Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station Review: Compact and feature-rich

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Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station Review: Compact and feature-rich


Verdict

The Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station is a capable and compact Thunderbolt 5 docking station with a vast array of ports in a sturdy and surprisingly small frame for the features on offer. The Thunderbolt 5 USB-C ports are fast, alongside brisk USB and SD card slots, although it is quite dear and lacks some more advanced features from dearer choices.

  • Compact and sturdy

  • Excellent port selection

  • Very easy to live with

  • Still quite expensive

  • Lacks some more advanced features

  • Maximum functionality relies super-modern devices

Key Features

  • Thunderbolt 5 connectivity:

    This Keychron dock offers bang up-to-date connectivity with Thunderbolt 5 both in and out, allowing for fast power delivery and high resolution and refresh rate display out with compatible devices.

  • 14-in-1 ports:

    It comes with a wide range of ports for display, charging other devices and connecting external storage and more to one laptop in a neat package.

Introduction

The Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station sees the famed peripherals manufacturer enter a new product category.

This is its first docking station, which looks like quite a formidable choice for folks who want a compact and feature-rich option that sits somewhere between the Ugreen Maxidok 10-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station and the Ugreen Maxidok 17-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station in terms of price and overall features, with everything from fast USB-C ports to Ethernet, SD cards and more, while also looking good, too.

At $349.99, it sits between the two Ugreen choices as I expected, although it is more towards the premium end of the general docking station market, not least the array of Thunderbolt 5 ones we’ve got these days. 

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I’ve been putting it through its paces for the last couple of weeks to see how it fares.

Design and Features

  • Surprisingly compact and sturdy
  • Lots of useful modern ports front and back
  • Lacking in more advanced means against dearer choices

The first thing that struck me with this Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station is how remarkably small it is. The Ugreen choices are already rather dinky, but this Keychron choice feels smaller because it’s much narrower and by default stands upright like a desktop PC, meaning it takes up less space on a desk than competing choices.

As with Keychron’s keyboards, this docking station is made of machined aluminium and has some real heft to it. There is an ounce of flair with the cross pattern on the elevated side panels of the unit that also works as a flow-through grille for passive cooling in conjunction with its aluminium heatspreader.

Side Panel - Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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The ports on this Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station are split evenly between the front and back, with thoughtful placement putting the ones you’re most likely to use on the front, and the others on the back.

On the front, we’ve got a power button and indicator LED alongside a 10GB/s USB-C port and a pair of USB-A 10GB/s ports, too. There are also separate SD and TF card slots and a headphone jack. The SD card readers are potentially faster than a lot of the ones you’ll find in modern ultrabooks, being rated for up to 312Mbps, as they’re both UHS-II-rated, as long as you’re using a card that’ll take advantage of the higher-speed interface.

Front Ports - Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The main attraction is the rear I/O of this Keychron unit, though, with an upstream Thunderbolt 5 port to your laptop handling the rest of the crowd of ports that provides up to 140W of power to the host device. To add to this, there are two further Thunderbolt 5 ports for hooking up external monitors, fast external SSDs and such, plus two full-size HDMI 2.1 slots for more display action.

For reference, Thunderbolt 5 doubles data speeds from 40Gbps to bi-directional 80Gbps, and up to 120Gbps in ‘boost mode’ for higher display bandwidth, which technically means it’s capable of up to 8K/60Hz or 4K/240Hz, depending on the laptop you’re using and the ports it comes with. 

Rear Ports - Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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Moreover, for those connecting high-speed SSDs, Thunderbolt 5 also provides a hefty bandwidth increase with up to 64Gbps PCIe 4.0 available, and transfer speeds of up to 6200MB/s.

You also get 2.5-gig Ethernet for stable and brisk wired networking, plus a further two 10GB/s USB-A ports. There isn’t any form of M.2 on-board if you wanted to connect another ‘internal’ drive to supplement your existing laptop storage. All of this is powered by a 180W DC power supply that’s nearly as big as the docking station itself. 

