Hermès launched the Grand Paddock bag in the United States this week, embedding Apple's MagSafe wireless charging inside a $5,150 calfskin case. The bag powers an iPhone and an Apple Watch simultaneously through a proprietary magnetic puck system. The release arrives as U.S. luxury-tech accessories post double-digit growth while the broader consumer tech sector passes $527 billion, positioning the Grand Paddock as a test of whether affluent buyers will pay a premium for integrated charging.

The full kit costs $5,150 and includes the bag plus a Paddock Duo charger, two magnetic pads that mirror Apple's discontinued MagSafe Duo.
Inside, molded slots secure the charger, a removable power block, a USB-C cable, and a dedicated strap compartment for the watch. A slimmer Paddock Solo model retails for $4,650, and the Duo charger sells separately for $1,750.

Buyers must supply their own power adapter and charging cable. Neither bundle includes the USB-C wall charger or cable required to energize the system.
Buyers also select an Apple Watch strap that fits the bag's compartment, ensuring compact travel storage.
The Grand Paddock ships with dedicated slots for every component, anchoring the charger and cable inside leather-lined cavities. The design prevents tangling and keeps hardware flush against the bag's interior walls. Hermès uses Togo calfskin treated to resist scratches, a material the house has refined for decades in its Birkin and Kelly lines.
Market watchers expect the launch to prompt competing luxury houses to embed wireless charging in their leather goods. If the Grand Paddock gains traction, affluent consumers may shift how they manage daily charging routines, folding tech maintenance into high-status accessories rather than treating it as a separate task. That shift could redefine the luxury-tech boundary and accelerate partnerships between fashion brands and hardware makers.


















