Review

UGREEN Revodok Pro 109 USB-C Hub

A 9-in-1 USB-C hub with 10Gbps data, 4K HDMI, 100W passthrough, gigabit ethernet, and a premium aluminum shell that pairs perfectly with a MacBook.

4.6
out of 5 Excellent
Price $69.99

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UGREEN Revodok Pro 109 USB-C Hub

What we like

  • 10Gbps USB-C and USB-A data ports — twice as fast as most cheap hubs
  • Premium aluminum body stays cool under load
  • Longer attached cable than the Anker 555 — easier to route behind a monitor
  • 100W PD passthrough handles full MacBook Pro charging

Could be better

  • Single HDMI port limits dual-display setups
  • No 3.5mm audio jack
  • Attached cable means you can't swap or upgrade it

Full Review

The Revodok Pro 109 is UGREEN’s answer to the question “what if a hub felt like an Apple accessory?” The aluminum chassis matches a Space Gray MacBook almost exactly, and the integrated cable is long enough to reach a port on the right side of your laptop without yanking the hub off the desk. After a few months of daily use it’s the dock I keep recommending to MacBook owners who don’t need dual monitors.

Build and Daily Use

The aluminum shell is the headline feature. Plastic hubs heat up fast when you push 4K video and a 1Gbps ethernet connection at the same time — the Pro 109 stays warm but never hot. The cable is roughly 8 inches, which doesn’t sound like much until you compare it to the stubby 4-inch tether on the Anker 555. Routing it behind a monitor stand is genuinely easier.

Performance

The 10Gbps USB-C and USB-A ports are the real upgrade over older hubs. Backing up a Samsung T7 SSD pulls north of 900MB/s, which a 5Gbps hub would cap at half that. HDMI handles 4K@60Hz without dropped frames on a 27-inch 4K display, and the gigabit ethernet port hit a steady 940Mbps on Speedtest. The 100W passthrough delivers about 85W to the laptop after the hub takes its cut — enough to keep a MacBook Pro 16” charging under load.

Versus the Anker 555

The Anker 555 is the obvious cross-shop. It’s a touch cheaper and has the same port mix, but it tops out at 5Gbps on its USB-A ports and the cable is noticeably shorter. If you frequently move large files or want a tidier desk, the UGREEN is worth the extra ten dollars. If you mostly just need HDMI and a couple of USB-A ports, the Anker is fine.

Who Should Buy This

Buy this if you have a single-display MacBook setup and want one cable to cover charging, ethernet, HDMI, and fast external storage. Skip it if you need dual monitors — the UGREEN Revodok Pro 313 or a proper dual-HDMI dock is a better fit there.