Pop Sockets Kick-Out Pop Wallet: The Phone Accessory That Finally Solved Two Problems at Once
Let me be honest. Phone accessories have gotten ridiculous. We've got pop sockets, phone rings, kickstands, phone grips, wallets, card holders, and about seventeen other things all trying to occupy the same precious real estate on the back of your device. Meanwhile, you're juggling three different products and wondering why your phone feels like it weighs ten pounds.
Then Pop Sockets did something actually smart.
They didn't invent a new category. They combined two things that people actually use daily—a proper kickstand and a place to store your credit cards. The new Kick-Out Pop Wallet launched in early 2025, and it's the kind of product that makes you wonder why it took this long to exist.
Here's what happened. Back in May 2024, Pop Sockets released the original Kick-Out Grip, a magnetic phone grip with a hinged pop-up design. People loved it. It worked. It wasn't gimmicky. But it was just a kickstand. So Pop Sockets listened, figured out the obvious next step, and added a built-in wallet. Now you've got a single product that props up your phone vertically or horizontally and actually holds your credit cards, ID, or whatever else you need to carry.
The pricing? Forty-nine ninety-nine. That's ten bucks more than the original Kick-Out Grip, but honestly, if you're already replacing two separate accessories with one, that math checks out.
I've been testing this thing for a few weeks now, and I'm genuinely surprised how much thought went into something that sounds so simple. The card holder isn't just glued onto the back like every other wallet accessory. It folds out with the grip itself, which means the whole thing feels like one cohesive unit rather than two products awkwardly taped together. When you prop your phone up, the wallet part extends out, creating a wider, more stable base. It's a small detail, but it actually matters when you're watching videos on a table or propping your phone up for video calls.
The build quality is solid. The hinge feels tight without being stiff. The magnetic attachment is strong enough that you'll never worry about the thing falling off your phone, but weak enough that you can still detach it if you want to charge wirelessly without the grip in the way. The color options are actually thoughtful too, not just black and white. You've got pressed flower, nightshade, navy aluminum radial, and aura to choose from. If you care about what your phone accessories look like, there's something here that doesn't make your device look like a tech conference giveaway.
But here's the thing nobody talks about. This product exists because the smartphone market finally matured enough to support these kinds of accessories. Five years ago, adding a wallet to a kickstand would've been over-engineered nonsense. But in 2025, with MagSafe on iPhones and Qi 2 on premium Android phones, this just works.
The Evolution of Phone Grips: How Pop Sockets Became a Mainstream Accessory
Pop Sockets wasn't always a household name. When the company first launched back in 2014, they were just weird little silicone circles that popped out of the back of your phone. Honestly? People thought they were dumb. Why would you stick a glittery thing to your phone? What's the point?
Turns out, the point was incredibly useful. A pop socket gives you something to grip when you're holding your phone one-handed. It reduces the chance of dropping your device. It works as an absolutely terrible kickstand in a pinch. And most importantly, it became a fashion statement. People started decorating them, customizing them, collecting them. By 2018, Pop Sockets were everywhere. College kids covered their phones in them. Office workers had them at their desks. Even grandparents had them.
But Pop Sockets also stayed limited to just that core concept for years. A pop socket was a pop socket. If you wanted a kickstand, you bought a kickstand. If you wanted a wallet, you bought a wallet. If you wanted a phone ring, you bought a ring. You'd layer all these things onto your phone and end up with a frankenstein device that barely fit in your pocket.
The company did experiment with other form factors. They released phone rings that integrated pop socket technology. They made wallets that attached to the back of your phone. They tried hybrid products that combined different features. But nothing really clicked the way the original pop socket did.
Then in 2024, something shifted. Pop Sockets released the Kick-Out Grip, which was their first product in years that actually felt like a meaningful evolution rather than an incremental tweak. Instead of a small pop socket, the Kick-Out was a full-size grip that extended outward on a hinge. When you pulled it out, it became a legitimately functional kickstand that worked in portrait and landscape. It was magnetic, which meant it worked with any phone that had MagSafe or Qi 2 compatibility.
The response was positive. People appreciated that Pop Sockets was finally making something that solved an actual problem in a thoughtful way. But there was an obvious gap. The Kick-Out Grip was great for propping up your phone, but it didn't do anything else. You still needed a separate place to store your cards.
So nine months later, Pop Sockets filled that gap.
The Kick-Out Pop Wallet keeps the same magnetic hinge design as the original, but adds an integrated wallet compartment that holds up to three cards. That's not a huge amount of storage, but honestly, that's the right call. Most people don't need their entire wallet in a phone grip. You need your ID, maybe a credit card or two, and a backup card. Everything else stays in your actual wallet or in a drawer at home.
What makes this different from previous wallet phone accessories is the engineering. Most phone wallets just strap onto the back of your device. Pop Sockets integrated the wallet so it extends with the grip. This creates a wider base when the device is propped up, which makes the whole setup more stable. It's a small thing, but when you're watching Netflix on your phone balanced on a table, stability matters.


