With the EPP protocol for charging the Pixel 4 — and most other Android phones — at 10W, iOttie combines the most popular car mount on the market with a reliable Qi charging pad so you can top off as you drive.

Belkin is a great brand, and I love the way they help ensure that a device is held exactly where it needs to be when in landscape due to how the side supports bump out from the pad. It charges Samsung phones at 9W and iPhones at 7.5W.

Ampere's Unravel is one of the more unique wireless chargers out there, allowing you to charge three devices when laid out flat. You can also prop up one device while wirelessly charging it, or take up the least space while folding it up accordian style.

This wireless charger can charge your phone on the go at up to 18W with Power Delivery wired charging. I love it because when I forget the cables, I can still wirelessly charge at 5W with this phone-sized bank.

These luxury chargers are covered with fabric and a non-slip texture, and they come in a variety of fun colors and patterns. This charger supports EPP for up to 10W charging, as well as 7.5W/5W standards.

OtterSpot batteries can stack atop each other on the home base to charge via POGO pins, and while you're traveling, they'll charge your devices wirelessly or via USB-C. They also function as standard Qi pads when plugged in.

This compact 10W Qi pad comes with a silicone cover that can double as a cable organizer while traveling and a LED blocker at night so the light won't keep you up while you're trying to sleep.

Covered in a plush fabric in one of three colors, this upgraded version of iOttie's home charger sports a USB-A port on the back so that it can charge a second device in addition to Qi charging your phone.

This sleek charging pad from Yootech features the same 15W EPP profile as the Anker PowerWave 15 pad, but it can be powered by either Qualcomm QuickCharge or USB-C Power Delivery.

This is the perfect charger for those invested who have a Galaxy smartwatch. The pad will also support 7.5W for iPhones and standard 5W charging on top of 10W charging for Galaxy phones.

This Qi charger can output 15W for the few devices that support it right now, plus 10W/7.5W/5W for everyone else as supported, including the Pixel 4's 11W profile. It's got a sleek look and takes Power Delivery or Qualcomm QuickCharge.

The best wireless chargers are a bit of a dream, breaking you out of the old rut of having to plug in your phone every time to sit down to work or sleep. Ditch your cables and quit wearing out your phone's charging port by getting yourself a handy wireless charger. It's easier than ever now that more wireless chargers are switching to USB-C so you can stick to one cable.

For a flat pad, Anker makes one of the more dependable Qi chargers with the Anker PowerWave Alloy. It does everything we want a wireless charger to do — 15W Qi EPP charging, support for Samsung and Apple's standards and it even supports Power Delivery if you don't have a Qualcomm wall plug handy. This has been a long time coming and I'm happy Anker finally got around to adding PD support so you can just use the same cable and wall adapter for your wireless charger as you would to charge your Android phone.

For when you want to go vertical, I actually recommend going with a unique multi-port charger: the Unravel 3+1. It can fold up into a stand when you need to charge a phone while you're using it, but when you don't, it either folds out into three separate 10W charging pads. You can fold it accordion-style for one compact charging pad on a nightstand or a crowded desk. There's also the Spigen SteadiBoost Flex for use as either a flat pad or a stand when you need it.

Standards, standards, and more standards: What makes a good Qi charger so hard to find

Wireless chargers have been around for quite a while, but they've really gained steam in the last three years since Apple finally added Qi charging to the iPhone 8 and up. However, just as we once had to make sure a fast wired charger adhered to the particular standard our phone once used, wireless chargers have a half-dozen different charging standards and protocols that are hard to condense down to a product name or bullet-note in a feature listing. So let's start with the most important standards on a Qi charger, the actual charging specs:

15W EPP : This is the Qi Wireless Consortium's "Extended Power Profile" and it's a relatively open standard, though the list of phones using it right now is relatively small, including recent LG phones, the Google Pixel 4, and the OnePlus 8 Pro (when not using OnePlus's own charger for proprietary 30W wireless charging).

: This is the Qi Wireless Consortium's "Extended Power Profile" and it's a relatively open standard, though the list of phones using it right now is relatively small, including recent LG phones, the Google Pixel 4, and the OnePlus 8 Pro (when not using OnePlus's own charger for proprietary 30W wireless charging). 15W Samsung : This is technically Samsung Fast Charge Wireless 2.0, and we've yet to find any chargers outside Samsung's own 15W Wireless Charger Stand. You can only charge the Note 10 Series and the S20 Series at 15W right now, and even then, actual charging speed is more like 12W.

: This is technically Samsung Fast Charge Wireless 2.0, and we've yet to find any chargers outside Samsung's own 15W Wireless Charger Stand. You can only charge the Note 10 Series and the S20 Series at 15W right now, and even then, actual charging speed is more like 12W. 10W Qi : Of the 10W charging specs, the standard 10W is what most chargers and Android support. This can sometimes be using the EPP profile, sometimes it's not, and sometimes it's not the standard Qi because it's actually the Samsung profile instead.

: Of the 10W charging specs, the standard 10W is what most chargers and Android support. This can sometimes be using the EPP profile, sometimes it's not, and sometimes it's not the standard Qi because it's actually the Samsung profile instead. 10W Samsung : This is technically Samsung Fast Charge 1.0, and for a lot of wireless chargers, this is the 10W standard they mean when they say they're a 10W charger. The charging speed you'll see on a compatible Samsung device is closer to 9W that 10W.

: This is technically Samsung Fast Charge 1.0, and for a lot of wireless chargers, this is the 10W standard they mean when they say they're a 10W charger. The charging speed you'll see on a compatible Samsung device is closer to 9W that 10W. 7.5W Apple : 7.5W is the charging speed used for iPhones, and as such it's become a charging speed offered on almost all wireless chargers.

: 7.5W is the charging speed used for iPhones, and as such it's become a charging speed offered on almost all wireless chargers. 5W Qi: This is the basic Qi profile that all Qi chargers should support. Even if you can't fast-charge your particular phone on a particular charger, you should always be able to get 5W charging if your device supports Qi charging.

Since we've yet to find a wireless charger that supports all of these, we instead have to try and pick a charger that has the particular standards that we think our devices now and in the future can use. If you're a Galaxy user or iPhone user, your task is easy since most chargers have your protocols. The rest of us should be seeking out a charger with 15W EPP or 10W standard Qi charging.

Of course, there's the way a Qi charger is powered: most Qi chargers worth buying don't have a permanently attached AC wall adapter. Two outdated standards are still rampant in the Qi charging market — Micro-USB input ports and Qualcomm QuickCharge 2.0/3.0 fast charging — but more USB-C based chargers are becoming available that are compatible with Power Delivery charging. I've tried to highlight such chargers whenever possible because having a Qi charger that you can use with your Chromebook or MacBook charger is very handy, especially if you're trying to pair down on the number of chargers you need to bring along when traveling.

So, since there's a lot of standards at play here, here's which standards and speeds each these chargers supports in handy chart form: