MOFT Trackable MagSafe Wallet: Which Model Should You Buy?
MOFT's Find My-enabled MagSafe wallets are now shipping after more than a year of delays since their CES 2025 debut. Two models have been independently reviewed: the Snap-on Phone Stand & Wallet at $49.99 and the Tripod Wallet, which Tom's Guide lists at $59.99 on Amazon. MOFT's January 2026 CES preview listed all three models at $49.99, so the Tripod's current $59.99 price reflects a post-launch adjustment. A third option, the Field Wallet, was described by MOFT at CES 2026 as a "minimalist bifold with expanded capacity," but no independent reviewer has tested it or confirmed its card count, so it stays off the buy list for now.
These are tracker-equipped phone accessories with a card pocket. Whether one fits your life comes down to how many cards you carry and which secondary function, kickstand or tripod, you'll actually use.
What Find My integration actually adds to the MOFT trackable MagSafe wallet
Native Find My support means these wallets appear in Apple's Find My app the same way an iPhone or AirTag does, no third-party app required. The Snap-on completed Apple's formal Find My certification before launch, per MOFT's CES 2026 post, which also indicated the same certification applies across all three models in the lineup. That certification matters: accessories that skip the formal process can behave inconsistently on the network.
The built-in speaker, triggered remotely through the Find My app, reaches 70 decibels, according to 9to5Mac. That's roughly the volume of a face-to-face conversation, loud enough to locate a wallet stuffed into a coat pocket or wedged under a car seat. A Tom's Guide reviewer who already knew MOFT's lineup well called Find My "the one feature that prevented me from using it before," a clean summary of what the previous product was missing.
The charging setup separates these wallets from most of the competition. There's no port, no proprietary cable. They recharge on any MagSafe charger, which 9to5Mac specifically flagged as a practical edge over other Find My wallets on the market. MOFT rates battery life at six months per charge, a figure both Tom's Guide and 9to5Mac reported without pushback. The Tom's Guide reviewer called out the battery point in direct comparison to AirTags, noting that skipping battery swaps altogether was a meaningful draw.
That combination, Find My network access, an audible alert speaker, and wireless charging, covers the three things that make a standalone tracker annoying to live with. AirTags need an annual battery swap and a separate mount; some competing Find My wallets require proprietary cables. MOFT's approach removes both friction points.
MOFT Trackable Tripod Wallet vs. Snap-on: which model fits which buyer
The Snap-on Phone Stand & Wallet ($49.99) is the thinner, simpler choice. It holds up to two cards and folds into a kickstand for hands-free viewing, per Tom's Guide. It's available on Amazon with Prime delivery and directly from MOFT in four colors: Jet Black, Misty Cove, Blackberry, and Terracotta, according to 9to5Mac. MOFT's CES 2026 announcement said the Snap-on would also reach Apple retail in Misty Cove and Jet Black, though post-launch coverage has focused on MOFT direct and Amazon.
For someone who already pays with Apple Pay most of the time and carries only a driver's license and one card, the Snap-on slot structure is a reasonable fit. The kickstand is the secondary function here, useful for watching video at a desk or propping the phone during a video call without needing a separate stand. One accessory replaces a card sleeve, a tracker, and a phone stand.
The Tripod Wallet ($59.99 at Amazon, per Tom's Guide) adds a fold-out mechanism that angles the iPhone for photos and video calls. Tom's Guide described it as an "ingenious tripod function" and MOFT positioned it for "hands-free use and content creation". Card capacity for the Tripod hasn't been independently confirmed beyond MOFT's own materials, so the Snap-on's two-card count is what the reporting actually establishes.
The $10 premium over the Snap-on buys the tripod mechanism, not more storage. For someone who regularly shoots handheld video, uses their phone as a webcam, or takes a lot of FaceTime calls without a stand nearby, the Tripod Wallet earns its higher price. For everyone else, the Snap-on covers the same tracking and carry function for less.
Design factors into the case for both models. The Tom's Guide reviewer noted MOFT's wallet has a "more sophisticated look" than competing MagSafe wallets, specifically calling out a "contemporary aesthetic" compared to Supcase's offering. For an accessory that lives on the back of a phone all day, that's a reasonable consideration.
MOFT also has some history worth noting here. The company introduced the original Snap-on MagSafe design in 2020, making the hybrid wallet-and-stand category its signature product category. These trackable models are updates to an established lineup, not a first attempt. That context makes the design refinement more credible than it would be from a newer entrant.
The two-card ceiling
Two cards is the confirmed ceiling on the Snap-on, and it's the constraint that will determine whether either model works for a given buyer. Tom's Guide was direct about it: two slots means choosing between a driver's license and one credit card in daily use. The same reviewer said the wallet would be substantially more useful if it held "at least five cards." Slim profile and card capacity are in direct tension; MOFT has come down firmly on the slim side.
For anyone who already relies on Apple Pay for most purchases and carries minimal physical cards, that trade-off is workable. For anyone who routinely needs an ID, a transit card, a work badge, and a backup card, neither reviewed model solves the problem. They're not trying to.
The Field Wallet is the one that might. MOFT describes it as a "minimalist bifold with expanded capacity for everyday carry", which suggests a higher card count without specifying one. No independent reviewer has confirmed that figure or tested how the Find My integration performs in the bifold format. Until that coverage exists, the Field Wallet is an announced product, not a reviewed one.
For a two-card carrier, the Snap-on consolidates tracking, card carry, and a phone stand into one accessory that charges on hardware most iPhone users already own. A basic MagSafe card sleeve runs in the range of $30-$40 without any tracking built in, and the Snap-on's $49.99 price adds Find My certification, a speaker, and the kickstand function on top of that. The math holds if two-card carry is already your habit. It doesn't if you're trying to downsize from a traditional wallet.
On the Field Wallet: wait for independent review
MOFT first previewed this lineup at CES 2025, spent the following year completing Apple's certification process and finalizing production, then launched the Snap-on in early 2026, per MOFT's own documentation. The Tripod Wallet and Field Wallet were previewed alongside it at CES 2026. As of now, the Tripod has post-launch review coverage from Tom's Guide; the Field Wallet has none.
The Field Wallet is the right product to track if expanded card capacity is the deciding factor. But the case for it rests entirely on MOFT's own description. Its actual card count, dimensions, and how the Find My integration handles a bifold form factor remain unconfirmed by any independent source. For buyers who need more than two cards, the current answer is that no reviewed MOFT product addresses that need yet. The Snap-on and Tripod Wallet are the options that exist in practice, and for those models, the specs and pricing are now settled.
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