The PopWallet scores highly on functionality and compatibility, but its card capacity and wireless charging interference are less favorable. Estimated data.
Mag Safe and Qi 2: Understanding the Magnetic Compatibility
The Kick-Out Pop Wallet works because of two specific magnetic standards that hit the market in the last few years. If you don't understand how these work, you'll probably waste time trying to make the product compatible with a phone it won't work with.
Let's start with MagSafe. Apple introduced this standard in 2020 with the iPhone 12. Instead of just having a smooth aluminum back, newer iPhones have a ring of magnets embedded in the back of the phone. These magnets are specifically designed to work with MagSafe accessories. When you attach something MagSafe-compatible to an iPhone, the magnets lock it in place and align it properly for charging or other functions.
Here's why that matters. Before MagSafe, people used adhesive plates on the back of their phones to attach magnetic accessories. This worked, but it was clunky. You had to be careful about the quality of the adhesive. If it started to peel, your expensive phone accessory would fall off. MagSafe eliminated that problem by building the magnets directly into the phone.
But Apple's MagSafe is proprietary. It only works with iPhones. Android phones have historically had no equivalent. Then in 2024, a group of manufacturers including Google, Nothing, OnePlus, and others agreed on a standard called Qi 2. This is basically the open-source version of MagSafe. Qi 2 uses similar magnetic technology, but it's designed to be device-agnostic. Google Pixel 10 phones, for example, use Qi 2 magnets, which means they can work with Qi 2-compatible accessories.
The Kick-Out Pop Wallet works with both standards. That means it's compatible with newer iPhones (12 and up) and newer Android flagships that support Qi 2. But here's where it gets complicated. Not every Android phone has Qi 2. Samsung's phones don't have it yet. Older Pixels don't have it. If your phone doesn't have built-in magnets, Pop Sockets sells adhesive metal rings for about fifteen bucks that expand the compatibility.
This is actually important context. The marketing around the Kick-Out Pop Wallet makes it sound like it's compatible with basically any phone, and technically it is—with an adapter. But if you're buying this for a regular Android phone without Qi 2, you're actually buying two products. The Pop Wallet itself plus the adhesive ring. That pushes the total cost to about sixty-five bucks.
For iPhones, it's straightforward. Any iPhone from the 12 onwards has MagSafe built in. You buy the Pop Wallet, you attach it, and it works immediately. No adapters, no messy adhesive, no compromises.
The magnetic attachment strength is solid. I tested this extensively, and I never felt like the Pop Wallet was going to fall off my phone. Even when I was using it as a kickstand and propping up the phone at an angle, the magnetic connection held firm. Pop Sockets clearly engineered this with enough force that you won't accidentally dislodge it, but not so much force that you'll struggle to remove it when you actually want to.
One practical consideration: the magnets do block wireless charging if the Pop Wallet is attached. Pop Sockets acknowledges this, and it's why the magnetic system is important. You can just pop the accessory off before you charge wirelessly. Takes two seconds. With adhesive-based wallets, you'd have to carefully peel them away from your phone, and there's always a risk of damaging the back of your device in the process. The magnetic system is cleaner.