Performance

  • Fast charging to my MacBook Pro
  • Convenient means of connecting everything I needed to and more
  • Permissions need to be granted before it can work

During my time with the Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station, I hooked it up to my main 16-inch M1 Pro-powered MacBook Pro work laptop and used it in conjunction with a range of devices to best judge its usability.

I used the bundled Thunderbolt 5 USB-C port to connect my MacBook to the docking station, which not only makes it the brains of the operation, but with up to 140W of power delivery, also charges my laptop up briskly to boot.

Profile - Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station

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When hooking up an external display, I was initially greeted with no signal, but it turns out that macOS needed permissions to connect to the dock before anything would work – that’s just a useful troubleshooting tip if you get no display out over either one of the rear USB-C ports or the two HDMI 2.1 ports on the unit.

My 16-inch M1 Pro-powered MacBook Pro unfortunately doesn’t support full-fat Thunderbolt 5 output, and instead has three Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports, meaning its display-out capabilities max out at 6K/60Hz, rather than the 8K/60Hz that Keychron touts. To get Thunderbolt 5, you’ll want to look to top-end MacBook Pros, such as the M4 and M5 Pro and Max variants.

Profile - Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Nonetheless, I had no trouble using it at 4K/144Hz with my Philips Evnia 32M2N8900 monitor hooked up to the docking station via the Thunderbolt 4-capable USB-C cable that came with the monitor initially. With a compatible Thunderbolt 5 monitor, though, you may be able to reap the full benefits of 4K/240Hz output over USB-C, especially as Keychron provides the necessary capability in the box for upstream connectivity.

The large number of ports that the Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station comes with proved to be more than enough for hooking up everything from an SD card from my camera for ingesting photos, a wired mechanical keyboard, wired networking and external SSDs with the other rear Thunderbolt 5 port.

Profile - Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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This dock is designed primarily for more intensive power users than me, and I still had ports I could have used when I thought I’d connected all my devices. It goes to prove the power of an apparent 14-in-1 docking station, and what you can really do with it.

Should you buy it?

You want a compact, feature-rich docking station

This Keychron docking station excels in putting a lot of fast and useful ports into a very small frame, so it won’t take up much desk space.

You don’t need so many ports

If you don’t strictly require the 14-in-1 connectivity this laptop provides, then you can get away with a less featured choice that’ll also be a fair amount more affordable.

Final Thoughts

The Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station is a capable and compact Thunderbolt 5 docking station with a vast array of ports in a sturdy and surprisingly small frame for the features on offer. The Thunderbolt 5 USB-C ports are fast, alongside brisk USB and SD card slots, although it is quite dear and lacks some more advanced features from dearer choices such as the M.2 slot for SSD storage found on the Ugreen Maxidok 17-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station.

How We Test

We test every docking station we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry-standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.

  • Tested for more than a week
  • Tested with real world use

FAQs

What ports does the Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station have?

The Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station has 14 total ports with one upstream Thunderbolt 5 port (80Gbps/120Gbps, 140W, two downstream Thunderbolt 5 ports (80Gbps, 15W), one USB-C port (10Gbps), three USB-A ports (10Gbps), two HDMI 2.1 ports, Ethernet (2.5Gb), a UHS-II SD card reader (312MBps), a UHS-II microSD card reader (312MBps), a 3.5mm combo audio jack (front) and uses a 180W power supply.

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Test Data

Full Specs

  Keychron 14-in-1 Thunderbolt 5 Docking Station Review
USA RRP $349
Manufacturer
Size (Dimensions) 165 x 98 x 53 MM
Weight 856 G
Release Date 2026
First Reviewed Date 09/07/2026
Resolution x
Ports 2 Thunderbolt 5 1 USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 4 USB-A 3.2 Gen 2 2 HDMI 2.1 1 2.5 Gbps Ethernet 1 SD card slot 1 TF card slot 1 3.5mm headphone jack
Touch Screen No
Convertible? No