Orico’s desktop charging approach feels practical, not flashy
Orico has built a strong reputation in the AliExpress niche by focusing on tidy, functional accessories that solve cable clutter without overcomplicating the design. This charger station follows that pattern with a compact footprint, clear port layout, and a build that looks more like an office tool than a travel adapter.
The brand’s strength is consistency: users usually know what they are getting from Orico, and the hardware tends to prioritise stable everyday use over marketing-heavy extras. That matters here, because this station is aimed at households and desks that need order first, then charging convenience.
Five USB ports that turn one socket into a shared charging point
The main advantage is simple: one AC outlet becomes a central charging hub for phones, earbuds, power banks, and smaller USB accessories. With five USB outputs rated at 5V/2.4A each and a total output of 40W, it is built for overnight charging and desk-side top-ups rather than speed-chasing fast charge sessions.
That makes it a better fit for mixed-device households than a single-port wall charger, especially when several gadgets need power at the same time. Real user feedback reflects that use case clearly, with praise for tidy charging and comments that the speed is average rather than fast.
Built-in holders make the charging station more useful on a desk

The integrated holder design is what separates this unit from a plain multi-port charger. It gives each device a standing position, which helps keep screens visible, cables less tangled, and phones easier to grab when notifications arrive.
That said, the holder geometry is not ideal for every device shape, and some users noted that larger phones or tablets can feel less secure in the slots. If you use thick cases, a wider device body, or heavier tablets, the fit is worth checking before you rely on it as a daily dock.
Why the included cable set matters in real use
Orico includes a 25cm cable bundle with Type-C, Lightning, and Micro-USB leads, which reduces the need to source accessories separately. For a desktop station, that short cable length is a smart choice because it keeps the setup visually cleaner and avoids the spaghetti effect common with longer leads.
The separate 1.5m power cord also gives flexibility when the socket is not right beside the desk, while the 100-240V input makes it suitable for different mains environments. In practice, that means the station is easy to place on a bedside table, workbench, or shared charging shelf, so what does the safety side look like?
Fire-resistant housing and smart chip control add confidence

The PC+ABS fire-resistant shell and smart identification chip are the most reassuring technical details in the spec sheet. The chip helps distribute power intelligently across connected devices, while the certified build standards, including CE, FCC, and RoHS, suggest a more disciplined approach than no-name hubs.
It is still a standard-output USB charger, not a GaN fast charger, so expectations should stay realistic. If you want rapid top-ups for modern phones, this will not replace a high-wattage USB-C PD unit, but for stable multi-device charging it is well aligned with its role.
Who this charger station suits best
This is a good match for users who charge several devices in one place and care more about order than headline speed. It works especially well for bedside use, shared family desks, and office corners where phones need to stay upright and cables need to stay out of sight.
Customer feedback points to the same strengths and weaknesses: compact size, neat organisation, and acceptable everyday performance, with the main criticism being that it is not a fast charger. If that trade-off fits your setup, the station makes a lot of sense, and the details below show why it is easy to slot into a daily routine.

