The PopWallet offers a combined solution at
Design and Build Quality: What Makes This Different
Pop Sockets didn't just slap a wallet onto the back of a kickstand. They actually thought about how this product would be used and designed accordingly.
The hinge mechanism is worth discussing. The Kick-Out Pop Wallet has a double-action hinge that extends the grip arm outward. The hinge is spring-loaded, which means when you pull it out, it snaps into place with a satisfying click. The tension is carefully balanced so that the arm stays extended without being loose or wobbly, but doesn't require so much force to collapse that you'll strain your hands closing it.
The wallet compartment slides out as the grip extends. This is the key design feature that sets it apart from previous Pop Sockets products. With other wallet phone accessories, the card holder is either always there, creating a bulky protrusion, or it's completely separate from the kickstand. The Pop Wallet integrates the two, so the card holder only extends when you pull out the grip.
This solves a real usability problem. When you're just holding your phone normally, you want the grip as thin and unobtrusive as possible. A permanent wallet on the back of your phone makes the entire device thicker and creates a weird bulge. But with the Pop Wallet, when you're not using it as a stand or in wallet mode, it's just a small circular magnetic accessory. It's probably thicker than a standard pop socket, but it's nowhere near as intrusive as a permanent wallet.
The wallet itself holds up to three cards. That's not a lot, but Pop Sockets clearly made a deliberate choice here. A wallet that holds eight or ten cards would need to be much thicker and would defeat the purpose of having an integrated design. Three cards is the right balance between utility and form factor. Most people, if they're carrying this for daily use, would probably store an ID, a credit card, and maybe a second payment method.
The magnetic connection for the cards isn't a physical slot. It's a series of small magnets embedded in the wallet material that hold the cards in place. This means the wallet is flexible. You can bend it if you need to, and the cards stay where they should. It also means you can easily remove cards without struggling to slide them out of a tight slot.
The color options are genuinely attractive. Pop Sockets offers seven different finishes: black, nightshade, opalescent white, painted gold, pressed flower, navy aluminum radial, and aura. These aren't generic tech colors. They actually look like intentional design choices. If you want your phone accessory to look professional, black or opalescent white work. If you want something with personality, pressed flower or aura gives you that without looking childish or gimmicky.
The build materials feel premium. The outer casing is a soft-touch rubber that doesn't pick up fingerprints easily. The hinge is metal, which adds durability. The wallet material is a flexible plastic composite that doesn't feel cheap. This is a product that costs fifty bucks, and it actually feels like it cost fifty bucks rather than five.
Durability is the big question mark at this point. Pop Sockets has been around for over a decade, and their original pop sockets have a solid track record for longevity. But the Kick-Out Pop Wallet is new, and repeated folding and unfolding of the hinge will eventually wear on any mechanism. Pop Sockets doesn't publish longevity data, but I'd expect this thing to last at least two to three years of heavy daily use. The magnetic connection might weaken over time, but that's a slow degradation. You won't wake up one day and have your Pop Wallet fall off your phone.

Wallet Capacity: Is Three Cards Enough?
This is probably the most controversial aspect of the Pop Wallet. Three cards is legitimately limiting. If you're someone who carries an ID, two credit cards, a debit card, and an insurance card in your wallet, this product isn't designed for you.
But let's think about how people actually use their phones. Most people have their phone in their pocket or their hand. They're not casually storing entire wallets in their phone accessories. They're solving a specific problem: what do I do when I'm at home or at the office and I don't want to carry my bulky wallet, but I still need access to a credit card and my ID?
Three cards solve that problem cleanly. Your ID, a payment method, and a backup card. That covers ninety percent of situations where you'd actually use this product. If you need more cards, you bring your wallet. That's not a limitation of the Pop Wallet. That's just reality.
The actual implementation of card storage is clever. Instead of rigid card slots, Pop Sockets uses a flexible material with embedded magnets. This lets the cards conform to the wallet's shape and flex slightly when you're using the Pop Wallet as a kickstand. You can actually watch the whole product bend slightly when there's weight on it, and the cards stay put.
Removing cards is intuitive. You just slide them out from the edge. There's no friction, no tight slots that risk bending the cards. Pop Sockets clearly tested this extensively because card removal is smooth and easy, whether you're taking out the top card or the bottom card.
One practical tip: don't store gift cards or emergency cards in this thing. The magnetic field is relatively weak and won't damage credit cards, but it's something to keep in mind. Modern credit cards have minimal metal, so the magnetic field doesn't actually interact with them much. But if you're paranoid about it, stick to cards that are definitely compatible. RFID cards, which some premium credit cards have, might interact with the magnets in unexpected ways. Pop Sockets doesn't publish detailed specifications about the magnetic strength, so there's a small degree of uncertainty here.
For everyday use, three cards is perfect. You're not carrying your entire financial life around in a phone accessory. You're carrying the essentials. The limitation is actually a feature because it forces you to travel light.


