lowest price historically according to camelcamelcamel.
Edit: Apparently this was just recently $3 cheaper but required a coupon which isn't detected on camelcamelcamel price history.
This is a multi port USB-C and USB-A desktop charger made by a reasonably reputable brand (Anker) instead of just a generic brand.
No high output ports for charging a laptop but great for having a charger set up with various lower powered USB devices connected such as phones, tablets, etc. Nothing state of the art, but a great deal considering the price, quality, and number of USB-C ports in my opinion.
Device has 6 ports with a total of 112W:
1x 30W USB-C and 2x 20W USB-C
1x 18W USB-A and 2X 12W USB-A
This is a charger where the power cord plugs into the back so you can have it sitting where you want instead of the brick kind where it is stuck at the wall. The power cord connects to the back of the charger with a standard IEC C7 connector so you can easily replace the cable if you need a different length. This is the non polarized cord that looks a bit like a figure 8 on the end.
Charger accepts input of 120v/240v 50/60 Hz so you can probably turn it into a travel charger if you just get a different cord with the desired outlet connector or use an adapter assuming the place you're going has power that fits the previously mentioned input specs.
I think USB-A #3 (middle) is compatible within some version of Qualcomm Quick Charge but can't find any data on which version beyond the voltage and current specs above. I'll connect an analyzer to mine and update the post tonight with more details on exact specs that port supports. (See Edit below for testing details)
Edit: I checked before starting the post to make sure it wasn't a duplicate but didn't think of checking again before hitting submit. Looks while like writing the post someone else beat me to it. Thank you to whomever merged the posts.
Edit #2: As promised here's more detailed info regarding the supported charging modes of the different ports based on testing my own device.
Supported protocols based on quick test with a cheap usb tester.
This may be incomplete, or incorrect, but is provided with the best intentions and am happy to be corrected by someone who has a newer, more accurate tester etc.
USB-A ports 1 and 2:
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
USB-A port 3 (middle port):
QC 3.0 11.9V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
USB-C port 1 (middle port):
PD 3.0 36.30W PDO:5 Options
->5V 3A
->9V 3A
->15V 2A
->20V 1.5A
->PPS 3.3-11V 3.3A
QC 3.0 12V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Huawei FCP 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
*DOES NOT* have Samsung AFC support if you needed that.
USB-C port 2 and port 3:
PD 3.0 20.04W PDO:3 Options
->5V 3A
->9V 2.22A
->12V 1.67A
QC 3.0 11.9V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
*DOES NOT* have Huawei FCP or Samsung AFC support
All protocols listed above are merely what the charger claims to support when a device is connected to the respective port. None were actually tested with a device connected to confirm. Sorry, but I'm lazy and also have nothing that does Qualcomm QuickCharge 2.0/3.0, or Huawei FCP.
I can however say USB-C port 1 does support fast charging on my iPhone. I watched it negotiate the 9V/3A PDO option and then pull about 25W when I connected my phone with a partially charged battery.
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Lowest price historically according to camelcamelcamel.
Edit: Apparently this was just recently $3 cheaper but required a coupon which isn't detected on camelcamelcamel price history.
This is a multi port USB-C and USB-A desktop charger made by a reasonably reputable brand (Anker) instead of just a generic brand.
No high output ports for charging a laptop but great for having a charger set up with various lower powered USB devices connected such as phones, tablets, etc. Nothing state of the art, but a great deal considering the price, quality, and number of USB-C ports in my opinion.
Device has 6 ports with a total of 112W:
1x 30W USB-C and 2x 20W USB-C
1x 18W USB-A and 2X 12W USB-A
This is a charger where the power cord plugs into the back so you can have it sitting where you want instead of the brick kind where it is stuck at the wall. The power cord connects to the back of the charger with a standard IEC C7 connector so you can easily replace the cable if you need a different length. This is the non polarized cord that looks a bit like a figure 8 on the end.
Charger accepts input of 120v/240v 50/60 Hz so you can probably turn it into a travel charger if you just get a different cord with the desired outlet connector or use an adapter assuming the place you're going has power that fits the previously mentioned input specs.
I think USB-A #3 (middle) is compatible within some version of Qualcomm Quick Charge but can't find any data on which version beyond the voltage and current specs above. I'll connect an analyzer to mine and update the post tonight with more details on exact specs that port supports. (See Edit below for testing details)
Edit: I checked before starting the post to make sure it wasn't a duplicate but didn't think of checking again before hitting submit. Looks while like writing the post someone else beat me to it. Thank you to whomever merged the posts.
