Best Docks for Gaming Handhelds (2026): 5 Picks by Device

Best Docks for Gaming Handhelds (2026): 5 Picks by Device

By · FounderPublished Jul 7, 2026

A dock turns a handheld into a desktop, but the wrong one turns it into a slideshow or a slowly draining battery. The two things that decide whether a dock works for you are display-out (what resolution and refresh it passes over HDMI, and whether it supports your exact handheld) and charging passthrough. Port count comes a distant third.

Below are five picks sorted by the handheld you own and how you use it docked, from a do-everything overall pick to a cooling dock for long sessions. If you are still choosing the handheld itself, our peripherals buying framework covers the wider decision.

Our top pick: JSAUX 6-in-1 Dock (HB0603)

The JSAUX 6-in-1 (HB0603) clears both hard gates, true 4K at 120Hz over HDMI 2.1 and full 100W charging, while supporting the widest handheld list including the ROG Ally X.

JSAUX Upgraded Docking Station 4K@120Hz for Steam Deck OLED/ROG Ally X/Legion Go (S)/MSi Claw, 6-in-1 Steam Deck Dock with HDMI 2.1, Gigabit Ethernet, 3 USB 3.0, 100W Charge for Steam Deck LCD-HB0603
JSAUX Upgraded Docking Station 4K@120Hz for Steam Deck OLED/ROG Ally X/Legion Go (S)/MSi Claw, 6-in-1 Steam Deck Dock with HDMI 2.1, Gigabit Ethernet, 3 USB 3.0, 100W Charge for Steam Deck LCD-HB0603
$34.99$39.99

Quick picks

Quick picks: handheld docks by use case

Specs at a glance

Specs at a glance: handheld docks

What to check before buying a dock

Four checks, in order. Get these right and the rest is preference.

First, does it list your exact handheld, including the ROG Ally X? The Ally X is the most common compatibility miss in this category. If your model is not named on the listing, assume it is not supported rather than hoping it works.

Second, what does the HDMI output? HDMI 2.1 passes 4K at 120Hz. HDMI 2.0 caps at 4K at 60Hz. Match this to what your TV or monitor can take, not to the biggest number on the box. A 4K@120Hz dock does nothing extra on a 60Hz panel, and a 60Hz dock throttles a 120Hz TV.

Third, how much charging passthrough? A 100W port keeps any current handheld charging while it runs a demanding game docked. A dock that caps at 60W can slowly lose ground on the battery under load, which is how people end up with a dead handheld after an evening of docked play.

Fourth, do you need Gigabit Ethernet and fast USB, or just HDMI and power? Fast Ethernet at 100 Mbps and USB 2.0 are fine for TV-plus-controller use, and they are exactly where budget docks cut cost. Step up only if you run wired downloads or external storage through the dock.

Best Overall: JSAUX 6-in-1 Dock (HB0603)

JSAUX Upgraded Docking Station 4K@120Hz for Steam Deck OLED/ROG Ally X/Legion Go (S)/MSi Claw, 6-in-1 Steam Deck Dock with HDMI 2.1, Gigabit Ethernet, 3 USB 3.0, 100W Charge for Steam Deck LCD-HB0603
JSAUX Upgraded Docking Station 4K@120Hz for Steam Deck OLED/ROG Ally X/Legion Go (S)/MSi Claw, 6-in-1 Steam Deck Dock with HDMI 2.1, Gigabit Ethernet, 3 USB 3.0, 100W Charge for Steam Deck LCD-HB0603
$34.99$39.99

Specs

  • HDMI

    HDMI 2.1, 4K@120Hz

  • Ethernet

    Gigabit (1000 Mbps)

  • USB-A

    3x USB 3.0 (5 Gbps)

  • Charging

    100W USB-C PD passthrough

  • Compatibility

    Steam Deck LCD/OLED, ROG Ally / Ally X, Legion Go / Go S, MSI Claw

  • Form

    Stand dock, detachable base

What it does well

HDMI 2.1 is the reason this one leads. It passes 4K at 120Hz, or 1080p at 240Hz, to a display that can take it, so a high-refresh TV or monitor gets fed instead of being capped at 60Hz by the dock. That is the single spec that separates a dock you will still want in two years from one you will replace.