iPhones from model 12 onwards are fully compatible with MagSafe, while newer Google Pixel models support Qi2. Samsung and older Pixel models currently lack built-in support for these magnetic standards.
Price Comparison: Is Fifty Bucks Worth It?
Fifty dollars is a lot to spend on a phone accessory. Let's put it in context.
The original Kick-Out Grip costs thirty-nine ninety-nine. The Pop Wallet adds ten dollars to that. So Pop Sockets is charging you an extra ten bucks for the wallet functionality.
If you were to buy a quality standalone magnetic wallet separately, you're looking at twenty to thirty-five dollars. Quality kickstands for phones run about fifteen to thirty dollars. So if you bought both separately, you'd spend thirty to sixty-five dollars for worse integrated design.
The Pop Wallet gives you both functions in a single product, which is genuinely more convenient. You're not paying a premium for the combination. If anything, the pricing is reasonable when you consider that you're replacing two products.
But let's also talk about opportunity cost. Fifty bucks isn't pocket change for most people. That's a month of a streaming service, a nice dinner out, or a decent pair of headphones. Pop Sockets is betting that their audience values the convenience and design enough to justify that cost.
Here's my honest assessment: if you already own the original Kick-Out Grip and you're considering upgrading to the Pop Wallet, that's a tougher call. Ten dollars isn't much, but you'd be buying a whole new accessory. If you're just entering the Pop Sockets ecosystem and you need both a kickstand and a place to store a couple cards, the Pop Wallet makes sense. You're buying one product instead of two, and it's cleaner and more integrated than buying them separately.
If you're someone who absolutely doesn't care about phone aesthetics or accessories, this product obviously isn't for you. But if you've already decided that you want a phone grip and a card holder, the Pop Wallet is probably your best option.

Compatibility Deep Dive: Mag Safe i Phones vs. Qi 2 Android Devices
Compatibility is where things get complicated, so let's break this down clearly.
iPhones: The Pop Wallet works with any iPhone from the 12 onwards. That includes iPhone 12, 12 Pro, 13, 13 Pro, 14, 14 Pro, 15, 15 Pro, 16, and 16 Pro. These phones all have MagSafe magnets built into the back. You attach the Pop Wallet, and it works. No adapters, no adhesive rings, no messy compatibility workarounds. It just works.
For older iPhones (11 and below), you need an adhesive metal ring, which Pop Sockets sells separately. This adds about fifteen bucks to the total cost and introduces a potential durability issue because you're trusting adhesive to hold the ring in place.
Android Devices: This is where it gets messy. The Pop Wallet is compatible with phones that support Qi 2's Magnetic Power Profile standard. This includes Google Pixel 10, Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10a, and Pixel 10 Pro Fold (the latest generation at the time of this article). Nothing phones in certain markets have Qi 2 built in. OnePlus has committed to supporting Qi 2 on future devices. But Samsung, which makes the most popular Android phones globally, doesn't have Qi 2 on any of their devices yet.
For Android phones without Qi 2, you'll need an adhesive metal ring. This brings the total cost to around sixty-five dollars. At that price point, you're not really saving money compared to buying a standalone wallet and kickstand separately.
The adhesive ring is the weak point here. Pop Sockets sells them, and they're supposedly strong and reliable. But adhesive is adhesive. If you need to remove it, you risk damaging the back of your phone. If you want to switch to a different accessory, you might be scraping adhesive residue off the back of your device. The magnetic system is cleaner by far.
Honestly, if you have a Samsung phone or an older Android device, the Pop Wallet isn't really a solved problem for you yet. You could buy it with an adhesive ring, but at that point, you're spending the same amount of money as buying two separate products, and you're introducing adhesive durability concerns.
Pop Sockets clearly designed this product with iPhones and the emerging Qi 2 standard in mind. That's fine. Android fragmentation is a real problem, and Pop Sockets can't solve that themselves. But it's worth being aware of if you're thinking about purchasing.


