Expert’s Rating
Pros
- 12 ports
- 85W PD
- Three 4K 60Hz ports
- Ships with 100W wall charger
Cons
- Expensive
- No USB device charging except laptop
- UHS-I card reader speed
Our Verdict
This dock is compact and well-designed, but is a little expensive alongside comparable docking stations.
Price When Reviewed
$349.99
Best Prices Today: Ugreen Revodok Pro 312 12-in-1 Docking Station
$349.99
Ugreen is a respected maker of premium accessories, especially chargers and hubs, and its latest USB-C docking station offers the same quality, precision and speed.
A fully featured docking station is at heart a charger that also offers multiple port extensions, so Ugreen is expected to deliver the goods, and it does with its 12-port USB-C Docking Station.
It stands apart from many USB-C docks with its three display ports, all of which can be used with Windows laptops and MacBooks—even with the M1 and M2 models that are otherwise limited to one external display.
Updated: we updated this review in January 2024 following Ugreen adding a 100W charger to the package, and renaming the dock. Otherwise, all testing remains the same.
Specs and features
Here are the 12 ports on the Ugreen USB-C dock:
- 85W PD charging (USB-C)
- HDMI 2.0 (4K at 60Hz) port
- HDMI 2.1 (8K at 30Hz or 4/5/6K at 60Hz) port
- DisplayPort 1.2 (4K at 60Hz) port
- One USB-C (10Gbps) port
- Two USB-A (5Gbps) ports
- One USB-A (10Gbps) port
- SD Card Reader (UHS-I)
- MicroSD Card Reader (UHS-I)
- Gigabit Ethernet port
- Hybrid 3.5mm audio port
IDG/Foundry
Ugreen’s Revodok Pro 312 USB-C Triple Display Docking Station ships with a 2-port Ugreen 100W wall charger. The dock itself requires 15W of power itself, hence the need for a 100W PD to reach the 85W.
You could also use a desktop charger. There are plenty of these with 100W PD ports, and the extra charging USB ports will make up for the fact that this dock’s USB ports are for data transfer only.
We’ve rounded up the best USB-C chargers and best USB-C chargers for Mac if you want to add a new one other than the charger your laptop shipped with.
Displays
One of the HDMI ports and the DisplayPort support 4K at 60Hz (Mac and Windows) and the second HDMI can push up to 8K at 30Hz in Windows and up to 4K at 60Hz with a Mac. The HDMI 2.1 port can hit 60Hz at under 8K, for example, 4K, 5K or 6K.
Using the HDMI ports and the DisplayPort you can connect three displays simultaneously.
Except for the M1/2/3 Max MacBook Pro, Macs don’t natively support three external displays as they don’t support MST (Multi-Stream). Even worse, the plain (non-Pro or Max) M1, M2 and M3 MacBooks are limited to just one external display.
As I have discussed in my How to connect more than one display to an M1/M2 Mac tutorial, there is a software workaround, which entails installing DisplayLink software. This simple fix allows all Macs to support up to three external displays, so the full functionality of the Ugreen USB-C Triple Display Dock is open to all.
Like other triple-display dock manufacturers, Ugreen could make things easier for Mac users by including the link to the DisplayLink software.
IDG/Foundry
USB ports
Aside from the back-mounted USB-C port that charges the dock, there’s another upstream USB-C port that connects to the computer (and can charge that in turn).
There’s also front-mounted USB-C and USB-A ports that can transfer data at 10Gbps, which is speedier than on offer on many USB-C docks.
At the back there are two slower but still reasonable 5Gbps USB-A ports.
It’s worth noting that none of these USB ports—except the upstream USB-C to laptop—can charge connected devices, which is a notable limitation given that most docks offer some device charging from its USB ports.
Other ports
Alongside those is a Gigabit Ethernet port for fast and stable wired-Internet access.
Back to the front of the dock, are two card-reader slots: one full SD and the other TF (also known as microSD). These are UHS-I, offering 104MBps data transfer. Many docks offer faster 312MBps UHS-II card readers, so if this is important to you, consider an alternative dock; see our roundup at Best USB-C docking stations.
Finally, there’s 3.5mm audio jack for speakers or microphone.
IDG/Foundry
Design
The Ugreen USB-C Triple Display Dock is a vertical docking station in a very compact form for its ports (11 downstream, 1 upstream and 1 to charge the dock).
Its Space Gray color will match darker laptops, and it won’t stand out on your desk, hidden in the shadows.
We appreciate the power and upstream ports being placed at the rear, with the front ports all sensibly selected.
We also like the power button on the top of the dock—allowing the user to switch off the power to the connected laptop when not in use overnight, helping maintain laptop battery health.
A subtle light under the black top of the dock displays when the dock is powered and connected to a laptop.
Price
The Ugreen USB-C Triple Display Dock costs $329.99 in the US, £399.99 in the UK and CA$349.99 in Canada. Before you buy, check out the link here to Amazon and click through to the Ugreen Store, which sometimes offers decent discounts.
This pricing is a little higher than with imilar premium USB-C docks, and the UK price is particularly high. Read our roundup of the best USB-C laptop docks. if your laptop boasts a 40Gbps connection, you might consider one of the best Thunderbolt 4 laptop docks.
Unless you use your laptop’s USB-C charger to power the dock, you will need to invest in a new one as this dock doesn’t ship with its own power supply.
Verdict
With its three video ports, the Ugreen Revodok Pro 312 USB-C Triple Display Dock is a great choice if you need multiple monitors.
We’d have preferred an independent power supply or a PD 3.1 USB-C input that would allow up to 240W to the dock, plus device charging from the USB ports, but the included 100W charger supplies what you need for 85W laptop PD charging.
This dock is compact, well-designed and worked a treat when we tested it with three external displays, even on an M2 MacBook Pro.