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Wireless charging wastes way more electricity than wired, here's why

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Why This Matters

While wireless charging offers unmatched convenience, it significantly consumes more electricity than wired charging, leading to higher energy waste and increased heat generation. This inefficiency can contribute to higher energy costs and environmental impact over time, making it a critical consideration for both consumers and the industry. As wireless tech becomes more prevalent, understanding its drawbacks is essential for making sustainable choices and improving future designs.

Key Takeaways

Wireless charging has become ubiquitous in recent years, with companies like Apple, Samsung and Google all embracing the technology. The benefit is obvious. It's easier to plop a device on a charging pad than it is to wiggle in a USB-C cable.

Despite the convenience, there are some downsides with wireless charging tech. Generally speaking, wireless charging is inefficient, wasting more energy than wired charging. Let's get into the why of it all and detail other risks associated with wireless charging.

How is wireless charging less efficient?

Wireless chargers use more power to completely charge a device, when compared to a cable. A modern smartphone is a great example of this. Charging a smartphone with a wire from zero to 100 percent takes around 15Wh (watt-hours measure the amount of energy needed for a device to run for an hour). The same phone will require around 21Wh (40 percent more) to juice up via a wireless charger, according to a 2020 study by the enterprise platform OneZero. That number could vary based on the charger and how you use it — a 2024 test by iFixit found the energy gap between Apple's MagSafe charger and wired charger to be slightly better at around 36 percent more power used, and also showed how misalignment on a charging pad could halve the efficiency of a wireless charger.

Wireless chargers also generate and waste more heat than wired chargers. Charging pads get pretty hot during use, which is a sure sign of wasted energy.

Is this discrepancy a big deal?

Yes and no. A daily difference of around 6Wh isn't that big of a deal when considering a single wired charger versus a single wireless charger. However, it adds up when considering every wired charger versus every wireless charger. A year of charging up a smartphone with a cable takes around 5.5 kilowatt-hours (kWh) and that shoots up to 7.6kWh with a wireless charger.

Studies have indicated that 30 to 66 percent of smartphone owners use wireless charging pads and related accessories at home, according to the Wireless Power Consortium and the Deloitte Mobile Consumer Survey UK. There are around 7.6 billion smartphones in the world. If 30 percent of those smartphones are being charged wirelessly that would indicate an annual global power waste of 4,830GWh. This amount of energy could power hundreds of thousands of homes for a year. Wireless charging products are becoming more popular every year, so this metric will only go up.

Why is wireless charging less efficient than wired charging?

Wireless chargers transfer power through electromagnetic induction. This is simply not as efficient as a direct charge, as the energy has to go through more steps to be usable. There's also an air gap between the phone and the charger, which lets heat escape.

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