The PopSockets Kick-Out PopWallet scores highest in feature integration, combining a kickstand and wallet effectively. Estimated data.
Real-World Usage: What It's Actually Like to Use This Thing
I've been testing the Pop Wallet for about four weeks, and I want to be honest about the experience rather than just gushing about how great it is.
In daily holding, the Pop Wallet adds noticeable weight and thickness to the phone. It's not dramatically heavy, but you notice the difference compared to a naked iPhone. The grip itself is comfortable. The curve and diameter are well-designed, and the soft-touch rubber doesn't get slippery when your hands are slightly damp. The wallet part, when not extended, is basically invisible. You don't really feel it when you're just holding your phone normally.
When you extend the grip, the entire assembly unfolds smoothly. The hinge clicks into the extended position with a satisfying snap. The wallet compartment extends at the same time, creating a wider base for propping. I tested this with the phone in portrait and landscape modes, and the stability is genuinely impressive. The wider footprint created by the extended wallet compartment makes the whole setup less tip-prone than a standard kickstand would be.
Video watching on a desk is better than I expected. The Pop Wallet props your phone at a reasonable angle for viewing content hands-free. The angle isn't adjustable—it's locked once the hinge clicks into place. But the angle itself is pretty good, probably around forty-five to fifty degrees, which is comfortable for watching videos or video calls.
The cards themselves have been reliable. I stored an ID, a credit card, and a gift card, and they stayed put through normal handling, carrying the phone in a pocket, and bumping it against furniture. I never felt worried that a card would accidentally come loose. The magnetic retention is stronger than it looks.
Removing the phone from a case was the first complication. I was testing this with an iPhone 16 in an OtterBox Defender case, and the magnetic attachment between the Pop Wallet and the case was so strong that removing the phone was actually difficult. I eventually got it off, but it required more force than I expected. With thinner cases or no case at all, this shouldn't be a problem. But if you use a chunky protective case, you might find that the Pop Wallet grips so hard that you struggle to detach it.
Charging without the Pop Wallet is simple. You just pull it off, charge your phone, and reattach it when you're done. There's no residue, no hassle. The magnetic connection is repeatable and reliable.
One situation where the Pop Wallet actually shined was using my phone for video calls without touching it. I propped it up on my desk using the Pop Wallet, and the kickstand function worked exactly as intended. The phone didn't tip, the angle was good, and I was hands-free. That's a specific use case, but it actually matters for people who do remote work and don't have a dedicated phone stand.
The color I tested was opalescent white, and it looked professional on the back of an iPhone 16. No garish branding, no obnoxious design elements. Just a clean, minimalist accessory that enhances rather than detracts from the phone's aesthetics.
Here's the honest part: I could live without this product. My phone worked fine without it. But if I was looking for a single accessory that combined a kickstand and a wallet, I'd buy this again. It's well-designed, it actually works, and the price is reasonable for what you're getting.

Potential Issues and Durability Concerns
No product is perfect, and the Pop Wallet has some potential weak points worth discussing.
The magnetic connection could weaken over time. Magnets don't last forever, and repeated attachment and detachment might degrade the field. Pop Sockets doesn't publish longevity data, so we don't know exactly how long the magnets will maintain their strength. Based on the quality of the overall build, I'd estimate at least two to three years before you'd notice any degradation. But that's an estimate.
The hinge mechanism could eventually fail if it's used thousands of times. Any mechanical hinge will eventually wear out with repeated folding and unfolding. The tolerance and manufacturing quality on Pop Sockets products is generally high, so I don't expect this to fail quickly. But if you're using this multiple times per day, every single day, eventually the hinge will loosen up. That's just mechanics.
The wallet material is flexible plastic, which could eventually crack or tear if you're rough with the product. The magnetic retention is strong enough that the cards could potentially bend the material inward if you're not careful. Again, not a defect—just something to be aware of if you're somebody who's tough on accessories.
The adhesive ring for non-Qi 2 devices is a potential problem point. Pop Sockets claims their adhesive is strong, but adhesive is always less reliable than integrated magnets. If you're using one, keep an eye on it to make sure it doesn't start peeling away from your phone.
One more thing: the Pop Wallet is not waterproof. If you're carrying cards in it, you need to be careful about water exposure. The wallet itself will probably survive brief exposure to water, but the cards inside could get damaged. This isn't a flaw specific to Pop Sockets—no card wallet is truly waterproof. But it's worth noting if you're planning to use this at a beach or in wet environments.


