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Beats launches heavy-duty ‘Power Pink’ cords starting at $19

The new Beats Power Pink braided cables offer a sleek, colorful alternative to generic white charging bricks while providing up to 60W or 240W of power.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jul 7, 2026, 2:21 PM EDT
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Close-up of a Beats Power Pink braided USB-C charging cable connected to a laptop's USB-C port. The laptop rests on a hardcover book atop a wooden desk, with the coiled cable extending into the foreground, highlighting its durable woven design and vibrant pink finish.
Image: Beats / Apple
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Most of us don’t think twice about our charging cables until they stop working. They are the literal connective tissue of our modern digital lives, yet we treat them like an absolute afterthought—tucking them behind heavy nightstands, letting them gather dust under car seats, or aggressively pulling at them when our battery hits that stressful single-digit zone. For years, tech companies didn’t care much either. Your choices were usually a clinical, rubbery white cord that eventually turned a depressing shade of gray, or a generic black wire that came free in the box with an old router. But Apple’s Beats brand has been quietly fighting to change that, transforming the humble charger from a boring utility into a genuine fashion statement.

The latest step in that colorful crusade arrived today with the launch of an eye-catching new “Power Pink” colorway for Beats’ popular woven cable lineup. It is a bold, unapologetic shade of pink that feels less like a corporate afterthought and more like a deliberate accessory choice. If you have ever wanted your phone charger to look like it belongs in a curated desk setup rather than a tangled drawer of electronic shame, Beats is betting this is the cord for you. The vibrant new shade borrows a page out of the lifestyle brand playbook, designed to coordinate with existing pieces in the ecosystem like the Pink Beats Pill speaker and the pink Powerbeats Fit earbuds.

This isn’t Beats’ first foray into dressing up our tech peripherals. The audio brand first surprised everyone back in April 2025 when it dropped a premium collection of braided cords in a handful of distinct shades, like Bolt Black and Rapid Red. Earlier this year, they followed up by introducing a massive three-meter version for people who need to charge their devices from halfway across the room. By treating charging cables with the same design language usually reserved for premium headphones or sneakers, Beats has managed to turn a boring necessity into an extension of personal style.

The Power Pink drop spans three distinct configurations to suit different charging setups. First, there is a standard 1.5-meter USB-C to USB-C cable priced at $18.99, which handles power delivery up to 60W—plenty of juice for an iPhone, iPad, or a standard laptop. If you need serious reach and power, the heavy-duty three-meter USB-C to USB-C variant steps things up considerably. Priced at $29.99, this longer cord supports a massive 240W charging capacity, making it a rugged companion capable of juicing up even power-hungry MacBook Pro models without breaking a sweat. For those still rocking legacy bricks or older car ports, Beats also included a 1.5-meter USB-A to USB-C option for $18.99, though it tops out at a more modest 15W charging speed due to the limitations of the older USB-A standard.

Of course, because this is a tech product, there is a catch. If you were hoping to use these flashy pink cords to dump massive 4K video files from your pro camera onto a hard drive, you will want to look elsewhere. All three versions of the Power Pink cable are limited to USB 2.0 data transfer speeds. It is a classic accessory compromise: these are built primarily for power, not blistering data transmission. That said, they are far from useless for data; they handle basic syncing, wired CarPlay setups flawlessly, and work seamlessly across both Apple and Android devices.

Where they do shine beyond pure aesthetics is their clever integration with audio hardware. If you plug the USB-C variants into a compatible pair of Beats headphones or speakers, they unlock simultaneous charging and playback. Better yet, they support full lossless audio on compatible devices—a feature you rarely get with the cheap, generic unbranded cords you find at a gas station checkout counter. Beats claims these cables aren’t just pretty faces, either; they have undergone thousands of hours of rigorous durability testing, featuring a tightly woven, tangle-free exterior that is reinforced at the joints to prevent the dreaded fraying that kills most factory cables.

If you are ready to ditch the boring white cords and inject some personality into your tech bag, the Power Pink cables are available right now on Apple’s website. For those who prefer to check things out in person or toss them into a physical shopping cart, they will hit Target stores and target.com beginning July 12. They might just be charging cables at the end of the day, but in a sea of sterile gray and white tech gear, a little bit of color coordination goes a long way.


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