Anker showed off a few powerful charging and computer accessories at IFA 2025 this year, and they put out just a wacky amount of power. That’s especially true of the Prime 300W Power Bank and the Prime Docking Station, which features what the company calls “the first triple display charging dock with stable 8K display output.”
The Prime 300W Power Bank has enough juice to charge two laptops and a phone at once using its two USB-C and single USB-A ports. Its screen—which was hard to see under the bright lights of the IFA hall I was in, but seemed bright enough indoors—tells you how much power is left, how many watts it’s outputting, and the charger’s current temperature.
You can cycle through those using a button on the side of the device. The Anker app lets you do things like prioritize which devices you’d rather send more power to (a single USB-C port can provide up to 140 watts). And you can recharge it up to 50% in just 15 minutes, as it can take up to 250 watts at once—though you’ll need to use two power adapters and both of its USB-C ports for that. (Handily, Anker sells a 160W Prime Charger that’ll get you there.)
Then there’s the Prime Docking Station, a 14-port dock with a screen, single SD and microSD card slots, and three USB-C ports on the front, each capable of up to 140W output, while the remaining ports are on the back. Those are a 140W USB-C port for powering your laptop, along with these ports: three USB-C, three USB-A, two HDMI, one DisplayPort, one ethernet, one audio jack, and two SD card slots. According to a member of Anker’s product team, the device uses HDMI 2.1 and DisplayPort 1.4, and it can only output to one 8K screen at a time and up to 4K on two others. You’ll want to use DisplayPort for 8K output at 60Hz, though—the HDMI ports only output 8K at 30Hz.
The display functions like any other Anker Prime device, giving you information like current USB-C output, status on your data transfers, its current display signal, and the dock’s temperature. A knob on the side lets you cycle through the options. One of those is the settings menu, where you can run through a few options like screen brightness, clock format, and even adjust which direction of knob turn does what. (I love tiny detailed settings like this.) I wanted to see some things, like the file transfer status, in action, but Anker wasn’t really equipped to show that off.
You can connect to the Prime Docking Station with an Anker PC app to monitor devices connected to it or adjust display settings. While a lot of powerful docks use passive cooling, Anker stuck a fan in the Prime Docking Station to keep the device from throttling under heavy load. Anker said in its press materials that the Docking Station will be $299.99 in the U.S., although it’s currently listed at $269.99.
Besides the Power Bank and Docking Station, the Prime series also includes that 160W charger I mentioned above. Even this has a display, where you’ll check how much power it’s supplying through each of its three USB-C ports, which are capable of outputting up to 140W each (not simultaneously, mind you). You can also cycle through three charging modes with a button on the front or connect to it with Bluetooth and use the Anker app for other modes and adjusting things like screen brightness or setting how long it takes before the screen turns off. That’ll be $149 when it comes out on Sept. 25.
Finally, Anker has a new three-in-one Prime Wireless Charging Station, a Qi2.2 wireless charging station with a wireless charging base for things like AirPods, along with two stalks: one for your Apple Watch and one with a 25W magnetic charger that has a built-in fan to keep your phone cool while it charges. Anker says this lets it get an iPhone 16 Pro Max up to 80% in 59 minutes—something you wouldn’t necessarily expect from a normal MagSafe charger, since excess heat can cause your phone to throttle charging speed.
The Prime Wireless Charging Station’s display is for checking real-time charging stats. A little spot at the bottom of the screen is a touchpad that you can slide your finger on to cycle through settings or double-tap to put it in sleep mode so the fan isn’t making too much noise. (I could feel it but not hear it at full blast, but to be fair, IFA is loud.) The app also lets you set that mode, as well as configure charging schedules. Anker doesn’t say in its press materials when this will be available, nor how much it will cost.