Edit #2: As promised here's more detailed info regarding the supported charging modes of the different ports based on testing my own device.
Supported protocols based on quick test with a cheap usb tester.
This may be incomplete, or incorrect, but is provided with the best intentions and am happy to be corrected by someone who has a newer, more accurate tester etc.
USB-A ports 1 and 2:
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
USB-A port 3 (middle port):
QC 3.0 11.9V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
USB-C port 1 (middle port):
PD 3.0 36.30W PDO:5 Options
->5V 3A
->9V 3A
->15V 2A
->20V 1.5A
->PPS 3.3-11V 3.3A
QC 3.0 12V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Huawei FCP 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
*DOES NOT* have Samsung AFC support if you needed that.
USB-C port 2 and port 3:
PD 3.0 20.04W PDO:3 Options
->5V 3A
->9V 2.22A
->12V 1.67A
QC 3.0 11.9V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
*DOES NOT* have Huawei FCP or Samsung AFC support
All protocols listed above are merely what the charger claims to support when a device is connected to the respective port. None were actually tested with a device connected to confirm. Sorry, but I'm lazy and also have nothing that does Qualcomm QuickCharge 2.0/3.0, or Huawei FCP.
I can however say USB-C port 1 does support fast charging on my iPhone. I watched it negotiate the 9V/3A PDO option and then pull about 25W when I connected my phone with a partially charged battery.
Dang, I was going to say I'm surprised camelcamelcamel missed the price drop as I had an alert setup waiting to get another one of these but I see now the $26.99 price was with a coupon which camelcamelcamel doesn't detect as far as I know.
Dang, I was going to say I'm surprised camelcamelcamel missed the price drop as I had an alert setup waiting to get another one of these but I see now the $26.99 price was with a coupon which camelcamelcamel doesn't detect as far as I know.
Camelcamelcamel doesn't detect coupon codes and the link I posted had a $14 coupon code that may or may not have been listed on Amazon. You should setup a deal alert on this site for either "Anker" the brand or "Anker 112w" so that you don't miss deals for this item. You can setup the deal alert to send you an email, private message, site notification and mobile push notification. I have a lot of deal alerts setup here and they work great.
Camelcamelcamel doesn't detect coupon codes and the link I posted had a $14 coupon code that may or may not have been listed on Amazon. You should setup a deal alert on this site for either "Anker" the brand or "Anker 112w" so that you don't miss deals for this item. You can setup the deal alert to send you an email, private message, site notification and mobile push notification. I have a lot of deal alerts setup here and they work great.
Camelcamelcamel is too slow. Distill monitor is better. If you're somewhat tech savvy, set up a VM that starts a browser on boot and leave it running. Install the Distill app and you get some Push Notifications and 30 email notifications a month.If you opt to use their cloud servers, your max refresh rate is once per hour but if you use your own computer/VM, you can set it as low as 1 second but you risk the website blocking you for hot valued or rare items that gets watched. Happy hunting !
Camelcamelcamel is too slow. Distill monitor is better. If you're somewhat tech savvy, set up a VM that starts a browser on boot and leave it running. Install the Distill app and you get some Push Notifications and 30 email notifications a month.If you opt to use their cloud servers, your max refresh rate is once per hour but if you use your own computer/VM, you can set it as low as 1 second but you risk the website blocking you for hot valued or rare items that gets watched. Happy hunting !
I was suggesting using the deal alerts feature here on slickdeals. After you set up a deal alert for keywords with minimum rating (i.e. number of upvotes which I think has a default of 2 in the app), when someone posts a deal that matches it and the rating is above the threshold you set, then you get an instant notification via whatever methods you selected. What you suggested is overkill when there's a feature on this site that works well.
Last edited by Sam K June 17, 2025 at 06:51 AM.
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This should be plenty fast for charging many laptops, it's just not gonna handle a high power laptop. Perfect for a MacBook Air or Chromebook, even good enough for a MacBook Pro to charge when not in use or maintain charge with light to moderate use.
Only 30 watts max per single plug? You'd be better off with their other charger that's a little more money and can do 100w on a single plug.
And which charger do you suggest that has 5-6 ports and can deliver at least the same wattage as this one with all ports in use? The 6 port charger I have that meets/exceeds those specs costs 3x as much as this one.
And which charger do you suggest that has 5-6 ports and can deliver at least the same wattage as this one with all ports in use? The 6 port charger I have that meets/exceeds those specs costs 3x as much as this one.
