DJI has stepped outside drones and into the very crowded charger aisle with its first 140W GaN power brick, a compact three-port adapter that pairs two USB-C outputs with one USB-A and ships with a cable that can show live charging data. At 209 yuan, it is priced like a mainstream accessory, but the feature set is aimed squarely at people juggling laptops, phones, earbuds, and the usual tangle of modern gear.
DJI POWER 140W GaN Charger specifications
The charger’s headline trick is simple: both USB-C ports can deliver up to 140W, helped by PD 3.1 support, while the USB-A port tops out at 33W for smaller devices or older phones. When several devices are plugged in, DJI says dynamic power allocation keeps charging stable across all ports, so yanking one cable should not make the others restart. That is table stakes for a premium multi-port charger, but it is still nicer than the bargain-bin chaos many people have seen.
- 2 USB-C ports, up to 140W each
- 1 USB-A port, up to 33W
- PD 3.1 support
- Dimensions: 68.3 mm × 32.2 mm × 64 mm
- Weight: about 245 grams
Why DJI is entering the charger market
GaN is now the default upgrade path for charger makers because it allows high output in a smaller body, and DJI is leaning hard into that pitch with a foldable plug and over-temperature protection. The timing also makes sense: Apple, Anker, Baseus, Ugreen, and a long list of rivals have spent the past few years turning chargers into mini power hubs, so DJI is entering a category where specs matter and brand trust can still win a sale. The company’s own ecosystem gets priority charging too, which is exactly the sort of quiet preference tech brands love to bury in the fine print.
The bundled cable is more interesting than it sounds
DJI is also selling the charger with a 7A digital display data cable, and that is the part people will probably remember after the box goes in a drawer. Its built-in E-Marker smart chip shows real-time power, voltage, and current, supports up to 240W, and handles USB 2.0 data transfer in a braided design. In a market full of anonymous black cables, a live readout is a neat touch; in practical terms, it also tells you whether your device is actually pulling the power you paid for.
Price and the charger competition
At 209 yuan, DJI is not trying to undercut the field so much as prove it belongs in it. That price puts the POWER 140W GaN Charger in the same broad fight as other high-wattage travel chargers, where compact size, port mix, and honest power distribution are the difference between a useful desk companion and another forgotten cube in a drawer. The real test will be whether buyers who know DJI for cameras and flying machines trust it with their MacBooks and phones.
If DJI keeps pushing accessories beyond its core imaging gear, this charger looks like the kind of cautious first step that could actually stick. The next question is whether it follows with a broader charging lineup or leaves this as a one-off for the brand’s most gadget-hungry fans.