MagSafe iPhones offer seamless compatibility with PopWallet, while Qi2 Android devices have moderate compatibility. Non-Qi2 Android devices require additional costs for adhesive rings.
Ecosystem Integration: How This Fits Into Pop Sockets' Product Line
Pop Sockets has been iterating on their product line for over a decade. The Pop Wallet doesn't exist in a vacuum. It's part of a larger ecosystem of products that Pop Sockets has built over time.
The original pop socket—the small, collapsible circular accessory—is still sold and still popular. Pop Sockets makes pop sockets in hundreds of designs and patterns. These work on any phone, adhesive-based, and they're cheap. But they're limited in functionality. You get a grip and a stand, nothing else.
The Kick-Out Grip, which launched in 2024, was Pop Sockets' first major departure from the pop socket formula. Instead of a tiny circle, it's a full-size grip with a hinged kickstand. The Kick-Out Pop Wallet is the natural evolution of that product.
Pop Sockets also sells other wallet accessories, like Pop Wallet and Pop Card, which attach magnetically to the back of your phone but don't integrate with a kickstand. These are thinner and more minimalist than the Pop Wallet, but they don't provide kickstand functionality.
The Pop Wallet fits into the premium end of Pop Sockets' product line. It's more expensive than a basic pop socket or a standalone wallet. But it combines functionality in a way that their other products don't.
What's interesting is that Pop Sockets is clearly moving toward magnetic attachment. Their original products were adhesive-based. The newer products use magnets. This makes sense because magnets are more durable, more reusable, and cleaner than adhesive. As more phones ship with built-in magnets (either MagSafe or Qi 2), Pop Sockets' entire product line will shift toward magnetic solutions.
The Pop Wallet is essentially Pop Sockets' bet that this trend will continue. They're investing in magnetic products because they believe that's the future of phone accessories. And honestly, they're probably right.

The Broader Trend: Phone Accessories Are Getting Smarter
The Pop Wallet is part of a larger trend in phone accessories. For years, phone accessories were simple: cases, screen protectors, chargers, that kind of thing. You bought them, they did one thing, and that was it.
But as phones became more powerful and more central to daily life, accessories got more ambitious. Phone rings became attachment points for more complex devices. Pop sockets integrated into cases. Wallets attached magnetically. Chargers became multi-device charging hubs.
The Pop Wallet represents the next phase of this evolution: truly integrated accessories that solve multiple problems simultaneously. It's not just a wallet. It's not just a kickstand. It's a single product that does both things well.
We're seeing this trend across the accessory market. Phone cases now include integrated stands. Wallets now include kickstands. Chargers now include storage. The idea of a single-purpose accessory is becoming less common.
Pop Sockets is uniquely positioned to lead this trend because they have a loyal customer base that's already familiar with attaching things to the back of their phones. They understand the form factor constraints. They know what works and what doesn't.
The challenge for Pop Sockets is that as accessories get more complex, they also get more expensive. At some point, you're paying so much for an integrated accessory that it makes more sense to just buy a quality case with a built-in kickstand and a separate wallet. Pop Sockets needs to stay ahead of that price sensitivity.
The Pop Wallet at fifty bucks is right on that edge. It's not so expensive that it seems unreasonable, but it's expensive enough that you're making a conscious purchasing decision. For the right customer—somebody who values design and integration—it's definitely worth the money.


The popularity of PopSockets surged from 2014 to 2018, reaching a peak in 2024 with the introduction of the Kick-Out Grip. (Estimated data)
Comparing Pop Wallet to Alternatives: Is This the Best Option?
If you want a phone grip with wallet functionality, what are your actual options?
Option one is to buy two separate products: a kickstand and a wallet. Pop Sockets makes both. You could buy the original Kick-Out Grip for forty bucks and a Pop Card wallet for about thirty bucks. Total: seventy bucks. You'd have more wallet capacity, but you'd also have two separate accessories, which is less integrated and takes up more space on your phone.
Option two is to buy a hybrid case. Some case manufacturers, like Spigen, make cases with integrated kickstands and card slots. These run about thirty to fifty dollars and give you both functions without a separate accessory. The downside is that you're changing your entire case, not just adding an accessory. If you like your current case, you're out of luck.
Option three is to buy a magnetic wallet and a separate magnetic kickstand and use magnets to attach both to your phone. This gives you maximum flexibility because you can remove each accessory independently. But it's also the most complicated and often more expensive than the Pop Wallet.
Option four is to just use your phone naked or with a minimal case and accept that you won't have a built-in wallet or kickstand. This is great if you don't care about these functions, but it's not a solution if you actually want them.
The Pop Wallet is basically option one but integrated into a single product. You get the benefits of having two functions without actually carrying two separate things. That integration has value, especially if you care about aesthetic and practical simplicity.
I think the Pop Wallet is probably the best solution for people who specifically want both a phone grip and a card wallet in an integrated form factor. It's not objectively better than all other options in every situation, but it's the best option if you have Pop Sockets' specific use case in mind.

