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expirediconian | Staff posted Feb 16, 2026 05:29 PM
expirediconian | Staff posted Feb 16, 2026 05:29 PM

Zitahli Men's RFID Wallet w/ AirTag Pocket (Black)

$5.00

$20

75% off
Amazon
27 Comments 34,266 Views
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chuang xiang via Amazon has Zitahli Men's RFID Wallet w/ AirTag Pocket (Crazy Horse Black, Small) on sale for $9.99 - $5 off when you apply promo code AU35W4IU at checkout = $4.99. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+.

Thanks to Deal Hunter iconian for sharing this deal.

Note: Promo codes are typically one-time use only and may not always apply seamlessly. If you encounter this issue, try refreshing the page, re-entering the code, or revisiting the cart page.

Features:
  • Money Clip Design - Measuring 4" x 3.5", this slim men's wallet boasts a money clip structure that occupies less space than traditional bill compartments, effectively minimizing bulk. It includes 11 card slots: a quick-access slot on the front, 10 regular slots on the inner card sleeves, and an integrated dedicated AirTag pocket. (AirTag not included)
  • Designed for AirTag - The AirTag Wallet Men features a built-in secure pocket holder that keeps your AirTag in place. Its easy-to-use design also provides excellent signal strength, ensuring you never lose your leather wallet again
  • RFID blocking shield technology

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff

Original Post

Written by iconian | Staff
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
chuang xiang via Amazon has Zitahli Men's RFID Wallet w/ AirTag Pocket (Crazy Horse Black, Small) on sale for $9.99 - $5 off when you apply promo code AU35W4IU at checkout = $4.99. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+.

Thanks to Deal Hunter iconian for sharing this deal.

Note: Promo codes are typically one-time use only and may not always apply seamlessly. If you encounter this issue, try refreshing the page, re-entering the code, or revisiting the cart page.

Features:
  • Money Clip Design - Measuring 4" x 3.5", this slim men's wallet boasts a money clip structure that occupies less space than traditional bill compartments, effectively minimizing bulk. It includes 11 card slots: a quick-access slot on the front, 10 regular slots on the inner card sleeves, and an integrated dedicated AirTag pocket. (AirTag not included)
  • Designed for AirTag - The AirTag Wallet Men features a built-in secure pocket holder that keeps your AirTag in place. Its easy-to-use design also provides excellent signal strength, ensuring you never lose your leather wallet again
  • RFID blocking shield technology

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff

Original Post

Written by iconian | Staff

Community Voting

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Top Comments

ski522
395 Posts
99 Reputation
I work in cybersecurity. Unlike inventory RFID's, modern EMV credit card chips (post 2015) use dynamic one time codes, so skimmed data is usually useless for fraud, and long range 'electronic pickpocketing' remains rare and overhyped. Recent security reports describe the risk as uncommon and overblown compared to bigger threats like physical skimmers on ATMs and payment terminals. RFID blocking sleeves are cheap peace of mind if you are paranoid in crowds, but most experts call them unnecessary these days.
boybrady
396 Posts
469 Reputation
I think there are a couple things going on. The RFID blocking probably moderately interferes with the airtag functionality if it is fully encased.

And I don't think the primary goal of most people is getting back a stolen wallet with the airtag, but rather find a lost or misplaced one.

Which is what I assume is going on with this style of wallet.
BuddyLove99
5191 Posts
370 Reputation
As a weekly wallet loser, I'm in. At this point I've taken pictures of my ID and a few credit cards.

27 Comments

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Feb 18, 2026 05:16 PM
1,052 Posts
Joined Oct 2004
GenerationSlickFeb 18, 2026 05:16 PM
1,052 Posts
I order this and I'm returning it. Cheap. May last a few months at best and it's bulky once you add stuff in it. I do not recommend.
2
Feb 18, 2026 05:23 PM
220 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
solardrgnFeb 18, 2026 05:23 PM
220 Posts
bad design
Feb 18, 2026 08:17 PM
511 Posts
Joined Aug 2019
MrShrugglesFeb 18, 2026 08:17 PM
511 Posts
The pockets for this things are hilarious.
I bought it to use a backup for extra cards. Its gonna be fun trying to remember what cards are in what slots.
5 Bucks probably not worth the return headache.
Pro
Feb 18, 2026 10:04 PM
1,124 Posts
Joined Jun 2013
abstractedpudding
Pro
Feb 18, 2026 10:04 PM
1,124 Posts
Quote from JenT4685 :
I've always found it weird how so many AirTag wallets and phone cases show the AirTag in plain view like this. Wouldn't you want it hidden, so if someone dishonest finds the tagged item, or someone steals it, they won't just immediately discard the tag?That's why I have my wallet AirTag inside of a little slit inside of a pad, in the pads wrapping, in a zipped compartment of another zipped compartment of the wallet. A thief could probably still find it if Apple alerts them that they're being tracked, but I'm assuming that takes a while, so least it'd give me a better chance of recovering my property instead of a bare AirTag in the middle of the road.
Yet another person who mistakes a "find my wallet between the seat cushions" device with a "thwart pickpocket" device.
Feb 18, 2026 10:26 PM
142 Posts
Joined Feb 2014
localpikakeFeb 18, 2026 10:26 PM
142 Posts
Quote from GenerationSlick :
I order this and I'm returning it. Cheap. May last a few months at best and it's bulky once you add stuff in it. I do not recommend.
Thank you, that's useful --- trying to minimize to wallet and phone only as a woman is hard.
Feb 19, 2026 01:10 AM
584 Posts
Joined Oct 2010
ChityWokFeb 19, 2026 01:10 AM
584 Posts
Quote from JenT4685 :
I've always found it weird how so many AirTag wallets and phone cases show the AirTag in plain view like this. Wouldn't you want it hidden, so if someone dishonest finds the tagged item, or someone steals it, they won't just immediately discard the tag?That's why I have my wallet AirTag inside of a little slit inside of a pad, in the pads wrapping, in a zipped compartment of another zipped compartment of the wallet. A thief could probably still find it if Apple alerts them that they're being tracked, but I'm assuming that takes a while, so least it'd give me a better chance of recovering my property instead of a bare AirTag in the middle of the road.
men's wallet. we don't do the zipper thing. good point tho. I rather just not be stupid to lose my wallet or let it get picked
Feb 19, 2026 01:11 AM
584 Posts
Joined Oct 2010
ChityWokFeb 19, 2026 01:11 AM
584 Posts
75 off for a reason, and they're still making money
1

