Ugreen’s New P6 Power Bank Packs a Screen and 45W

Ugreen has launched the P6 45W 10,000mAh power bank with a built-in TFT screen, integrated USB-C cable, fast charging, and detailed battery health monitoring for travel and daily use.

Chloe Nakamura Chloe Nakamura . 2 Comments
Ugreen’s New P6 Power Bank Packs a Screen and 45W

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Battery packs usually fade into the background. This one is trying very hard not to.

Ugreen has officially launched the P6 Series 45W, a new 10,000mAh power bank aimed at travelers and anyone tired of guessing how much charge is really left. The launch price in China is about €26, and now the company has filled in the details that were missing when the product first appeared.

The most eye-catching feature is not the battery size or even the fast charging. It is the tiny TFT display on the body. Instead of the usual row of vague LED dots, the P6 shows live data pulled from Ugreen’s battery management system, including voltage, temperature, battery health, and even charge cycle count. If something goes wrong, such as overheating or abnormal voltage, the warning appears directly on the screen. That gives the device a slightly more serious feel, almost like a pocket-sized power tool for your phone, tablet, or lightweight laptop.

Inside, Ugreen says it is using ATL battery cells, the same supplier known for working with Apple devices. On paper, that does not automatically make the P6 premium, but it does send a clear signal about reliability and component quality, two things buyers in this category tend to care about more than flashy branding.

More than a basic battery brick

Charging options are fairly generous for a compact model. The P6 comes with a built-in braided USB-C cable, which means one less accessory rattling around in a bag. There is also a second USB-C port, and both can deliver up to 45W output. That is enough for most smartphones, tablets, handheld gaming devices, and some smaller laptops. For older gear, Ugreen has added a USB-A port with up to 22.5W output.

Refilling the power bank is reasonably quick too. Both the integrated USB-C cable and the USB-C port support up to 36W input, so topping it up should take far less time than older low-wattage portable chargers.

Ugreen is also leaning hard into durability. The company says the cobalt lithium cells are rated for up to 800 charge cycles before major degradation becomes noticeable. That is a significant jump from the 300-cycle figure attached to some of its earlier models. Heat management is another selling point here. According to Ugreen, the internal monitoring system checks temperature as many as 14,400 times per minute while the device is in use.

Then there is the safety pitch, and Ugreen is not being subtle about it. The company claims the P6 already complies with China’s upcoming 2026 national safety requirements. It also says the battery survived a series of severe lab tests, including steel needle puncture, pressure up to 2.5 tons, and exposure to temperatures as high as 140 degrees Celsius without fire, explosion, or leakage. Ugreen adds that the product goes through more than 150 test procedures before shipping.

For a device meant to travel, the physical footprint matters. The P6 weighs around 210 grams and measures 109 x 69 x 17.65mm, so it stays comfortably in the everyday portable category. The shell combines aluminum alloy, polycarbonate, and ABS plastic, finished with a textured wave pattern that gives it a slightly more distinctive look than the usual plain slab. Ugreen also says it is approved for flights and high-speed rail travel, which makes it an easy fit for commuters and frequent flyers.

The portable power market is crowded, and most new entries struggle to stand out. Ugreen’s angle here is simple but smart: give users more visibility, more charging flexibility, and more confidence about battery safety. That little display may end up being the feature people remember most.

In the broader accessories race, the timing is interesting. Anker has also introduced a new ultra-slim 10,000mAh magnetic power bank with 15W wireless charging, showing just how competitive this segment has become.

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Comments

Marius

800 cycles, 140C and steel needle tests? ok marketing flex, but where are third party reports. anyone seen an independent review yet?

atomwave

wow a power bank with a tiny screen? actually kinda cool. live battery stats sound very useful for travel, but hope it doesnt die fast lol