How to Choose a Power Bank for Travel
You know that moment at the airport gate when your phone hits 5% and your boarding pass is digital? A few years back, I scrambled through security with a $10 power bank that barely charged half my phone. The next trip, I brought a monster 30,000mAh brick that weighed more than my camera. There is a sweet spot between "useless" and "luggage anchor," and it depends on three things you actually need to think about before you buy.
Capacity isn’t king — real world use is
Most power banks advertise a number like 20,000mAh. That’s the raw battery inside, not what your phone will actually get. The conversion rate (how much juice survives voltage regulation, heat, and cable losses) is often between 60% and 75% for cheap ones. A good travel power bank should deliver at least 70% of its rated capacity. That means a 20,000mAh unit gives you around 14,000mAh usable — enough to top up an iPhone 15 Pro about four times. Don’t just look at the label; check reviews or specs that mention "conversion rate" or "actual output." If it doesn’t say, assume the worst.
Weight and size: the hidden travel killer
You’ll carry this thing everywhere — in your backpack, jacket pocket, or daypack. A 10,000mAh power bank with a Li-Polymer cell can be as thin as a passport case, while older 18650-cell packs feel like a heavy brick. For short city trips, 10,000mAh is the sweet spot: light enough to pocket, enough for a full day of phone + earbuds. For a week-long hiking trip, 20,000mAh is worth the extra ounces, but only if the battery technology is high-density. Check the weight in grams before you click “buy” — anything over 350g for 20,000mAh is getting into laptop territory.
Fast charging protocols: who speaks your language?
USB-C is universal, but not all USB-C ports are equal. If you rock an iPhone, look for Power Delivery (PD) at 20W or higher — that’s the fastest way to refill a modern iPhone. Android users should check for Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0/4+ or PD. Many power banks also support both, but the real test is simultaneous charging. Some cheap ones drop speed dramatically when two devices plug in. I’ve tested a model that slowed both ports to 5W when used together — basically a trickle. A good travel unit will maintain at least 15W+ on each port while both are active.
Airline rules and TSA reality
Here’s the part nobody thinks about until the security line. The FAA (and most international regulators) allows power banks up to 100Wh (roughly 27,000mAh) in carry-on luggage only. Anything above that needs airline approval, and checked bags are a hard no — lithium batteries in cargo hold are a fire risk. So if you see a 40,000mAh “beast” online, it’s not TSA-friendly for most flights. Stick to 20,000–26,800mAh for worry-free travel. Also, make sure it’s clearly labeled — security might ask to see the capacity marked on the device.
Pass-through charging: the underrated feature
Ever been stuck with an empty power bank and a dying phone at the gate? Passthrough charging lets the power bank charge itself from a wall outlet while simultaneously charging your phone. Not all units support this — it generates heat. But a good travel bank will handle it safely. Check the manual or reviews for "pass-through" mention. If you’re the kind of traveler who plugs everything in overnight at the hostel, this feature saves you from carrying two bricks.
Build quality and ports
Look for a power bank with at least two outputs (USB-C + USB-A) and a micro-USB or USB-C input for recharging. The USB-C input is becoming the standard — you can use the same cable for your phone and the bank. Also, check for a built-in flashlight or LED indicator. That sounds trivial until you’re digging through your bag in a dark airport.
The final call
No single power bank is perfect for everyone. A minimal digital nomad might love the Anker 511 (10,000mAh, 20W PD), while an outdoor photographer might grab the Aukey 20000mAh with triple ports. But the best one for travel is the one you actually bring. So don’t chase the biggest number — chase the lightest weight that still keeps your devices alive from breakfast to bedtime.
Now over to you: have you ever been burned by a power bank that promised 20 hours but died after two? Or found a hidden gem that fits perfectly in your passport pocket?
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到底怎么判断转换率啊?商品详情页都不写这个
刚买了个20k的,结果实际只能充三次iPhone,有点失望 😅
试过带个30k的砖头出门,肩膀疼了一整天😂
那如果同时充手机和耳机,功率会掉很多吗?
我那个便宜的充电宝充手机巨慢,原来是被坑了