At CES 2026 in Las Vegas, TESSAN outlined a broader shift in how it wants its products and brand to be understood, placing less emphasis on individual devices and more on how charging fits into modern mobility. Exhibiting at Booth #31109 in the Venetian Expo from January 6 to 9 during CES 2026, the company presented a mix of new hardware and brand initiatives under the theme “Courage Charge.”
Central to this year’s presentation is the launch of the “100 TESSAN Travelers” initiative, a campaign designed to highlight how people with mobile lifestyles rely on power solutions in everyday situations. Rather than focusing on influencer-driven promotion, the initiative is positioned as a collection of real-world use cases, ranging from business travel to creative and exploratory work. The booth experience reflects this approach through large-scale visual installations and storytelling elements intended to contextualize the products within broader travel and work scenarios.

Alongside the initiative, TESSAN introduced the Voyager 205, its latest high-output travel adapter. Built using gallium nitride technology, the device delivers up to 205 watts of power in a compact form, supporting simultaneous charging of power-hungry devices such as laptops, camera equipment, and drones. The adapter is designed for use across more than 200 countries and regions, reinforcing its focus on frequent travelers and professionals who depend on consistent power availability across borders. While high-wattage GaN chargers are becoming more common, the Voyager 205 pushes toward the upper end of output currently available in a single travel-oriented unit.

The CES booth also features a wider range of what TESSAN refers to as “Home & Journey” solutions. These include vertical tower-style power strips aimed at desk organization, ultra-thin flat plugs intended to address clearance issues behind furniture, and lifestyle-oriented charging accessories that are meant to transition easily between fixed workspaces and travel environments. Taken together, the lineup suggests a strategy focused on ecosystem thinking rather than standalone accessories.

In addition to its show floor presence, TESSAN is hosting an invitation-only evening event during CES, designed as a networking and brand touchpoint for partners, media, and select guests. While not product-focused, the gathering reflects the company’s attempt to frame charging technology as background infrastructure that supports work, travel, and creative activity rather than as an end in itself.
TESSAN’s CES 2026 presence does not radically redefine charging technology, but it does illustrate how accessory brands are increasingly blending hardware launches with narrative-driven positioning. As competition in GaN chargers and travel adapters continues to intensify, differentiation may depend as much on how products fit into daily routines as on raw specifications.
