What you need to know
- Recently, the World Power Consortium held a Qi Off-Cycle meeting at Xiaomi’s HQ in Beijing, China.
- Xiaomi and several more companies were there to discuss a new Qi2 charging standard: 50W.
- The major talks have concluded, but there’s more work to be done, and it’s been reported that Qi2 50W might not debut until 2028.
Times are changing, and it looks like the World Power Consortium (WPC) wants to upgrade Qi2 to match what consumers are looking for.
It was reported by ITHome (Chinese) that the WPC’s Qi Off-Cycle meeting at Xiaomi’s HQ in Beijing, China, was to discuss the future of the wireless charging standard (via 9to5Google). Specifically, Xiaomi is spearheading the future of Qi2 by chasing a 50W charging standard. The publication reports that Xiaomi is focused primarily on “small inductance, low voltage, high power solutions” (machine-translated). Each of these is said to directly influence safety/charging efficiency, coil module loss, and more.
In short, what this new 50W direction wants to solve is “high-powered wireless charging.”
The publication states that the meeting featured Xiaomi, as well as “over 20 companies” that have been working alongside it and the WPC to advance the Qi2 wireless standard. The companies met in Beijing to talk about Qi2’s 50W “interoperability verification” and to highlight the prototype testing stage. These companies have been encouraged to continue working together to push 50W through, so the market (and consumers) can see it in their future phones.
However, there’s nothing official just yet. Right now, what Xiaomi and its partners have been working on is just the groundwork. It’s been reported that following Xiaomi’s partnerships with domestic companies, Qi2 50W could be a reality by 2028.
25W was almost a year ago
Android Central’s Take
It’s all about giving users options, right? But if you see that wired charging is still the best route, why would you even look or think about a wireless charger? Xiaomi and its partners and other companies involved with the WPC and Qi2 see this issue and are actively working to solve it. It’s pretty clear that this will take some time, but it’s probably worth it.
Let’s not forget that in July 2025, the WPC announced Qi2 v2.2.1. The version numbers equates to the wireless charging we have today: 25W. The WPC highlighted this new version as being “more powerful” than the original Qi2. A primary critique from consumers about wireless charging is its speeds. They’re slow. The latest 25W version aimed to solve that, but it hasn’t quite nailed that yet.
Charging speeds were previously stuck at 15W, and now they’re 25W. However, if Xiaomi has anything to say about it, things won’t stay there for long. It’s not satisfied with 25W charging, and consumers aren’t either. At the time, iPhones were among the first to bring this to its consumers, with Android makers adopting it soon after. There’s a chance we’ll see a similar occurrence whenever Qi2 50W arrives.
The WPC was also confident that even more Android phones would see Qi2, and that’s thanks to Google and Samsung.


