Belkin's Apple Watch power bank hits all-time low of $79.99 in Amazon spring sale

the best Star Wars power fantasy available right now
On why Star Wars Jedi: Survivor remains worth playing despite its $47 discount.

Each spring, the marketplace becomes a kind of mirror — reflecting not just what we want, but what we quietly need to move through the world more freely. Amazon's Big Spring Sale, running through March 25th, 2024, offers a moment to close the gap between the tools we carry and the lives we're trying to live, with meaningful discounts on wearables, smart home devices, and digital companions that have quietly become infrastructure for modern daily existence.

  • Belkin's BoostCharge Pro power bank has dropped to its lowest price ever at $79.99 — a rare solution for Apple Watch owners who've long struggled to find fast, portable charging that actually works on the go.
  • The Garmin Forerunner 255S arrives at $249.99 — a hundred-dollar cut that puts dual-frequency GPS and 12-day battery life within reach of runners who couldn't previously justify the premium tier.
  • The sale sprawls beyond wearables, pulling in smart thermostats, e-readers, digital photo frames, and gaming titles, creating a compressed window of decisions across nearly every corner of consumer tech.
  • With the sale closing Sunday, March 25th, the urgency is real but not manufactured — these are genuine price floors on products with established track records, not speculative hype.

Amazon's Big Spring Sale is running through March 25th, and a handful of deals are landing at prices worth paying attention to. The headline item is Belkin's BoostCharge Pro power bank, now $79.99 at Amazon and B&H Photo — its lowest price ever. For Apple Watch owners, it addresses a persistent frustration: the watch charges fast enough on the go, reaching 80 percent in roughly 45 minutes via a magnetic connection, while simultaneously powering a phone or earbuds over USB-C at up to 20W. Verge reviewer Victoria Song praised it last year, noting that genuinely travel-friendly fast-charging options for Apple Watch remain surprisingly scarce.

For runners, the Garmin Forerunner 255S at $249.99 — a hundred dollars off — is the more compelling story. Available at Amazon, Best Buy, and Garmin's own site, it's last year's model, which means a memory-in-pixel screen instead of OLED, but the tradeoffs are easy to accept. Twelve days of battery life, dual-frequency GPS, NFC payments, a barometric altimeter, and a compass make it a watch that performs well above its price point. The dual-frequency GPS is the real differentiator — it pulls from multiple satellite bands at once, delivering better accuracy in cities and dense terrain where single-band systems falter.

The sale extends into smart home and entertainment as well. Ecobee's Smart Thermostat Premium is $219.99, bundling air quality monitoring and smart speaker functionality with broad platform compatibility. The Kobo Libra 2 e-reader is $169.99 from Rakuten — a strong alternative for anyone stepping away from Amazon's ecosystem, with a sharp display, waterproofing, and physical page-turn buttons. Twelve South's AirFly Pro Bluetooth adapter is $43.99, a small but genuinely useful device for wireless headphone use on flights. The window closes Sunday.

Amazon's spring sale is running through March 25th, and the discounts are landing harder than expected. The standout deal is Belkin's BoostCharge Pro power bank, now $79.99 at both Amazon and B&H Photo—a twenty-dollar drop and the lowest price it's ever hit. For anyone who owns an Apple Watch Series 7, 8, 9, or either Ultra model, this is the kind of accessory that solves a real problem: getting meaningful charge on the go without lugging around a separate power brick.

The BoostCharge Pro holds 10,000mAh of capacity and uses a small magnetic divot to charge an Apple Watch to 80 percent in roughly 45 minutes. While you're doing that, the power bank can simultaneously feed power to your phone, earbuds, or any other USB-C device at up to 20W. It comes with a USB-C cable and has a soft-touch finish that feels solid in hand. When Verge reviewer Victoria Song wrote about it last year, she wasn't overstating the appeal—good travel-friendly options for fast-charging Apple's watches are genuinely scarce, and most require you to carry a separate USB-C charger and a power brick rated above 5W.

Spring weather tends to be the real motivator for fitness resolutions, and Amazon's sale is a good moment to grab the Garmin Forerunner 255S at $249.99—a hundred dollars off the regular price. You can find it at Amazon, Best Buy, and Garmin's own site. This is last generation's model, which means it has a memory-in-pixel screen rather than the always-on OLED display of the newer 265S, but the tradeoff is worth it at this price. The watch packs an estimated 12 days of battery life, an NFC chip for contactless payments, a barometric altimeter, and a compass. More importantly, it tracks an enormous range of metrics and includes dual-frequency GPS—a feature that typically lives on pricier watches. That dual-frequency system locks onto multiple satellite bands simultaneously, which means better accuracy in cities, dense forests, and other places where a single GPS system struggles. For a midrange running watch, the 255S punches well above its weight.

Beyond wearables, the sale has pulled in some solid gaming and smart home discounts. Star Wars Jedi: Survivor, Respawn's action-adventure game from last year, is down to $23.27 for a digital PC copy at Amazon—roughly $47 off. It won't revolutionize the franchise, but it remains the best Star Wars power fantasy available right now. Ecobee's Smart Thermostat Premium is $219.99 at Amazon and Best Buy, down thirty dollars, matching its second-best price ever. This one stands out because it bundles an indoor air quality monitor and smart speaker functionality, letting you control it with either Alexa or Siri, and it plays nicely with Apple Home, Google Home, and other platforms.

For readers who've committed to leaving Amazon's ecosystem, the Kobo Libra 2 e-reader is $169.99 directly from Rakuten, a twenty-dollar discount. It's arguably the best non-Amazon option on the market—sharp 300ppi display, IPX8 waterproofing, USB-C charging, and physical page-turn buttons. The catch is it doesn't integrate with Kindle books, which matters if you've built up a library there. The Aura Carver digital photo frame starts at $143 with a mat, down thirty-seven dollars, and makes it easy to push photos and videos from your phone. Finally, Twelve South's AirFly Pro Bluetooth adapter is $43.99, eleven dollars off—a small device that plugs into a 3.5mm jack and gives you wireless headphone connectivity on flights, with 25 hours of battery life. The sale runs through Sunday, March 25th.

Good, travel-friendly offerings that let you fast-charge Apple's latest smartwatches are hard to come by
— Verge reviewer Victoria Song, on the BoostCharge Pro
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does the Belkin power bank matter so much for Apple Watch owners? There are other portable chargers out there.

Model

Most portable chargers aren't designed for the Watch's unique charging connector. You'd need to carry a separate USB-C Apple Watch cable and a power brick that outputs more than 5W. Belkin built the divot right into the power bank itself, so it's one less thing to pack.

Inventor

And the 45 minutes to 80 percent—is that actually fast for a watch?

Model

For a device that size, yes. Watches have tiny batteries. Getting to 80 percent that quickly means you're not stuck waiting around, and you can charge your phone at the same time.

Inventor

The Garmin watch seems like the real story here. A hundred dollars off is substantial.

Model

It is, especially because dual-frequency GPS is usually reserved for watches that cost twice as much. Most runners won't notice the difference between a memory-in-pixel screen and OLED, but they'll absolutely feel the accuracy improvement in places where GPS gets confused.

Inventor

So this is a watch that's punching above its price point even before the discount.

Model

Exactly. At $249.99, you're getting features from watches that sell for $400 or $500. The battery life alone—12 days—is something a lot of premium watches can't match.

Inventor

Why include all these other deals in the piece? Thermostats and photo frames seem disconnected.

Model

Because the sale is broad, and readers shopping for one thing often need something else. But more than that, it shows the sale isn't just hype—the discounts are real across categories. That builds credibility.

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