The Ethernet port is real Gigabit, not the 100 Mbps that some budget docks quietly ship under the same 'Ethernet' label. Three USB 3.0 ports run at 5 Gbps each, enough to hang an external SSD off one and a keyboard and mouse off the others without a separate hub. The 100W passthrough keeps a docked ROG Ally X or Steam Deck OLED charging even while it runs a demanding title.

Compatibility is the widest here. It names the ROG Ally X explicitly, which is the model cheaper docks tend to leave off, so you are not gambling on whether your handheld will hand off video cleanly.

What you give up

This is a stand-style dock, so it lives on a desk or under a TV. It is not a pocketable puck you throw in a bag for a hotel room. If travel is the whole point, a smaller unit fits your use better.

There is no SD or microSD reader on board. If you move cards between the dock and the handheld often, you will still reach for a separate reader. The USB-C data passthrough also carries no video, so the single HDMI port is your only display-out.

Who it's for

The handheld owner setting up a fixed docked station at a desk or under a TV, who wants one dock that works across whatever handheld they own now and whatever they buy next. If you have a 4K@120Hz TV, this is the dock that will actually drive it.

One thing to check on the listing: buyers have flagged that an older non-upgraded HB0603 variant tops out at HDMI 2.0 4K@60Hz and drops ROG Ally X support. Confirm the page says HDMI 2.1, 4K@120Hz, and lists the Ally X before you buy.

Best Value: Anker 6-in-1 Steam Deck Dock

Anker Steam Deck Dock, 6-in-1 4K@60Hz HDMI Docking Station for Steam Deck
Anker Steam Deck Dock, 6-in-1 4K@60Hz HDMI Docking Station for Steam Deck
$35.99

Specs

  • HDMI

    HDMI 2.0, 4K@60Hz

  • Ethernet

    Gigabit (1000 Mbps)

  • USB-A

    2x USB-A (5 Gbps)

  • USB-C

    1x USB-C data (5 Gbps)

  • Charging

    100W USB-C PD passthrough

  • Compatibility

    Steam Deck LCD/OLED, ROG Ally, Legion Go (not ROG Ally X)

What it does well

The build punches above its price. It uses a short integrated USB-C cable, so there is one fewer accessory to lose, and it holds a clean 4K at 60Hz with no dropped frames. Gigabit Ethernet plus two 5 Gbps USB-A ports cover wired play and storage.

The reason to pick Anker over an anonymous listing at the same price is support. You get an 18-month warranty and a company that answers tickets. For a part that sits between your handheld, your TV, and your charger, that peace of mind is worth the small step up.

What you give up

HDMI 2.0 caps output at 4K@60Hz. On a 4K@120Hz TV you run at half the refresh the panel can do. If your display is a 60Hz 4K set or a 1080p monitor, you lose nothing here, but a high-refresh TV owner should look at the HDMI 2.1 picks.

The bigger limit: it does not support the ROG Ally X. Anker calls this out on the listing. There is also no SD card reader.

Who it's for

The Steam Deck, base ROG Ally, or Legion Go owner on a 4K@60Hz TV or a 1080p monitor who wants a dependable dock from a brand that stands behind it. If you own the Ally X, skip this and step up to a JSAUX pick.

The listing is explicit that this dock does not work with the ROG Ally X. For Ally X owners that is a hard skip, not a maybe.

Best Premium: UGREEN 9-in-1 Dock

UGREEN Steam Deck Dock 9-in-1 USB C Docking Station Foldable Stand
UGREEN Steam Deck Dock 9-in-1 USB C Docking Station Foldable Stand
$39.98$59.99

Specs

  • HDMI

    HDMI 2.0, 4K@60Hz

  • Ethernet

    Gigabit (1000 Mbps)

  • USB

    10 Gbps USB-A and USB-C 3.2

  • Card readers

    TF (microSD) and SD

  • Charging

    100W USB-C PD passthrough

  • Stand

    Foldable integrated stand

  • Compatibility

    Steam Deck, ROG Ally, ROG Xbox Ally, Legion Go

What it does well

This is the most connected dock in the group. The USB 3.2 ports run at 10 Gbps, twice the rate of the 5 Gbps ports on most rivals, which a fast external SSD can put to use. Built-in SD and microSD readers mean you can pull footage off a camera card or expand storage without carrying a separate reader.

