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USB Hubs

USB hubs from AV:Link for desk and home-office setups where one port has to do the work of several. The range spans Type-C and Type-A hubs with 3, 4 and 7 ports, adding HDMI output, an SD card reader and up to 100W pass-through charging. A tidy way to drive a monitor and connect drives, readers and peripherals from a single connection.

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One port doing the work of several

A USB hub turns a single connection on your laptop or computer into a row of ports, so you can plug in drives, readers, monitors and peripherals at once. For a desk or home-office setup where you are short on sockets, a hub clears the clutter of swapping cables and keeps everything connected from one point. The range here spans Type-C and Type-A hubs to match whichever connection your machine uses.

Choosing your ports

Hubs come with 3, 4 and 7 ports, so you can match the count to how much you actually connect. A 3-port hub is a tidy travel companion, while a 7-port model gives a busy desk room to breathe. Several mix USB-C and USB-A so older accessories and newer kit can share the same hub.

Video and card reading built in

Some hubs add HDMI output, letting you drive an external monitor from the same device that handles your drives and peripherals. An on-board SD card reader is handy if you move photos or footage off a camera regularly, saving you reaching for a separate dongle.

Charging through the hub

Selected hubs offer up to 100W PD pass-through charging, so a single cable can power your laptop while the hub feeds your peripherals. That keeps one port free and means you are not juggling a charger and a hub at the same time.

Picking the right hub

Start with your connection, Type-C or Type-A, then count the ports you need and decide whether HDMI, an SD reader or pass-through charging would earn their place. A smaller mini hub suits a bag and travels well between locations, while a fuller hub anchors a fixed desk where the cables stay put. If you are unsure, it is usually worth allowing a port or two more than you use today, since most desks gain rather than lose devices over time. Free UK delivery over £99, worldwide shipping.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Type-C and Type-A hubs?

It comes down to the connector that plugs into your device. Type-C hubs use the smaller reversible USB-C port found on many recent laptops, while Type-A hubs use the older rectangular USB connection. Pick the one that matches your machine.

How many ports do the hubs have?

The range includes 3, 4 and 7 port hubs. A 3-port model suits travel and tidy setups, while a 7-port hub gives a busy desk more room to connect drives, readers and peripherals.

Can a hub connect a monitor?

Some hubs include HDMI output, which lets you run an external monitor from the same connection that handles your other devices. Check the individual product for HDMI.

Can the hub charge my laptop?

Selected hubs offer up to 100W PD pass-through charging, so one cable powers your laptop while the hub drives its ports. Look for pass-through charging on the product you choose.

Is there a hub with a card reader?

Yes. Certain hubs build in an SD card reader, which is useful for moving photos and footage off a camera without a separate adapter.

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