Lenovo has put a fairly specific problem in a very tidy box: the new 150W multi-port USB-C GaN charger gives you three USB-C ports, enough output for a laptop and two other devices, and a bundled 7A 240W cable, all for 339 yuan on JD.com. For anyone looking for a Lenovo 150W GaN charger that can travel lighter without living on a diet of dead batteries, that is a better pitch than yet another oversized brick.

The charger, model MCFX150A3, is aimed squarely at people carrying power-hungry hardware such as Legion and ThinkPad laptops, plus phones, tablets, and whatever else is clinging to a low battery warning. Lenovo is leaning on GaN, which is now the standard trick for making high-wattage chargers smaller and cooler than older silicon designs. The result is a compact unit rather than a desk ornament.

Lenovo 150W GaN charger with three USB-C ports

The headline numbers are straightforward. Lenovo says the charger can deliver up to 140W on C1 and C2, and 65W on C3. It also supports combinations such as 100W plus 45W over two ports, or 65W plus 65W plus 20W across all three, for a total of 150W. In other words, it is not pretending to be a one-device charger with a bonus port tacked on.

  • Ports: 3 x USB-C
  • Max output: 150W total
  • Single-port output: up to 140W on C1 and C2, 65W on C3
  • Included cable: 7A 240W PD 3.2

Compact size, broad charging support

Despite the power rating, Lenovo says the charger measures about 84 × 32.5 × 65 mm and weighs around 324g, with the full package near 500g. That is still a chunk of metal and plastic, but it is a lot easier to live with than carrying separate bricks for a laptop, phone, and tablet. It also supports PD 3.2, PPS, QC 3.0, and Lenovo/Moto charging protocols, which broadens compatibility beyond Lenovo’s own ecosystem.

The unit uses a matte black and gray finish, a three-prong plug, and supports 100-240V input, so it should work for international travel. Lenovo also says it meets GB 4943.1-2022 safety standards and carries CCC certification. That combination matters because high-wattage chargers have become a small but crowded category, and buyers are getting pickier about whether the extra power actually comes with real-world safety and portability.

Available on JD.com in China

For now, the charger is available on major Chinese retail platforms, including JD.com. The bigger question is whether Lenovo treats this as a one-off accessory or the start of a broader push into premium desktop and travel charging gear, where brands like Anker and Ugreen have already made the territory feel crowded. If Lenovo keeps the pricing sharp and the power sharing smart, this one has a decent shot at becoming the charger people stop complaining about.

Source: Ixbt

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