The stand folds flat, so despite being a full nine-port dock it travels better than a fixed block. It also lists the newer ROG Xbox Ally in its compatibility set, so it stays current on the handheld side.

What you give up

The catch is the HDMI. It tops out at 4K@60Hz, so paying the premium here does not buy you 4K@120Hz output. If high-refresh video on a capable TV is your goal, a cheaper HDMI 2.1 dock does that job better.

It costs meaningfully more than the rest of the field, and most of that money is in ports. If all you do is plug into a TV and play, the extra readers and 10 Gbps lanes are spend you will not feel.

Who it's for

The buyer who treats the handheld as a travel PC. If you edit photos off an SD card, run a fast external drive, and want every port in one foldable unit, this earns its price. If you just want video and power, buy cheaper.

Despite the premium positioning, the HDMI is 4K@60Hz, not 4K@120Hz. Buyers chasing high-refresh output should verify the HDMI spec rather than assume premium means faster video.

Best Budget: JSAUX 5-in-1 Dock (HB0602)

JSAUX Upgraded Docking Station 4K@120Hz for Steam Deck OLED/ROG Ally X/Legion Go/MSI Claw, 5-in-1 Steam Deck Dock with HDMI 2.1, 100Mbps Ethernet, USB 2.0 and 100W Charge for Steam Deck LCD-HB0602
JSAUX Upgraded Docking Station 4K@120Hz for Steam Deck OLED/ROG Ally X/Legion Go/MSI Claw, 5-in-1 Steam Deck Dock with HDMI 2.1, 100Mbps Ethernet, USB 2.0 and 100W Charge for Steam Deck LCD-HB0602
$25.99$29.99

Specs

  • HDMI

    HDMI 2.1, 4K@120Hz

  • Ethernet

    100 Mbps (Fast Ethernet, not Gigabit)

  • USB-A

    2x USB 2.0

  • Charging

    100W USB-C PD passthrough

  • Compatibility

    Steam Deck LCD/OLED, ROG Ally / Ally X, Legion Go, MSI Claw

What it does well

This is the cheapest way to get true HDMI 2.1 4K@120Hz output and full 100W passthrough. Those are the two specs that matter most for a docked handheld, and this pick lands both at the bottom of the price range. Compatibility is wide and includes the ROG Ally X.

For a reader whose docked use is a TV and a controller, this does the whole job for less than half the cost of a premium dock. You are paying for exactly what you use and nothing you do not.

What you give up

The savings come out of two places. The Ethernet is 100 Mbps rather than Gigabit, so wired downloads are throttled to a fraction of what the Gigabit picks manage. The USB-A ports are USB 2.0, fine for a keyboard and mouse but slow for an external SSD.

There is no card reader. If any of those cuts touch how you actually use a dock, the small step up to the Best Overall pick buys them back.

Who it's for

The budget-first handheld owner whose docked routine is plug into the TV, connect a controller, and play. If you do not need fast wired networking or fast storage over the dock, you will not miss what this leaves out.

The 100 Mbps Ethernet and USB 2.0 ports are the visible cost-downs. Anyone planning to run an external SSD off the dock or download over Ethernet should step up to a Gigabit pick.

Editor's Pick: JSAUX 7-in-1 Cooling Dock (HB0705)

JSAUX Docking Station for ROG Ally X/ROG Ally/Steam Deck/Legion Go, 7-in-1 Dock for ROG Ally X with RGB Cooling Fan, HDMI 4K@120Hz, Gigabit Ethernet, Dual USB & USB C 3.0, 100W PD Charging - HB0705
JSAUX Docking Station for ROG Ally X/ROG Ally/Steam Deck/Legion Go, 7-in-1 Dock for ROG Ally X with RGB Cooling Fan, HDMI 4K@120Hz, Gigabit Ethernet, Dual USB & USB C 3.0, 100W PD Charging - HB0705

Specs

  • HDMI

    HDMI 2.1, 4K@120Hz

  • Ethernet

    Gigabit (1000 Mbps)

  • USB

    Dual USB-A and USB-C 3.0

  • Cooling

    Magnetic RGB cooling fan

  • Charging

    100W USB-C PD passthrough

  • Compatibility

    ROG Ally X / Ally, Steam Deck, Legion Go / Go S (cooling tuned for ROG Ally)

What it does well

The feature that earns this the Editor's Pick is the cooling fan. It sits over the handheld's air intake and pulls heat during long docked sessions, which is exactly when a handheld heat-soaks and starts throttling its clocks. A cooler chip holds its frame rate longer, so the fan does real work on a marathon session.

