Good — here are portable charger (power‑bank) recommendations for iPhones in Australia, grouped by use-case plus quick buying tips so you get the right one.
Top picks by use-case
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Best magnetic (MagSafe) for seamless on‑phone wireless charging 
- Apple MagSafe Battery Pack — made by Apple, attaches magnetically to MagSafe iPhones and provides convenient Qi2/MagSafe charging behavior and iOS battery reporting. Good if you want the simplest, fully integrated option. (Anker.com)
- Anker MagGo Power Bank (10,000 mAh) — Qi2 / MagSafe-compatible magnetic bank with higher capacity than Apple’s pack and additional features (display/stand on some models). Good if you want MagSafe convenience plus extra capacity. (Anker.com)
 
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Best high‑capacity USB‑C PD (for many charges or charging laptops too) 
- Anker 737 PowerCore 24K (PowerCore 24,000 mAh, 140W PD) — very high capacity and very fast USB‑C PD output; can charge an iPhone multiple times and even top up laptops/tablets. Choose this if you need long trips, multi‑device charging, or to charge a MacBook in a pinch. (Available in Australia retailers.) (Soundcore.com)
- ZMI No.20 / similar 25,000 mAh 100W banks — alternative high‑capacity PD option (TechRadar lists top high‑capacity picks available in Australia). (TechRadar.com)
 
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Best compact / pocketable (everyday carry) 
- 5,000–10,000 mAh compact banks (Anker, Zendure, INIU, UGREEN) — these give roughly 1–2 full iPhone charges, fit in a pocket, and are easy to carry. Zendure SuperMini and INIU models are commonly recommended as compact, sturdy picks. (TechRadar.com)
 
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Best budget option 
- INIU B6 and similar 10,000 mAh 18–20W PD banks — lower cost, decent performance for occasional use. TechRadar lists INIU as a strong budget pick in Australia. (TechRadar.com)
 
What to look for (quick checklist)
- MagSafe vs wired: If you want magnetic wireless charging for iPhone 12/13/14/15/16 series, pick a MagSafe/Qi2 certified bank. Wired USB‑C PD is faster and more efficient (less heat/loss). (Anker.com)
- Capacity (mAh): 5,000 mAh ≈ ~1 full iPhone charge; 10,000 mAh ≈ ~1.5–2 charges; 20,000–25,000 mAh ≈ multiple charges. (Real usable capacity is lower due to voltage conversion losses.) (Anker.com)
- Output power: For fastest wired charging look for USB‑C PD (20W+ for fast iPhone charging; 30–140W for laptops and fast multi‑device use). (Gadgets360.com)
- Safety and certifications: Look for PD/USB‑IF compliance, overheat/short protection, and airline/Wh labels if you fly (airlines often limit >100 Wh / ~27,000 mAh). TechRadar and retailers note airline/standards compliance as important. (TechRadar.com)
- Size/weight: Higher capacity = heavier. Choose by how you’ll carry it.
Recommended models to consider in Australia (shortlist)
- Apple MagSafe Battery Pack — best integrated MagSafe experience. (Anker.com)
- Anker MagGo Power Bank (10,000 mAh) — MagSafe/Qi2, higher capacity than Apple’s pack. (Anker.com)
- Anker 737 PowerCore 24K (24,000 mAh, 140W PD) — best if you want maximum capacity and USB‑C PD power. Available in Australian retailers. (Soundcore.com)
- ZMI No.20 / other 25,000 mAh 100W power banks — alternative high capacity option. (TechRadar.com)
- Zendure SuperMini or INIU 10K / 6.6K models — best compact everyday choices (pocketable). (TechRadar.com)
Buying tips for Australia
- Check local stock and warranty: buy from an Australian retailer or authorised reseller for local warranty support. Retailers like Wireless1, Anker AU, and major electronics stores stock many models. (Wireless1.com.au)
- If you fly, confirm the power bank’s Wh rating — many airlines restrict power banks >100 Wh (≈27,000 mAh at 3.7V). TechRadar’s Australia guide highlights airline rules and safety. (TechRadar.com)
- For best speed, use a USB‑C to Lightning or USB‑C to USB‑C cable that supports PD and the power levels you want.
- If you want the simplest “attach and forget” experience for an iPhone 12 or later, pick MagSafe/Qi2-certified banks; for fastest charging and efficiency pick PD USB‑C banks.
If you want, I can:
- narrow this to the best value options under a specific budget,
- check local Australian prices/stock for any of the models above,
- or compare two specific models side‑by‑side.
Which of those would you like next?