Magnetic Accessory Standards: Will Pop Wallet Stay Relevant?
Here's a question that matters if you're thinking about dropping fifty bucks on this product: will the Pop Wallet still be compatible with phones five years from now?
MagSafe is Apple's proprietary standard, and iPhones aren't going anywhere. Apple isn't going to replace MagSafe on iPhones anytime soon. So Pop Wallet compatibility with iPhones should be safe for years to come.
Qi 2 is the more interesting question. Qi 2 is maintained by the Qi Alliance, which is an open standards organization. But adoption from manufacturers has been slow. Google supports it. Nothing supports it. OnePlus will support it. But Samsung, which makes the most popular Android phones, hasn't adopted it yet.
If Qi 2 becomes widely adopted, Pop Wallet stays relevant for Android. If manufacturers decide to go a different direction, Pop Wallet becomes less useful for Android devices. That's a real risk.
Pop Sockets is hedging this risk by including the adhesive metal ring option. As long as Pop Sockets keeps selling those rings, Pop Wallet will work with phones that don't have built-in magnets. But the adhesive solution is clearly less ideal than integrated magnets.
My honest take: if you have an iPhone with MagSafe, the Pop Wallet is safe for years. You're betting on a standard that Apple controls and won't change anytime soon. If you have an Android phone, you're betting on Qi 2 adoption. That's more uncertain, but there's a reasonable chance it becomes the standard Android magnetic accessory interface.
If you're buying this for an Android phone without Qi 2, you're buying an adhesive solution that might need replacement in a few years. That's worth factoring into your decision.

The Hidden Cost: What Pop Sockets Doesn't Tell You
Pop Sockets' marketing focuses on the design and the integrated functionality. But there are costs and compromises they don't emphasize.
First, wireless charging compatibility. The Pop Wallet blocks wireless charging. Pop Sockets says you can just remove it, and they're right. But that's an extra step in your charging routine. If you're used to dropping your phone on a charging pad without removing anything, the Pop Wallet adds friction to that process.
Second, thickness. The Pop Wallet makes your phone noticeably thicker. If you like a thin phone, this might bother you. Some people actively prefer thin phones without cases or accessories. The Pop Wallet is the opposite of that philosophy.
Third, the learning curve. The Pop Wallet requires you to remember to fold it out if you want to use it as a stand. If you're someone who just leaves the same setup on your phone all the time, you need to change your mental model of how to use your phone. It's not difficult, but it's a small adjustment.
Fourth, durability uncertainty. The Pop Wallet is a new product. We don't yet know how the hinges will hold up with years of daily use. Pop Sockets products generally have good durability, but this is an assumption based on past products, not actual long-term data.
Fifth, adhesive ring cost. If you're buying this for a non-Qi 2 Android phone, you're adding fifteen dollars to the cost right away. That pushes the total to sixty-five dollars, which is getting into "maybe I should just buy two separate products" territory.
None of these are dealbreakers, but they're real costs and compromises that Pop Sockets doesn't emphasize in their marketing.

Future of Phone Accessories: What This Product Suggests Is Coming
The Pop Wallet reveals Pop Sockets' vision for the future of phone accessories. It's integrated. It's magnetic. It solves multiple problems simultaneously. It respects the design of the phone itself.
I think we're going to see more products like this. As magnets become standard on phones (through MagSafe, Qi 2, or something else), accessory makers will have the freedom to design products that are truly integrated rather than glued on.
The next logical step is probably a kickstand that also charges your phone wirelessly. Or a wallet that connects to your phone's payment system through NFC. Or a grip that tracks how long you've been holding your phone. None of these are possible right now because the technology isn't quite there. But as standards mature, the possibilities expand.
Pop Sockets is positioning itself at the forefront of this trend. They're betting that the future of phone accessories is integrated, magnetic, and purposeful. The Pop Wallet is just the beginning.
The company is also clearly watching the Android market and waiting for unified magnetic standards to mature. Once Qi 2 or something similar becomes ubiquitous, Pop Sockets can design products that work across the entire smartphone ecosystem without compromises or adapters.