I was suggesting using the deal alerts feature here on slickdeals. After you set up a deal alert for keywords with minimum rating (i.e. number of upvotes which I think has a default of 2 in the app), when someone posts a deal that matches it and the rating is above the threshold you set, then you get an instant notification via whatever methods you selected. What you suggested is overkill when there's a feature on this site that works well.
that requires a person on Slickdeals to notice the deal and post it, which would miss a lot of short-term price drops or coupons. I agree, very few people would do what they are talking about, but what you're suggesting is comparing apples and oranges.
C3 & C4 are 15W shared (basically 7.5W each) and A1 & A2 are 12W shared (basically 6W each).
For our needs, 30W + 20W + 20W + 18W + 12W + 12W is a much more useful power distribution. I rarely use my laptop but iPads and iPhones, we usually have several that need to be charged at any given time.
Last edited by Dashey10 June 20, 2025 at 01:20 PM.
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Edit: Apparently this was just recently $3 cheaper but required a coupon which isn't detected on camelcamelcamel price history.
Black Color $29.99: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CM6V5GL2
White Color $29.99: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CM6WDH6S
This is a multi port USB-C and USB-A desktop charger made by a reasonably reputable brand (Anker) instead of just a generic brand.
No high output ports for charging a laptop but great for having a charger set up with various lower powered USB devices connected such as phones, tablets, etc. Nothing state of the art, but a great deal considering the price, quality, and number of USB-C ports in my opinion.
Device has 6 ports with a total of 112W:
1x 30W USB-C and 2x 20W USB-C
1x 18W USB-A and 2X 12W USB-A
This is a charger where the power cord plugs into the back so you can have it sitting where you want instead of the brick kind where it is stuck at the wall. The power cord connects to the back of the charger with a standard IEC C7 connector so you can easily replace the cable if you need a different length. This is the non polarized cord that looks a bit like a figure 8 on the end.
Charger accepts input of 120v/240v 50/60 Hz so you can probably turn it into a travel charger if you just get a different cord with the desired outlet connector or use an adapter assuming the place you're going has power that fits the previously mentioned input specs.
Detailed Port Configuration:
112W, 6 Ports
USB-C1: (30W Max) 5V⎓3A / 9V⎓3A / 15V⎓2A / 20V⎓1.5A
USB-C2 and USB-C3: (20W Max) 5V⎓3A / 9V⎓2.22A / 12V⎓1.67A
USB-A1 and USB-A2: (12W Max) 5V⎓2.4A
USB-A3: (18W Max) 5V⎓3A / 9V⎓2A / 12V⎓1.5A
I think USB-A #3 (middle) is compatible within some version of Qualcomm Quick Charge but can't find any data on which version beyond the voltage and current specs above. I'll connect an analyzer to mine and update the post tonight with more details on exact specs that port supports. (See Edit below for testing details)
Edit: I checked before starting the post to make sure it wasn't a duplicate but didn't think of checking again before hitting submit. Looks while like writing the post someone else beat me to it. Thank you to whomever merged the posts.
Edit #2: As promised here's more detailed info regarding the supported charging modes of the different ports based on testing my own device.
Supported protocols based on quick test with a cheap usb tester.
This may be incomplete, or incorrect, but is provided with the best intentions and am happy to be corrected by someone who has a newer, more accurate tester etc.
USB-A ports 1 and 2:
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
USB-A port 3 (middle port):
QC 3.0 11.9V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
USB-C port 1 (middle port):
PD 3.0 36.30W PDO:5 Options
->5V 3A
->9V 3A
->15V 2A
->20V 1.5A
->PPS 3.3-11V 3.3A
QC 3.0 12V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Huawei FCP 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
*DOES NOT* have Samsung AFC support if you needed that.
USB-C port 2 and port 3:
PD 3.0 20.04W PDO:3 Options
->5V 3A
->9V 2.22A
->12V 1.67A
QC 3.0 11.9V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
*DOES NOT* have Huawei FCP or Samsung AFC support
All protocols listed above are merely what the charger claims to support when a device is connected to the respective port. None were actually tested with a device connected to confirm. Sorry, but I'm lazy and also have nothing that does Qualcomm QuickCharge 2.0/3.0, or Huawei FCP.
I can however say USB-C port 1 does support fast charging on my iPhone. I watched it negotiate the 9V/3A PDO option and then pull about 25W when I connected my phone with a partially charged battery.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank taco-man
Edit: Apparently this was just recently $3 cheaper but required a coupon which isn't detected on camelcamelcamel price history.
