Let’s be honest: losing your wallet is a unique, stomach-dropping flavor of panic. In the age of Apple’s AirTag, we’ve been given a digital safety net, but that little white puck was never a graceful solution. Stuffing an AirTag into a wallet creates an awkward, coin-shaped bulge that feels less like high-tech security and more like you’ve been hoarding quarters.
This awkwardness created a new market: the credit card-shaped tracker. Thin, discreet, and designed to slide into a card slot. But this category has always been plagued by two major compromises: disposable batteries or frustratingly short rechargeable ones.
Today, the premium accessory maker Nomad announced its solution to this: the Tracking Card Pro. It’s a $39 device that leans into its purpose with a clever disguise and a battery that finally lets you set it and, for the most part, forget it.
The first thing you’ll notice about the Tracking Card Pro is that it doesn’t look like a gadget. Available in black or white, it’s designed to look like a high-end credit card, complete with a printed, metallic-looking (but fake) chip. The white version, in particular, looks like a cousin to the Apple Card.
This isn’t just for aesthetics. As the company notes, if your wallet is stolen, a “savvy thief” doing a quick sweep for trackers might spot and toss a competitor’s card. The Tracking Card Pro is designed to blend in, hopefully surviving that initial cursory check and giving you a fighting chance to locate your wallet.
It’s a smart piece of social engineering, wrapped in a premium package of an exposed aluminum frame and a polycarbonate body. It also carries an IPX7 water and dust resistance rating, so it can easily survive an accidental drop in water or the general abuse of living in a back pocket.
Here’s the part that will make or break this for you: the thickness.
A standard credit card is about 0.76mm thick. Nomad’s original Tracking Card was already chunky at 1.7mm (roughly two cards). This new Tracking Card Pro is 2.5mm thick, or the equivalent of about three to four standard credit cards.

If you’re a minimalist who carries a whisper-thin ridge wallet with three cards and a bill, this is not for you. It’s a non-starter.
But Nomad made this card thicker for one very good reason: battery life.
The old $29 card had a 5-month rechargeable battery. That’s not bad, but it’s still an annoying piece of “tech hygiene” to remember two or three times a year. The new $39 Tracking Card Pro has a 16-month rechargeable battery.
That is a massive, game-changing leap. You go from recharging your wallet with the seasons to recharging it maybe once a year and a half.
This solves one of the biggest problems in the entire tracker market. Competitors like the Chipolo CARD Spot or the Eufy SmartTrack Card are also thin, but they are entirely disposable. Once their two- or three-year battery dies, the entire device becomes e-waste, and you have to buy a new one.
Nomad’s “Pro” card is the sustainable, “buy it for life” (or at least, for many years) alternative. When it finally needs juice, it’s incredibly convenient. It charges with any Qi, Qi2, or MagSafe charger. It’s even magnetic, so it will snap onto an upright MagSafe stand and an LED will light up to let you know it’s charging.

On the software side, the Tracking Card Pro works exactly like an Apple AirTag. You pair it once in the “Items” tab of the Find My app, and it lives there alongside your keys, backpack, or any other Apple devices.

This means it leverages the entire, massive, crowd-sourced Find My network. If you leave your wallet in a coffee shop, it will anonymously and securely ping its location off a nearby stranger’s iPhone, giving you its last-known location on a map. You get all the features you’d expect:
- Left-behind notifications: Your iPhone will alert you if you walk too far away from your wallet.
- Play a sound: If you’ve misplaced it nearby, you can make the card play a tune.
- Lost mode: You can mark the item as lost and add your contact info, so if an honest person finds it, they can see a message on their phone telling them how to reach you.
There is, however, one key feature missing: Precision Finding.
The Tracking Card Pro does not have an Ultra Wideband (UWB) chip. This means you can’t use your iPhone 15 to get an on-screen arrow guiding you “6 feet to your left, under the couch cushion.” You have to rely solely on the “play a sound” feature to track it down when you’re in the same room.
This remains the AirTag’s single biggest advantage, but it’s a trade-off you must accept to get the credit card form factor.
The Tracking Card Pro isn’t for everyone. The $39 price tag puts it $10 above its predecessor and its disposable competitors. And its 2.5mm thickness is a real consideration for wallet minimalists.
But this product isn’t for them. This is for the person who has been frustrated by the tracker market’s compromises. It’s for the person who hates disposable tech and found the old 5-month battery just a little too needy.
Nomad has built a “pro” device in the truest sense: it solves the biggest user complaints (battery life and discoverability by thieves) by making a confident trade-off in size.
The Nomad Tracking Card Pro is available for purchase from Nomad’s website for $39, with a 10 percent discount if you buy two. It is expected to ship by December 19th.
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