Quick Answer

Match the dock to the laptop port, not the price tag. A basic USB-C hub runs R400-R900, a 65W-100W power-delivery dock with HDMI 2.1 sits around R1,500-R3,000, and a Thunderbolt 4 dock driving dual 4K monitors lands at R4,000-R7,000. Sa buyers rarely need more than a 100W PD dock.

Spend Less, Notice More

The upgrade most SA buyers feel is the jump from a bare hub to a powered dock: one cable charges the laptop and drives a monitor, keyboard and storage at once. That convenience is worth the R1,500-R3,000 over a R400-R900 hub. A Thunderbolt 4 dock only pays back if you genuinely run dual 4K monitors or fast external SSDs daily.

Check the Port Before the Dock

A dock cannot add features the laptop port lacks. To drive an external display the USB-C port must support DisplayPort Alt Mode; to charge it must support USB Power Delivery; for full speed and dual 4K it needs Thunderbolt 4 or USB4. Many budget and older laptops have USB-C that is data-only, which means a Thunderbolt dock will run, but at hub speeds. Find your laptop model's USB-C spec, then buy to match.

Compare docking stations at Evetech by PD wattage and display outputs, and pick a 100W dock unless you truly run dual 4K monitors.

FAQ

Will any docking station charge my laptop?

Only if both the dock supports USB Power Delivery and your laptop's USB-C port accepts PD charging. A 100W PD dock (R1,500-R3,000) covers most ultrabooks; high-wattage gaming laptops still need their original charger for full speed.

Do I need Thunderbolt 4 or is USB-C enough?

USB-C with DisplayPort Alt Mode is enough for one 4K display and basic ports. Thunderbolt 4 or USB4 (R4,000+) is only worth it for dual 4K monitors or fast external SSDs.

Why doesn't my external monitor work through the dock?

Usually because the laptop's USB-C port is data-only and lacks DisplayPort Alt Mode. Check your laptop spec sheet; if it has no Alt Mode, no dock can output video from that port.