Yanko Design

Bang & Olufsen Finally Made a Power Bank Worth Showing Off

Power banks are among the most purchased tech accessories around, yet they’re rarely something anyone is proud to pull out in public. Most are plastic rectangles with LED indicators and brand names that read like Wi-Fi passwords. Even among the better-designed ones, the focus has always been on capacity and wattage, leaving the physical object as an afterthought. The result is a category full of capable but thoroughly forgettable hardware.

That’s an unusual entry point for Bang & Olufsen. The Danish brand isn’t known for accessories you’d stash in a drawer; it’s known for objects you’d set on a shelf and admire. So when it announced its first power bank, questions about specs felt almost secondary. What mattered was whether B&O could apply the same design conviction to something this ordinary. Going by what’s been revealed, the answer is yes.

Designer: Bang & Olufsen

The B&O Powerbank combines a glass surface with an aluminum frame, finished with diamond-cut edges and pearl-blasted textures. It’s the kind of hardware that feels deliberate in the hand, each surface treated with the same attention typically reserved for consumer electronics that cost a great deal more. It comes in two colorways, Infinite Black and Hourglass Sand, both chosen to match the Beoplay H100 headphones.

That pairing with the H100 isn’t incidental. The Powerbank was designed as a companion to B&O’s flagship headphones, a way to keep them running through long travel days without having to negotiate with airport power sockets. The colorway matching is no accident; the two pieces are meant to feel like a coordinated set rather than a spare part someone remembered to design at the last minute.

On the technical side, the Powerbank holds 5,000 mAh and supports Qi2 magnetic wireless charging at up to 15W, alongside a 20W USB-C output for wired devices. It accepts up to 18W via USB-C to recharge itself. Those aren’t record-breaking figures for the category, but it works cleanly with most Qi2-compatible devices, including the iPhone 17 series and the Google Pixel 10.

The more revealing figure is what B&O highlights for H100 owners specifically: five minutes of charging delivers up to 3.5 hours of additional playback. For someone wearing those headphones through a long-haul flight or an extended studio session, that’s a meaningful top-up that doesn’t require a hunt for an outlet. Snap the Powerbank on, keep listening, and put it away when you’re done.

There is, however, the price. At €145 in Europe and £125 in the UK, the Powerbank sits well above most Qi2-certified alternatives in this capacity range. Comparable 5,000 mAh magnetic chargers from brands like Anker and Ugreen come in at around $50 to $60. B&O is clearly charging a premium tied to design and heritage rather than specs, and buyers who understand the brand won’t be surprised.

B&O has spent decades building a reputation around objects that earn their place in a room, not just on a spec sheet. The Powerbank extends that same sensibility to the pocket. Pull it out at an airport lounge, and it won’t look like something that came bundled in a blister pack, which, for a certain kind of buyer, is precisely the point.

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