Ugreen has followed up its slim 45W GaN charger with a bigger but still pocket-friendly model: the Nexode Air 65W. The Ugreen Nexode Air 65W adds two USB-C ports and a USB-A port, keeps the body at just 14.5 mm thick, and uses foldable prongs so it slips more easily into a pocket or sling bag than most multi-port chargers that try this hard to be compact.
The new model is a tidy example of the current charger race: more watts, more ports, same tiny footprint. That is exactly what competing brands have been chasing as phones, tablets, handheld consoles, and ultraportables all compete for the same wall socket.
Nexode Air 65W size and design
Ugreen says the charger measures 84.3mm x 53.3mm and weighs around 108 grams, which is slim enough for travel without feeling like a novelty accessory. The front keeps the same striped styling seen on the 45W version, with Ugreen and Nexode Air branding below it. In other words, this is more ”same family, bigger engine” than a full redesign.
Ugreen Nexode Air 65W port output
The headline numbers are straightforward. USB-C1 delivers up to 65W, USB-C2 up to 30W, and USB-A tops out at 22.5W. But the fine print matters, because that 65W figure only applies in solo use; once you plug in two or three devices, power is split across the ports.
- USB-C1: 65W solo, 45W when sharing power
- USB-C2: 30W solo, 20W with C1, 15W without it
- USB-A: 22.5W solo, 15W with C1, 15W without it
- Supported standards: USB Power Delivery (PD), PPS, Quick Charge (QC), FCP, and SCP
The charger also accepts 100V-240V input, so it can travel across regions as long as you bring the right plug adapter. That keeps it firmly in the modern travel-charger category, where universality matters almost as much as raw output.
Ugreen Nexode Air 65W price and availability in China
Ugreen has priced the Nexode Air 65W at 129 yuan, or about $20 in conversion, and it comes with an 18-month warranty. It is being sold through JD.com. For comparison, the earlier 45W Nexode Air costs 109 yuan, or $16, so the extra port and extra headroom only add a modest premium.
The bigger question is how quickly this style of ultra-thin charger spreads beyond China. Ugreen clearly thinks there is room for a thinner, lighter 65W option that does not demand a bulky brick in return, and the market has rewarded that thinking before. If rivals answer with even slimmer multi-port chargers, the real winners will be anyone tired of carrying a wall wart the size of a small sandwich.