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Feb 19, 2026 12:52 PM
1,001 Posts
Joined Mar 2005
dataplussystemsFeb 19, 2026 12:52 PM
1,001 Posts
Quote from OPTICSOURCE :
RFIDs have not been readable since 2015
Can you provide a reference ? I would be interested in what was done.
Feb 19, 2026 03:22 PM
205 Posts
Joined Dec 2022
ElatedMarmot4098Feb 19, 2026 03:22 PM
205 Posts
almost free
Pro
Feb 19, 2026 06:31 PM
1,124 Posts
Joined Jun 2013
abstractedpudding
Pro
Feb 19, 2026 06:31 PM
1,124 Posts
Quote from dataplussystems :
Can you provide a reference ? I would be interested in what was done.
Basically, pre-2015 before the credit card companies in the US shifted to EMV cards (chip cards), early RFID implementations had static information just like printed on the card and embedded in the magnetic strip. The idea was that somebody could use an RFID reader and get that information to reuse other transactions.

With EMV technology, the information is generated on a current transaction basis and is encrypted and there are some other technical safeguards that result in a single use code being transmitted that is only valid for that transaction with that merchant. It's the same technology, whether you insert the card or tap to pay.

If you want more details, just search for info on EMV enabled cards.

(EMV isn't a cool acronym like "electronically managed validation" or anything like that. It's just an acronym for a Europay, Mastercard and Visa, the companies who developed this technology to reduce fraud.)
Last edited by abstractedpudding February 19, 2026 at 02:38 PM.
Pro
Feb 20, 2026 02:54 AM
1,124 Posts
Joined Jun 2013
abstractedpudding
Pro
Feb 20, 2026 02:54 AM
1,124 Posts
Quote from Lilrickfan :
It's well known major retailers use RFID to track inventory. If they can track that RFID they can track the ones in your ID or credit card too. As someone concerned with privacy and not just giving away any data I dont have to, I will deal with the inconveniences of RFID blocking wallets, to receive the benefits from it.
This conflates multiple tangentially related technologies in a way that leads to incorrect conclusions.

The statement "If they can track that RFID they can track the ones in your ID or credit card too" is akin to saying, "If you car has an FM radio, it can listen to your Bluetooth calls over too".

Yes, major retailers use RFID to track inventory. However, inventory systems that use Electronic Product Code (EPC) and similar schemes are operating in the UHF frequency spectrum (860–960 MHz). The effective range is measured in meters. Credit cards use HF frequencies (13.56 MHz) and the range is just a few centimeters.

Frequency incompatibilities are only the tip of the iceberg. The protocol differences between EPC tags and EMV cards are massive. The inventory tags basically just respond to a request with some static information and it's done. EMV chips requires a negotiation and interrogation with multiple steps. These readers talk to one card at a time and if they detect multiple cards, they have to choose one.
Beyond that, the design of the transmission requires the terminal to send information required for a transaction. The card isn't going to provide meaningful responses without the proper transaction context. Attempting to interrogate it outside a legitimate transaction would be fraudulent and violate merchant agreements, as well as likely running afoul of state and federal laws. Even if it was successful, the token sent is randomized and provides little information back to the retailer that would be useful to make a tracking profile. EMV cards and issuing banks share a unique secret key. Only the bank can interpret the cryptograms the card generates, so even if a retailer captured them, they would be meaningless.

So no retailers are building the necessary infrastructure to capture the data that not only would violate their merchant agreements, but also provide little value.

That doesn't mean they aren't tracking you. They are 100% tracking you at every opportunity. Obviously apps and loyalty programs provide massive amounts of data. They are also tracking your phone's wifi pings, bluetooth beacons (even more so if you have their app installed), they are using computer vision with cameras, etc. (And increasingly, license plate readers in some areas to combat organized retail crime.)

So while the RFID blocking wallet causes no harm, it doesn't actually protect you from any of the real tracking that is going on.
Feb 20, 2026 06:26 PM
14 Posts
Joined Jan 2023
Daddyof7Feb 20, 2026 06:26 PM
14 Posts
Says code not valid

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