Black Color $29.99: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CM6V5GL2
White Color $29.99: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CM6WDH6S
This is a multi port USB-C and USB-A desktop charger made by a reasonably reputable brand (Anker) instead of just a generic brand.
No high output ports for charging a laptop but great for having a charger set up with various lower powered USB devices connected such as phones, tablets, etc. Nothing state of the art, but a great deal considering the price, quality, and number of USB-C ports in my opinion.
Device has 6 ports with a total of 112W:
1x 30W USB-C and 2x 20W USB-C
1x 18W USB-A and 2X 12W USB-A
This is a charger where the power cord plugs into the back so you can have it sitting where you want instead of the brick kind where it is stuck at the wall. The power cord connects to the back of the charger with a standard IEC C7 connector so you can easily replace the cable if you need a different length. This is the non polarized cord that looks a bit like a figure 8 on the end.
Charger accepts input of 120v/240v 50/60 Hz so you can probably turn it into a travel charger if you just get a different cord with the desired outlet connector or use an adapter assuming the place you're going has power that fits the previously mentioned input specs.
Detailed Port Configuration:
112W, 6 Ports
USB-C1: (30W Max) 5V⎓3A / 9V⎓3A / 15V⎓2A / 20V⎓1.5A
USB-C2 and USB-C3: (20W Max) 5V⎓3A / 9V⎓2.22A / 12V⎓1.67A
USB-A1 and USB-A2: (12W Max) 5V⎓2.4A
USB-A3: (18W Max) 5V⎓3A / 9V⎓2A / 12V⎓1.5A
I think USB-A #3 (middle) is compatible within some version of Qualcomm Quick Charge but can't find any data on which version beyond the voltage and current specs above. I'll connect an analyzer to mine and update the post tonight with more details on exact specs that port supports. (See Edit below for testing details)
Edit: I checked before starting the post to make sure it wasn't a duplicate but didn't think of checking again before hitting submit. Looks while like writing the post someone else beat me to it. Thank you to whomever merged the posts.
Edit #2: As promised here's more detailed info regarding the supported charging modes of the different ports based on testing my own device.
Supported protocols based on quick test with a cheap usb tester.
This may be incomplete, or incorrect, but is provided with the best intentions and am happy to be corrected by someone who has a newer, more accurate tester etc.
USB-A ports 1 and 2:
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
USB-A port 3 (middle port):
QC 3.0 11.9V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
USB-C port 1 (middle port):
PD 3.0 36.30W PDO:5 Options
->5V 3A
->9V 3A
->15V 2A
->20V 1.5A
->PPS 3.3-11V 3.3A
QC 3.0 12V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Huawei FCP 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
*DOES NOT* have Samsung AFC support if you needed that.
USB-C port 2 and port 3:
PD 3.0 20.04W PDO:3 Options
->5V 3A
->9V 2.22A
->12V 1.67A
QC 3.0 11.9V Max
QC 2.0 5V 9V 12V
Apple 5V 2.4A
BC1.2 DCP 5V 1.5A
*DOES NOT* have Huawei FCP or Samsung AFC support
All protocols listed above are merely what the charger claims to support when a device is connected to the respective port. None were actually tested with a device connected to confirm. Sorry, but I'm lazy and also have nothing that does Qualcomm QuickCharge 2.0/3.0, or Huawei FCP.
I can however say USB-C port 1 does support fast charging on my iPhone. I watched it negotiate the 9V/3A PDO option and then pull about 25W when I connected my phone with a partially charged battery.
https://slickdeals.net/f/18359059-anker-6-port-112w-max-fast-charging-usb-c-usb-a-desktop-charger-station-white-26-free-shipping
https://slickdeals.net/f/18359059-anker-6-port-112w-max-fast-charging-usb-c-usb-a-desktop-charger-station-white-26-free-shipping
Dang, I was going to say I'm surprised camelcamelcamel missed the price drop as I had an alert setup waiting to get another one of these but I see now the $26.99 price was with a coupon which camelcamelcamel doesn't detect as far as I know.
I was suggesting using the deal alerts feature here on slickdeals. After you set up a deal alert for keywords with minimum rating (i.e. number of upvotes which I think has a default of 2 in the app), when someone posts a deal that matches it and the rating is above the threshold you set, then you get an instant notification via whatever methods you selected. What you suggested is overkill when there's a feature on this site that works well.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
This one is close.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CSFQQVVT
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CSFQQVVT
For our needs, 30W + 20W + 20W + 18W + 12W + 12W is a much more useful power distribution. I rarely use my laptop but iPads and iPhones, we usually have several that need to be charged at any given time.
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