Not everything at CES is a far-away concept. These gadgets are available to buy or pre-order now.
UpdatedThu, January 8, 2026 at 2:11 PM UTC
CES 2026 is in full swing, but you don’t have to wait months to get your hands on everything announced in Las Vegas this year. A surprising number of products are already up for pre-order, if not outright available to buy today, from new chargers and docks to projectors, keyboards and smart home gear. CES is still a showcase for concepts and big promises, but these are the gadgets that have real pricing and an order button ready right now. Check out all of the CES 2026 gadgets you can buy right now below.
Move over, annoying, loud leaf blowers. The folks at Whisper Aero believe that you shouldn't be awoken from a weekend slumber by loud lawn machines, so they made the Tone Outdoors T1, which they say is 80 percent quieter and 60 percent more powerful that other "leading" handheld gas leaf blowers.
Shokz's latest open-style earbuds are the OpenFit Pro, which combine effective noise reduction with Dolby Atmos support. The new Noise Reduction mode acts almost as a layer of active noise cancellation, something you typically only see on in-ear style buds.
Anker’s new Nano Charger delivers up to 45W of power in a compact design with foldable prongs and a small smart display. It can identify connected devices and adjust output accordingly, with a focus on keeping battery temperatures down.
Corsair’s Galleon 100 SD combines a full mechanical gaming keyboard with a built-in Stream Deck, complete with a 5-inch display, rotary encoders and 12 programmable buttons. It supports Elgato profiles for games, streaming and productivity, alongside 8,000Hz polling and Corsair’s MLX Pulse switches.
The Clicks Communicator is a minimalist Android phone built around a physical keyboard and a 4-inch OLED display. It supports modern features like NFC, wireless charging and a fingerprint sensor while positioning itself as a communication-first device.
Cosori’s Iconic Air Fryer uses a stainless steel body and ceramic nonstick interior to avoid plastic contact with food. It offers six cooking modes, app connectivity and temperature control up to 450°F.
Vivoo’s Smart Toilet clips onto your existing bowl and uses optical sensors to track hydration levels without disposable test strips. Results sync to a smartphone app, with the battery rated for more than 1,000 measurements per charge.
The Plaud NotePin S is a tiny AI recorder that adds a physical button and highlight feature to flag important moments in conversations. It supports multiple wearing styles and offers automatic transcription with summaries.
The Pebble Round 2 revives the brand’s thin, lightweight smartwatch design with a 1.3-inch color e-paper display and more than two weeks of battery life. It skips features like GPS and heart-rate tracking in favor of simplicity and overall longevity.
Eufy’s Omni S2 robot vacuum combines vacuuming and mopping with AI-powered floor detection and up to 100 AW of suction. It also generates lightly oxidizing disinfectants internally and adjusts cleaning behavior based on surface type.
The Soundcore Work is a coin-sized AI voice recorder designed for discreet recording and automatic transcription. It promises up to 97-percent transcription accuracy, offers AI-generated summaries and lets users highlight key moments with a double tap.
The Nebula X1 Pro pairs a 3,500-lumen 4K projector with a built-in 160W sound system for a single-box home theater setup. It supports Dolby Atmos, outdoor use and a 7.1.4 speaker configuration with satellite speakers.
Satechi’s Thunderbolt 5 Cube Dock brings support for up to 120Gbps transfer speeds, multiple 8K displays and 180W power delivery in a compact aluminum design. It also includes front-facing SD and microSD card slots, plus space for up to 8TB of internal SSD storage.
Dreamie is a standalone sunrise alarm clock designed to reduce phone use before bed, with built-in podcasts, soundscapes and sleep insights. All controls and data are stored on-device, with no subscription required.
The Displace Hub turns compatible TVs into mostly wireless displays using suction mounting, an internal battery and a built-in PC. It supports TVs between 55 and 100 inches and offers up to 10 hours of battery life depending on usage.
Punkt’s MC03 is a privacy-focused smartphone running the company’s AphyOS, with strict app permission controls and a split system for vetted and open apps. It includes a 120Hz OLED display, removable battery and IP68 rating.
Shure’s updated MV88 mic nixes Lightning in favor of USB-C, making the compact stereo microphone compatible with modern iPhones, Android devices and laptops. It offers multiple polar patterns, real-time denoising and automatic gain control.






































