Spigen’s MagSafe kickstand wallet hits $33 on Amazon for iPhone 17 and Pixel 10 users

January 19, 2026
Spigen’s MagSafe kickstand wallet hits $33 on Amazon for iPhone 17 and Pixel 10 users

NEW YORK, Jan 19, 2026, 05:04 (EST)

Spigen’s Tough Armor Pro (MagFit) magnetic wallet that folds into a phone stand is selling for $33 on Amazon, down from as much as $40, deal site 9to5Toys reported on Jan. 18. The accessory is designed to snap onto the back of a compatible phone or case and carry cards at the same time. 1

The timing underscores how quickly the magnet-on-the-back ecosystem has turned into a crowded accessory lane, not just a charging trick. Apple says MagSafe chargers and battery packs “snap” to supported iPhones and that magnets help align devices for faster wireless charging. 2

That magnet-first approach is spreading beyond iPhones. Google’s Pixel 10 line introduced Pixelsnap, a Qi2.2-based magnetic accessory system that also works with many MagSafe add-ons, TechRadar reported last year. 3

On Spigen’s own site, the Tough Armor Pro (MagFit) card holder is priced at $49.99 and pitched as a rugged wallet with an adjustable kickstand, a one-hand slide mechanism, and storage for up to five cards. Spigen also says it ships with an RFID-blocking card — RFID is the short-range radio tech used in contactless “tap-to-pay” cards. 4

Apple sells its iPhone FineWoven Wallet with MagSafe for $59 and says it supports up to three cards and can work with Find My, Apple’s tracking feature, if it gets separated from a phone. 5

Anker, another big accessory maker in the space, frames MagSafe gear broadly as magnetic add-ons that snap onto compatible iPhones, including wallets, stands and grips. 6

The Amazon listing for Spigen’s wallet says it is compatible with iPhone 12 through iPhone 17 models, an iPhone Air model, and Pixel 9 and Pixel 10 devices when used with a magnetic-compatible case. The listing also warns the magnet “will not hold” with other models or non‑MagSafe and non‑Pixelsnap cases, and shows the item sold by Spigen Inc. 7

But the RFID angle may matter less than marketing suggests. “It’s just very theoretical fraud,” Frank McKenna, chief strategist at fraud detection firm Point Predictive, told AARP in a 2024 report on RFID-blocking wallets, which also cited Identity Theft Resource Center COO James E. Lee saying: “We do not believe this topic addresses a real risk.” 8

The more immediate uncertainty is simpler: whether the magnet holds with a buyer’s case, and how bulky five cards feels on the back of a phone.

The $33 price is just one datapoint, but it shows where the competition is heading — magnetic wallets are no longer niche add-ons for iPhones, and accessory makers are positioning for both Apple and Google’s next-cycle phones.

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