The Apple Magic Keyboard is Apple’s standard wireless keyboard for the Mac, updated in October 2024 with a USB-C charging port replacing the older Lightning connector. The keyboard connects to a Mac via Bluetooth or a wired USB-C connection, with automatic pairing when plugged into any current Mac. Battery life runs about a month between charges. The compact layout skips the numeric keypad and Touch ID button, keeping the keyboard footprint smaller than the extended versions Apple sells at higher price points.
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A tactile keyboard that you can attach to your keyboard
This is the compact model in Apple’s Magic Keyboard lineup, without the numeric keypad or Touch ID button of the higher-priced versions. The keyboard measures about 11 inches wide and weighs about half a pound, sliding into your laptop bag or desk drawer without much bulk. The low-profile scissor mechanism under each key has been Apple’s standard since 2015, with the same shallow key travel that most Mac buyers know from a MacBook.
The Magic Keyboard weighs half a pound and stretches about eleven inches from end to end. A hairline seam runs around an aluminum shell that keeps flex out of the deck, no matter how hard you press. Wireless mode kicks in the moment the USB-C cable comes out. The keys are quiet under a normal typing rhythm and slightly louder on the space bar, edge, and function rows. Anyone used to the sound of a mechanical board will find this closer to silent, which is why the Magic Keyboard shows up in shared offices, coffee shops, and libraries as often as it does on a desk at home.











