Little rechargeable, cordless table lamps — the kind you can pick up and plonk anywhere, no plug required — are suddenly everywhere, glowing on dining tables and windowsills across the internet. It sounded like a gimmick to me (it's a lamp, why does it need a battery?), so I bought one and spent a couple of weeks carrying it around the house to test the trend properly.
The Order & Arrival
It arrived early, well packaged, with the lamp and a USB charging cable neatly presented and intact. A small, easy delivery with nothing to fault — and a nice solid little lamp in the hand, heavier and better-made than I expected for the price.
Setting It Up
There is no setup, which is rather the point — you charge it via USB, switch it on, and that's it. Mine had a touch control to cycle through brightness levels and a warm, dimmable glow. Within minutes of unboxing it was charged enough to use, and I was off wandering the house looking for places to put it.
Living With It
This is where it won me over completely. Warm light, anywhere, with no cord and no hunt for a socket: on the dining table for dinner (no more lamp tethered to the wall), on the windowsill, on a shelf with no outlet behind it, in the bathroom, even out on the back step for an evening drink. The freedom is genuinely addictive — I kept finding new spots a normal lamp could never go.
Battery & Light
Battery life was better than I feared — at a cozy low setting it comfortably lasted a full evening, often several, before needing its overnight USB top-up. Run it bright and it drains faster, but for mood lighting you're charging every few days. The light itself is properly warm and dims nicely, which is all I ask of a small lamp.
What's Good & What's Not
Good: total placement freedom, warm dimmable light, good battery life, and a better build than expected. Not so good: you do have to remember to charge it, and it's accent lighting rather than a bright task lamp. But those are tiny prices for the freedom. The same no-wiring appeal is exactly why cordless and rechargeable wall sconces have taken off too — once you go cordless, cords feel like a constraint.
Who It's For
Anyone who's ever wanted a lamp where there's no socket — a dining table, a windowsill, an awkward shelf, outdoors. It's a genuinely useful little thing, not a gimmick, and the cordless freedom is the kind you don't appreciate until you have it. My honest only regret is buying a single one; I've since wanted one in every room.
A rechargeable table lamp sounds like a gimmick until you live with one: warm light anywhere, no cord, no nearby socket needed — on the dining table, the windowsill, out on the step. Battery life is good and the cordless freedom is addictive. My only regret is buying just one.
