There isn't one Kado monitor. There are two — and you need to know which you're buying.
Kado sells multiple near-identically-titled 15.6″ FHD monitors. The two we've assessed differ in contrast and in how they handle power — one sips 5.5W, the other pushes 45W back into your laptop. They share almost the same title, set apart by one phrase — "75Hz 100% sRGB" or "45W Reverse Charging." Identify yours before you buy.
This review contains affiliate links, including the product images. If you buy through them we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you — it never changes our assessment. Read the full disclosure.
- Read the listing title. If it says "75Hz 100% sRGB" it's Unit A; if it says "45W Reverse Charging" it's Unit B.
- Check the listed contrast ratio:
3000:1is Unit A,2000:1is Unit B. - Check what it does with power: only Unit B charges your laptop back (up to 45W); Unit A simply draws ~5.5W and displays.
Unit A for a higher-contrast indoor screen · Unit B if you need it to charge your laptop back.
Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you, and it never changes our assessment. The full rubric, comparison and failure cases are below. Disclosure.
Why two Kado listings carry almost the same name
Search "Kado portable monitor" and you'll meet at least two 15.6″ FHD listings with nearly identical titles, photos, and price band. They are not the same product. We know because we reviewed them separately — once in April 2025 and again in February 2026 — and the spec sheets diverged.
The practical risk is simple: you can read a review of the higher-contrast unit, click through, and receive the reverse-charging unit instead — or vice-versa. The contrast ratio is different. The refresh rate is different. The power behaviour is different. The reliable way to know what you're buying is the title itself: look for "75Hz 100% sRGB" (the higher-contrast unit) or "45W Reverse Charging" (the reverse-charge unit). Read that phrase before you commit — everything downstream depends on which one arrives.
Unit A vs Unit B, side by side
Specs below are manufacturer-listed on the respective Amazon pages at the time of writing; listings change, so confirm the current listing title before purchase.
Manufacturer listing photo for the 75Hz / 100% sRGB unit — confirm the title matches before buying.
Listing photo for the 45W Reverse Charging unit. The two listings share near-identical titles — match the phrase before buying.
| Spec | Unit A · 75Hz / 100% sRGB | Unit B · 45W Reverse Charging |
|---|---|---|
| Contrast | 3000:1 Deeper blacks; better for dark-scene media | 2000:1 Still above the 1000:1 IPS norm |
| Refresh | 75Hz | 60Hz |
| Response | 12ms | 12ms |
| Colour gamut | 100% sRGB | not published No sRGB / NTSC % on the listing |
| Power | 5.5W draw Low load on laptop battery over USB-C | 45W reverse charge Plus 5.5W panel draw; the 45W is output to your laptop |
| Mounting | 100×100 VESA · 180° kickstand | 100×100 VESA · 180° kickstand |
| Brightness | not published | not published |
| Weight | not published | not published |
Both units are 15.6″ FHD 1920×1080 IPS with a matte finish, built-in speakers, and broad device compatibility. The differences above are the ones that change the buying decision.
Two numbers Kado never publishes — and how to judge them yourself
Neither Kado 15.6″ listing publishes a brightness (nits) figure or a weight, and the 45W Reverse Charging unit additionally omits a colour-gamut percentage. We don't assign numbers we can't verify, so we won't quote a brightness or weight here. What the gaps cost you: without a nits figure you can't judge bright-room or outdoor readability before buying; without a weight you can't plan bag load against a monitor that does publish one.
- On day one, open a plain white document at full brightness.
- Sit with a bright window behind you: if the text stays clearly readable, indoor and café use is fine.
- Now face the window with daylight on the screen: if it washes out, treat it as an indoor-only panel.
The matte (anti-glare) finish — confirmed in both of our reviews — helps in mixed lighting, but it's no substitute for a high nits rating. If a window-side or outdoor desk is your main use, choose a monitor that publishes its brightness.
- Kado does publish dimensions: roughly 13.9 × 8.2 × 0.36 in — slim, but no weight.
- A 15.6″ FHD portable of this build sits in the ~1.5–2.0 lb (0.7–0.9 kg) band typical for the class — a rough sanity-check, not a Kado spec.
- Confirm on arrival: weigh it, or check the "item weight" under the Amazon shipping details, or ask the seller before buying.
We list a category range only so you can plan a bag; we do not claim it as Kado's measured weight, because the manufacturer doesn't publish one.
For indoor desk and café use the missing nits matter less; for window-side or outdoor work they're decisive. See how we weigh disclosed vs. undisclosed specs in our review methodology.
The connection decides which Kado is right — and whether either is
A portable monitor only works if your host can send video to it. Over a single USB-C cable, that requires DisplayPort Alt Mode on the host port; many laptops have it, some budget and work-issued machines don't. A host that only outputs HDMI uses the monitor's Mini-HDMI input and a separate power source. The two units then split on power:
- Unit A (5.5W draw): bus-powered from the laptop over USB-C. Minimal battery impact — good for working untethered. It does not charge your laptop.