It does not trade fundamentals for cooling either. You still get HDMI 2.1 4K@120Hz, Gigabit Ethernet, and 100W passthrough, so this is a full dock with a fan on top rather than a gimmick. The base and fan light up if you want the RGB, and stay dark if you do not.

What you give up

The cooling is tuned for the ROG Ally intake, so other handhelds get a smaller benefit from the fan because the airflow does not line up as precisely. It is also bulkier and pricier than a plain dock.

The RGB is a maybe rather than a plus. If you want a quiet, dark setup, you are paying for lighting you will switch off.

Who it's for

The marathon docked player, especially a ROG Ally owner, who runs demanding titles at a desk for hours and wants to keep thermals and throttling in check. If your sessions are short, a plain dock saves money.

The fan's cooling benefit is strongest on the ROG Ally because the intake alignment is model-specific. Owners of other handhelds should treat the cooling as a smaller bonus.

Bottom line

If you want one dock that does everything and drives a high-refresh TV, buy the JSAUX 6-in-1 (HB0603). If you own a Steam Deck or base ROG Ally on a 60Hz TV and value support, the Anker 6-in-1 is the value call. If you run the handheld as a travel PC with card readers and fast storage, pay up for the UGREEN 9-in-1. If your budget is tight and you only need HDMI and power, the JSAUX 5-in-1 (HB0602) delivers 4K@120Hz for less. And if you game docked for hours, the JSAUX 7-in-1 cooling dock keeps your handheld from throttling. Pair any of them with a fast external SSD and your library travels with you.

FAQ

Will a Steam Deck dock work with my ROG Ally or ROG Ally X?

Most docks marketed for the Steam Deck also support the base ROG Ally, since both output video over USB-C. The ROG Ally X is the catch. Several popular docks, including the Anker 6-in-1 here, explicitly do not support the Ally X. Always check that your exact model is named on the listing. The JSAUX 6-in-1 and 5-in-1 picks both list the Ally X, so they are the safer choice if that is your handheld.

Do I need HDMI 2.1, or is HDMI 2.0 fine for a handheld dock?

It depends entirely on your display. HDMI 2.0 passes 4K at 60Hz, which is all a 60Hz 4K TV or a 1080p monitor can use. HDMI 2.1 passes 4K at 120Hz, which only matters if your TV or monitor can run 4K at 120Hz in the first place. If you own a high-refresh 4K set, get an HDMI 2.1 dock like the JSAUX picks. If not, HDMI 2.0 costs less and loses you nothing.

Can a dock charge my handheld while I play a game docked?

Yes, as long as it has enough passthrough wattage. All five picks here offer 100W USB-C PD passthrough, which keeps any current handheld charging even while it runs a demanding title. Weaker docks that cap around 60W can slowly drain the battery under a heavy load, so wattage is worth checking before you buy.

Does docking a handheld improve performance or frame rate?

Docking itself does not make the handheld faster. The chip runs at the same speed docked or handheld. What a dock can do is help indirectly: plugging in power lets many handhelds run their higher performance profile instead of throttling to save battery, and a cooling dock like the JSAUX 7-in-1 keeps the chip cool enough to hold its clocks longer during a long session. The frame rate you see on the TV is also limited by what your handheld can push at that resolution.

Do I need the official Steam Deck or ROG Ally dock, or is a third-party one fine?

A good third-party dock is fine and usually a better value. The official docks are well built but cost more and offer fewer ports than picks like the JSAUX 6-in-1 or the UGREEN 9-in-1. The one thing to verify on a third-party dock is that it lists your exact handheld and matches the HDMI and wattage you need. Once it clears those checks, a reputable third-party dock does the same job for less.

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