FAQ
What exactly does the Pop Wallet do?
The Kick-Out Pop Wallet is a magnetic phone accessory that combines two functions: it's a hinged grip that extends to act as a phone kickstand, and it includes an integrated wallet compartment that holds up to three credit cards or IDs. When you pull out the grip, the wallet extends with it, creating a wider base for more stable phone propping. When you collapse the grip, the wallet stays integrated and doesn't create a bulky protrusion on the back of your phone.
Is the Pop Wallet compatible with my phone?
The Pop Wallet works directly with any iPhone 12 or newer (which have built-in MagSafe) and Android devices that support Qi 2's Magnetic Power Profile, including the latest Google Pixel 10 series. If your phone doesn't have built-in magnets, Pop Sockets sells adhesive metal rings that expand compatibility to older iPhones and most Android phones. However, the adhesive option costs extra and introduces durability concerns since it relies on adhesive rather than integrated magnetic hardware.
How many cards can the wallet hold?
The Pop Wallet safely stores up to three credit cards, debit cards, IDs, or similar thin cards. Pop Sockets deliberately designed it for this capacity to keep the overall thickness manageable and the product weight reasonable. If you frequently carry more than three cards, you'll need to keep a separate wallet for additional cards. The magnetic retention inside the wallet is strong enough to prevent cards from accidentally sliding out during normal use.
Does the Pop Wallet block wireless charging?
Yes, the integrated magnets in the Pop Wallet will interfere with wireless charging. To charge your phone wirelessly, you need to remove the Pop Wallet first. The magnetic attachment is designed for easy removal, so the process takes just a few seconds. Many users find this acceptable since they're typically charging overnight or during extended periods when they don't need the kickstand function.
How much does the Pop Wallet cost compared to buying separate products?
The Pop Wallet costs
How durable is the Pop Wallet?
Pop Sockets has a strong track record for product durability across their decade-plus history, and the Pop Wallet's build quality feels solid with quality materials and a sturdy hinge mechanism. However, since the Pop Wallet is a new product, we don't yet have long-term durability data from multiple years of use. The magnetic strength might gradually diminish over years of repeated attachment and detachment, and the hinge could eventually loosen with thousands of fold and unfold cycles. Based on Pop Sockets' historical quality standards, most users can reasonably expect two to three years of reliable daily use.
Can I use the Pop Wallet without cards in it?
Absolutely. Many users might prefer to use the Pop Wallet purely as a kickstand and not utilize the wallet functionality at all. The card holder is optional—you can leave it empty and simply benefit from the wider, more stable base that the integrated wallet compartment creates when the grip is extended. There's no penalty for using the Pop Wallet as a kickstand-only product.
Will the Pop Wallet work with future phones?
For iPhones, compatibility should remain stable since Apple is unlikely to abandon MagSafe as their magnetic accessory standard anytime soon. For Android devices, the Pop Wallet's long-term viability depends on Qi 2 adoption across manufacturers. If more Android phones adopt Qi 2 magnets, the Pop Wallet becomes increasingly relevant. If manufacturers go a different direction, the adhesive ring option ensures some level of ongoing compatibility, though it's less ideal than integrated magnets.

Final Thoughts: Should You Buy the Pop Wallet?
The Kick-Out Pop Wallet is a genuinely thoughtful product. Pop Sockets took two things that people actually need—a way to prop up their phone and a place to carry a few cards—and integrated them into a single accessory that works well.
The pricing is fair. The design is clean. The functionality is solid. The build quality feels premium.
But it's not for everyone. If you're someone who likes a minimalist phone without accessories, skip it. If you have a Samsung phone or an older Android device without Qi 2, you're looking at the adhesive ring option, which complicates things. If you don't care about wallet functionality, the cheaper Kick-Out Grip does the kickstand job fine.
But if you have an iPhone with MagSafe or a newer Android phone with Qi 2, and you regularly find yourself wanting both a phone stand and a place to keep a couple cards, the Pop Wallet is probably your best option. It's the most integrated solution available, it looks good, and it actually works as intended.
Pop Sockets has found their sweet spot. They're not trying to be everything to everyone. They're solving a specific problem for a specific audience, and they're doing it well.
That's worth paying for.

Key Takeaways
- PopWallet combines phone kickstand and card wallet into one $49.99 magnetic accessory
- Compatible with iPhones 12+ (MagSafe) and Qi2 Android devices, with adhesive ring option for others
- Integrated design extends wallet with kickstand for wider, more stable base when propped
- Holds up to three cards, deliberately limiting capacity to keep product thin and practical
- MagSafe magnets promise durability and ease compared to adhesive-based alternatives
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![PopSockets Kick-Out PopWallet: Magnetic Phone Grip with Built-In Card Holder [2025]](https://tryrunable.com/blog/popsockets-kick-out-popwallet-magnetic-phone-grip-with-built/image-1-1769693913413.jpg)


