Good news for smartphone travelers: charging your phone abroad is one of the simplest electrical tasks of international travel. Modern smartphone chargers are almost universally designed to handle any voltage anywhere in the world. But there are still important details to know — the right adapter, the risks of cheap third-party chargers, and how to use USB-C power banks effectively. Here is everything you need.
The Simple Truth: Your Phone Charger Almost Certainly Works Worldwide
All major smartphone chargers — Apple, Samsung, Google, OnePlus, Xiaomi, and every other mainstream brand — are rated 100–240V at 50/60Hz. This means they work with any mains voltage in any country on earth without modification. You do not need a voltage converter for your smartphone.
The only thing you need is a plug adapter — a small device that adapts your plug's physical shape to fit the foreign socket. No voltage conversion. No transformers. Just a mechanical adapter costing $5–$15 that lets your existing charger physically connect to the local outlet.
✓ Verify once: Look at your phone charger or power brick. Find the INPUT line. If it says "100–240V" — you're safe in every country in the world with only a plug adapter.
Which Plug Adapter Do You Need?
The adapter you need depends on where you're from and where you're going. Here are the most common combinations for phone charging specifically:
- US/Canada → Europe (most countries): Type A to Type C or E/F adapter
- US/Canada → UK, Ireland, Kenya, Singapore: Type A to Type G adapter
- US/Canada → Australia, New Zealand: Type A to Type I adapter
- US/Canada → South Africa: Type A to Type M or N adapter
- UK → Europe: Type G to Type C or E/F adapter
- UK → Australia: Type G to Type I adapter
Use our free voltage checker to get the exact adapter type for your specific origin and destination countries. See the full worldwide plug types guide for detailed explanations of each type.
USB-C and Fast Charging Abroad
USB-C has become the universal charging standard for smartphones since 2022, and it actually simplifies international travel considerably. USB-C chargers:
- Are universally dual-voltage (100–240V)
- Auto-negotiate wattage with the device (USB Power Delivery)
- Can charge any USB-C device regardless of brand
- Work with USB-C power banks when outlets aren't available
If you use USB-C charging at home, you can use the same charger abroad with only a plug adapter — and it will charge any USB-C device you carry, not just your phone. A single high-wattage USB-C GaN charger with multiple ports is the optimal travel charging solution for most modern travelers.
Power Banks: The Best Travel Charging Insurance
A quality power bank is arguably the most important travel charging accessory you can carry. Power banks:
- Don't require any adapter to use (they charge your phone via cable)
- Provide emergency charging when outlets are unavailable or inaccessible
- Can charge your phone on planes, trains, and buses
- Protect your phone from potentially unstable foreign power supplies
For air travel, note that airline regulations restrict power banks over 100Wh in checked luggage — they must go in carry-on. Most 20,000mAh power banks fall just under this limit. Check airline regulations before flying.
The Risk of Cheap Third-Party Chargers Abroad
One scenario that genuinely puts phones at risk: buying cheap replacement chargers at airports or local shops in some developing countries. Counterfeit chargers that lack proper voltage regulation can damage phone batteries, cause overheating, or in rare cases create fire hazards. If you need to buy a charger abroad, stick to:
- Official brand chargers from reputable electronics retailers
- GaN chargers from established brands (Anker, Belkin, Apple, Samsung)
- Chargers with CE, UL, or other recognized safety certifications visible
Charging Your Phone Safely in Countries With Unstable Power
In some destinations — particularly parts of Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and parts of South America — power supplies can be unstable, with voltage fluctuations, surges, and brownouts. For daily phone charging, this is usually not a major risk since modern chargers have built-in protection circuitry. However, for expensive devices, a universal adapter with built-in surge protection is a worthwhile investment. Charging via a power bank (charged when power is stable) is also a good strategy in countries with load shedding.
Hotel USB Ports: Convenient but Slower
Many international hotels now install USB Type-A charging ports directly into bedside sockets and lamps. These are convenient but typically deliver only 5W (1A) of charging power — enough for overnight charging but very slow compared to modern fast chargers (18W, 30W, 65W+). For fast charging, use your own charger with the wall outlet rather than hotel USB ports.