The best Father’s Day gadgets in ZDNet’s latest list aren’t trying to impress Dad for five minutes, they’re built to cut small daily annoyances he already tolerates.
Father’s Day lands on Sunday, June 21, and ZDNet says its picks are based on testing, research, comparison shopping, and staff recommendations. The connecting thread is practical: fewer lost wallets, fewer cords, cleaner grill grates, easier photo sharing, and better comfort at home.
That’s the right filter. A gadget gift fails when it demands a new routine. It works when it slides into one Dad already has.
If the dad you’re shopping for lives on his iPhone, the accessory picks here also pair naturally with the broader shift toward phone-centered daily workflows, a theme we’ve covered in iOS 27 AI Features Invade Your Everyday iPhone Apps.
Father’s Day gadgets that Dad will actually use after Sunday
ZDNet’s seven picks skew toward utility over novelty. The list includes the Rolling Square AirCard Pro Dual Bluetooth Wallet Tracker for $40, NexTool Mini Multitool 9-in-1 for $22, ESR for MagSafe Wallet with Stand for $20, HiRise 2 Deluxe Wireless Charger for $80, Grillbot grill cleaning robot for $99, Aura Digital Picture Frame starting at $149, and Cozy Earth Men’s PJs for $112.
The shipping angle matters. ZDNet says many are currently on sale and all should arrive before Sunday, but it flags two caveats: Grillbot and Cozy Earth Men’s PJs require express shipping if you want them before the weekend.
| Gift | Price in ZDNet list | Best fit | Watch before buying |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rolling Square AirCard Pro | $40 | Dad who loses his wallet | Confirm iPhone or Android compatibility needs |
| NexTool Mini Multitool 9-in-1 | $22 | Traveler or tinkerer | Blade-free design is the point |
| ESR MagSafe Wallet with Stand | $20 | iPhone user | MagSafe fit matters |
| HiRise 2 Deluxe Wireless Charger | $80 | Desk or nightstand setup | Best for Qi2-compatible phones |
| Grillbot | $99 | Grill owner | Express shipping needed before weekend |
| Aura Digital Picture Frame | Starting at $149 | Grandparent or family-photo dad | App and sharing ease are key |
| Cozy Earth Men’s PJs | $112 | Homebody | Express shipping needed before weekend |
Rolling Square’s AirCard Pro targets the lost-wallet ritual
The Rolling Square AirCard Pro Dual Bluetooth Wallet Tracker is the cleanest example of a Father’s Day gadget that solves one repeated problem. It slips into a traditional wallet or MagSafe wallet and works with Android and Apple devices, according to ZDNet.
The real feature is not the card shape. It’s the alert volume. ZDNet says it is “one of the loudest trackers” its reviewer has tested, which matters more than a thinner profile if the wallet is under a car seat, in a jacket, or buried in a bag.
This is the commuter pick. It also fits the dad who doesn’t want another keychain hanging from his keys. The prescription is simple: buy it only if it matches his phone platform and the thing he actually loses.
NexTool’s blade-free multitool is built for airport anxiety
The NexTool Mini Multitool 9-in-1 is ZDNet’s pick for the dad who wants pliers, scissors, and screwdrivers nearby without risking a confiscation moment at airport security. ZDNet gadget reviewer Adrian Kingsley-Hughes recommends it as TSA-friendly because it has no blade.
The tool includes needle-nose pliers with wire cutters, tiny scissors, a bottle opener, a SIM extractor, and Phillips head and flathead screwdrivers. There’s also a keyring for attaching it to keys.
The underlying condition here is obvious: most multitools are too aggressive for travel. This one trades brute force for permission. If Dad needs a heavy-duty garage tool, this is not that. If he wants a daily pocket fixer, it’s the smarter shape.
ESR’s MagSafe wallet does more than hold cards
The ESR for MagSafe Wallet with Stand is ZDNet’s tested pick for the best MagSafe wallet, and the appeal is its lack of drama. It has vegan leather, a strong magnetic hold, five card slots, a dedicated ID pocket, notches for easier card access, and five colors.
At $20, it is the lowest-priced item in ZDNet’s seven-product list. The stand function also matters because it turns a wallet into a desk, kitchen, or travel accessory.
That makes it a different kind of Father’s Day gadget: part wallet, part phone prop. If Dad watches videos, takes calls, checks recipes, or keeps his phone open while working, the stand is likely to get more use than the extra card slot.
For iPhone-heavy households, this is where software habits and accessories meet. Our related read on iOS 27 AI Features Invade Your Everyday iPhone Apps is a useful companion if you’re thinking about how much more of daily phone use is moving into always-available app flows.
HiRise 2 Deluxe cuts the cord pile without looking cheap
The HiRise 2 Deluxe Wireless Charger is the desk-cleanup gift. It supports 15W Qi2 charging for iPhones or other Qi2-compatible phones, and the 5W wireless charger on the base can charge AirPods or a second wireless phone, according to ZDNet.
ZDNet Senior Editor Kyle Kucharski gave the design the line that matters:
"it has a premium, non-pretentious design that just looks good on a desktop."
That quote gets to the hidden buying test for chargers. Specs matter, but the charger has to stay visible in a room. If Dad hides it in a drawer, it has failed.
This one fits the home-office dad, the bedside-table dad, or the father figure who already has too many cords running behind a monitor. The only real check is compatibility: Qi2 support is central to the pitch.
Grillbot turns the worst grilling chore into a button press
The Grillbot grill cleaning robot is the oddest pick, and probably the most specific. ZDNet describes it as essentially a robot vacuum for your grill.
The use case is direct: place it on hot or cold grates, press the button, close the lid, and it shuts off when it’s done. Its brushes are dishwasher safe, which keeps the maintenance loop from becoming another chore.
This is not a general smart-home gadget. It’s a single-job machine for someone who grills and hates scraping grates afterward. The catch is shipping: ZDNet says you’ll need to pay for express shipping if it has to arrive before the weekend.
Aura’s digital frame fixes the family-photo upload problem
The Aura Digital Picture Frame, starting at $149, is the sentimental pick that still clears the utility test. ZDNet’s Alison DeNisco Rayome says she likes the Aura because of the frame quality and the ease of adding photos.
The killer detail is upload friction. Photos can be texted to a specific number tied to the account, and they instantly appear in the carousel. No emailing batches of attachments.
That makes the Aura a strong fit for grandparents, long-distance dads, and anyone who likes family photos but doesn’t want to manage files. The useful check before buying is not screen size or decorative finish. It’s whether the people sending photos will actually use the upload method.
Cozy Earth PJs are the comfort pick, not the gadget pick
The Cozy Earth Men’s PJs stretch the gadget label, but they fit the list’s broader logic: Father’s Day gifts that get used repeatedly. ZDNet lists them at $112 and says the pajama sets are well-made, soft, and cooling.
There’s also a price note. ZDNet says readers can get 15% off with code ZDNET15.
The caveat mirrors Grillbot: express shipping is required if you want them before the weekend. That makes this a better pick for the dad who values comfort and already has enough chargers, trackers, and tools.
The bigger picture
The useful Father’s Day gadgets in ZDNet’s roundup share one trait: each one removes friction from a specific routine. The AirCard Pro attacks wallet panic. The NexTool handles small fixes without a blade. The ESR MagSafe wallet reduces pocket bulk and props up a phone. The HiRise 2 Deluxe cleans up charging. The Grillbot scrubs grates. The Aura keeps family photos moving. The Cozy Earth PJs make downtime better.
That’s the buying lesson. Match the gift to Dad’s repeated annoyance, not to the flashiest product photo.
The practical watch items are shipping deadlines, return windows, phone compatibility, and whether the gift needs extras such as cables, batteries, express delivery, or account setup. A last-minute Father’s Day gadget can still feel thoughtful, but only if it works the first time he tries it.
Key Takeaways
- The list focuses on practical gifts Dad is likely to use beyond Father’s Day.
- Prices range from $20 to $149, giving shoppers several budget options.
- Shipping timing matters because Grillbot and Cozy Earth PJs need express shipping to arrive before the weekend.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.

