Review

UGREEN Revodok Max 313 Thunderbolt 4 Dock

A 13-in-1 Thunderbolt 4 dock that nearly matches the CalDigit TS4 for $100 less, with HDMI 2.1 and triple 4K60 support — but the 60W PD ceiling caps its appeal for big MacBook Pros.

4.5
out of 5 Excellent
Price $299.99

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UGREEN Revodok Max 313 Thunderbolt 4 Dock

What we like

  • 13 ports including HDMI 2.1, DP 1.4, and three downstream TB4
  • Triple 4K60 or single 8K display output
  • 2.5GbE and SD 4.0 reader handle modern peripherals
  • Roughly $100 cheaper than the CalDigit TS4

Could be better

  • 60W PD is underpowered for the MacBook Pro 16"
  • Aluminum chassis runs warm under sustained load
  • Only single display when paired with base M1/M2/M3 MacBooks

Full Review

UGREEN’s Revodok Max 313 is the company’s most ambitious dock yet — a true Thunderbolt 4 unit positioned squarely against the CalDigit TS4 at roughly $100 less. After spending time with it on a MacBook Pro and a ThinkPad, the value story holds up, but there’s one spec that keeps it from being a no-brainer.

Ports and Display

Thirteen ports is the headline number, and the layout is genuinely useful. You get three downstream Thunderbolt 4 ports for daisy-chaining, an HDMI 2.1 output (rare at this price), DisplayPort 1.4, 2.5GbE, an SD 4.0 reader, USB-A 3.2 across the front and back, and a 3.5mm combo jack. With a Thunderbolt 4 host, the Max 313 drives triple 4K60 displays or a single 8K30 panel without breaking a sweat. HDMI 2.1 means you can run a 4K120 gaming monitor or 8K TV directly without an adapter — something the CalDigit TS4 can’t do.

Build and Daily Use

The chassis is brushed aluminum with a vertical orientation that hides cable clutter. It runs warm under sustained 4K video output and large file transfers, but never uncomfortably hot. The included Thunderbolt 4 cable is short — about 0.8m — so plan accordingly if your laptop sits across the desk. Plug-and-play behavior on macOS Sonoma and Sequoia has been clean; no firmware nags, no random monitor disconnects.

The Power Delivery Catch

Here’s where the Max 313 stumbles. It tops out at 60W of upstream charging. That’s fine for a MacBook Air or a 14” MacBook Pro M-series base config, but the 16” MacBook Pro wants 96W and will trickle-charge or even drain under load. If you’re on a 16” Pro, the CalDigit TS4 (98W) or UGREEN’s own Revodok Max 213 (90W) make more sense. For everyone else, 60W is enough.

Max 313 vs CalDigit TS4

The TS4 wins on power delivery (98W) and port count (18). The Max 313 wins on HDMI 2.1, DP 1.4, price, and a friendlier SD card slot position. If you don’t need to charge a 16” Pro and you want HDMI 2.1, the Max 313 is the smarter buy.

Who Should Buy This

Buy the Revodok Max 313 if you’re running a MacBook Air, 14” MacBook Pro, or a Windows ultrabook and want most of the CalDigit TS4 experience for $100 less — especially if HDMI 2.1 matters to you. Skip it if you own a 16” MacBook Pro and want single-cable charging at full speed.