- Unit B (45W reverse charging): plug a wall adapter into the monitor and it passes up to 45W of Power Delivery back to your laptop over the same USB-C cable that carries video. 45W comfortably sustains ultrabooks and many thin-and-light laptops; machines that need 65W+ (gaming laptops, workstations) will hold their charge rather than gain it.
75Hz / 100% sRGB unit: the monitor sips ~5.5W from your laptop — minimal battery hit, but it won't charge it. Pick the 45W unit above to see reverse charging.
Four buyers who should look elsewhere
Before any recommendation: if you're one of these, neither Kado is the right call.
Five things you only learn after reviewing Kado twice
We assessed Kado in April 2025 and again in February 2026. These are the findings that recur across both reviews — the details that don't show up in a quick spec scan:
The HDMI input is a Mini-HDMI port. If your host is HDMI-only, a standard HDMI cable won't fit — you need a Mini-HDMI-to-HDMI cable or adapter. This is the single most common "why won't it connect" surprise, and the cable rarely comes in the box.
Both units use a matte, anti-glare panel that cuts reflections near windows and under overhead lighting. It doesn't replace a published nits figure, but in practice it makes the unknown brightness less punishing for indoor and café use than a glossy panel would be.
Kado backs both units with a 1-year warranty. Several competitors offer 2–3 years. For a device that travels in a bag and gets plugged and unplugged daily, that shorter coverage window is a real, recurring mark against it.
On the 45W unit, charging isn't magic: you plug a 45W-or-higher wall adapter into the monitor, then one USB-C cable to the laptop carries video one way and power the other. No wall adapter, no reverse charging — and 65W+ laptops only hold their charge rather than gain it.
Neither listing mentions flicker-free or blue-light filtering. Most people won't notice on a second screen used in bursts; if you stare at a portable for eight-hour days, it's worth weighing against monitors that document those features.
These observations come from our own published April 2025 and February 2026 assessments of the listings — not from a new bench test. Read the full method in our methodology.
How it stacks up against two portables we've scored
Most Kado shoppers are cross-shopping other budget 15.6″ portables. Here's the honest picture against two we've reviewed in full — the Acer PM161Q and the KYY 15.6″. Kado wins on some axes and loses on others; we show both.
| Spec that decides it | Kado · 75Hz/100% sRGB | Kado · 45W Reverse | Acer PM161Q | KYY 15.6″ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Published brightness | not published | not published | ~170–220 nits | 300 nits |
| Colour gamut | 100% sRGB | not published | 65% sRGB | 65% sRGB |
| Refresh rate | 75Hz | 60Hz | 60Hz | 60Hz |
| Charges your laptop | no | yes — 45W | no | no |
| Published weight | not published | not published | ~2.45 lb | ~1.7 lb |
| Our editorial score | 7.6/10 | qualitative | 9.1/9.3 | 8.5/10 |
The honest read: on paper Kado actually leads on colour-gamut claim and refresh, and the 45W unit offers charging nothing else here does. It scores below the Acer and KYY for one reason — those two publish the brightness and weight you can verify, and Kado doesn't. If transparency and verified brightness matter most, the Acer or KYY is the safer buy; if gamut, refresh or reverse charging is your priority and indoor use is the plan, Kado earns its place. Compare all four side by side in our comparison hub.
If you're not disqualified above, here's the call
How this assessment was produced: analysis of manufacturer-published specifications, our prior review record, and category compatibility logic — per our methodology, and explicitly not a new bench test.
A competent budget second screen — if you respect the gaps
Strong listed contrast and very low power draw make Unit A a sensible indoor productivity pick at its price. The score is held below the top tier by two undisclosed specs (brightness, weight) and a productivity-only response time — not by anything it does badly.
Unit A · 75Hz / 100% sRGB — scored 7.6/10
Buy it if you want the higher-contrast, low-power unit for indoor desk and café work and you don't need verified brightness or colour. Its 3000:1 contrast and 5.5W draw are its real advantages over the typical 1000:1 / 10–22W portable.
Unit B · 45W Reverse Charging qualitative verdict — not separately scored
A conditional yes for one specific buyer: the traveller who wants the monitor to charge a ≤45W USB-C laptop through a single cable. Outside that case its lower 2000:1 contrast, 60Hz, and missing gamut figure make Unit A the stronger default. We don't assign Unit B a separate numeric score in this audit.
How the 7.6 is built (Unit A · 75Hz / 100% sRGB)
weighted 7.6 / 10As an Amazon Associate, ScreenExtendersHub earns from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. Editorial decisions are independent — see our full disclosure.
What to expect across hosts
Questions buyers actually ask
More host-specific cases live in our compatibility FAQ.
Independent Research Analyst, Portable Productivity Systems ↗
Boniface Musembi evaluates portable monitors the way they're actually used — carried between desks, cafés, and client sites — judging each by how it behaves in real workflows rather than on spec sheets alone. His assessments draw on independent, published research and a documented review methodology, and disclose what the manufacturer leaves out.