A power bank is a portable device consisting of a battery, a charger to interface battery with charging power source and an output interface to provide desired output voltage. Power banks are made in various sizes and typically based on lithium-ion batteries. A power bank contains battery cells and a voltage converter circuitry. The internal DC-DC converter manages battery charging and converts the battery stack's voltage to the desired output voltage. The advertised capacity on the product in many instances is based on the capacity of the internal cells, however the theoretical mAh available to output depends on the output voltage. The conversion circuit has some energy losses, so the actual output is less than theoretical. The theoretical
mAh of a 3.7 V battery power bank with 5 V output is 74% of the battery mAh rating. The RavPower RP-PB41 with advertised capacity of 26,800 mAh that was evaluated in the journal has a theoretical capacity of 19,832 mAh, although the delivered capacity was 15,682 mAh, 78% of theoretical value. Authors attributed the difference to internal resistance in battery and converter losses. Power banks may be able to detect a connection and power on automatically. If the current load is under a model-specific threshold for a specific duration, a power bank may power down automatically. The average power bank in 2023 transferred around 2/3, or 67% of the power bank's battery energy into the battery of the device being charged. Some power banks are able to deliver power
wirelessly, some are equipped with an LED
flashlight for casual near-distance illumination when necessary, and some have a
pass-through charging feature which allows providing power through their USB ports while being charged themselves simultaneously
. Some larger power banks have
DC connectors (or
barrel connectors) for higher power demands such as
laptop computers.
Battery cases Battery cases are small power banks attached to the rear side of a mobile phone like a
case. Power may be delivered through the USB charging ports, or
wirelessly. Battery cases also exist in the form of a camera grip accessory, as was for the
Nokia Lumia 1020. For mobile phones with removable rear cover,
extended batteries exist. These are larger internal batteries attached with a dedicated, more spacious rear cover replacing the default one. A disadvantage is incompatibility with other phone cases while attached.
Prong cases included fold-out prongs integrated into the case itself.
Rental/exchange In some parts of the world, there are kiosk based power bank rental or subscription services. Customers pay for the use of power bank for a specified period of time and return the depleted power bank to the kiosk. In one case with a brand called FuelRod, it was sold at an elevated price at various amusement parks with the understanding that they get a perk of free exchange at participating locations. FuelRod moved to discontinue the free exchange in 2019 and resulted in a class-action lawsuit reaching a settlement that early adopters would be grandfathered to free exchange privileges.
Air travel restrictions Per US
Federal Aviation Administration regulations, power banks in the United States are not allowed in checked-in luggage. Power banks up to 100 Wh are allowed as carry-on and those 101 Wh to 160 Wh are allowed with airline approval. After
Air Busan Flight 391 in Korea, concerns about power banks on flights arose, and new regulations of power banks were issued. The Korean government issued a ban on using power banks on Korean flights. In March 2025,
Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia issued a directive to advise passengers storing power banks on their person, and avoid in overhead bins. In February 2025,
Eva Air announced their ban on using power banks on flights.
AirAsia,
China Airlines,
Starlux Airlines,
Singapore Airlines, and
Thai Airways issued similar bans later. In June,
China's Civil Aviation Administration banned passengers from carrying power banks that lack
China Compulsory Certification on domestic flights. The
International Civil Aviation Organization published the new guidelines for power banks on 27 March 2026, which limited to two per passenger, and recharging during the flights is prohibited. ==See also==