USB Cable Types Explained: USB-A, USB-B, USB-C, Micro, and Lightning Compared (2026)
Mar 23, 2026
USB cables have evolved through four generations and at least a dozen connector shapes. Using the wrong cable means slow charging, failed data transfers, or damaged ports. This guide covers every USB type in current use, what the markings mean, and how to pick the right cable for every device.
USB connector types at a glance
| Connector | Shape | Reversible | Common devices |
|---|---|---|---|
| USB-A | Flat rectangle | No | Computers, chargers, hubs, flash drives, keyboards |
| USB-B | Square with beveled top | No | Printers, scanners, audio interfaces, DACs |
| Mini-USB | Small trapezoid | No | Older cameras, GPS units, older controllers (legacy) |
| Micro-USB | Thin trapezoid | No | Older Android phones, Kindles, budget electronics |
| USB-C | Rounded oval | Yes | Modern phones, laptops, tablets, Nintendo Switch, everything new |
| Lightning | Thin flat (Apple) | Yes | iPhone (pre-15), AirPods, older iPads |
USB speed standards
| Standard | Marketing name | Max speed | Connector |
|---|---|---|---|
| USB 2.0 | Hi-Speed | 480 Mbps | A, B, Mini, Micro, C |
| USB 3.2 Gen 1 | SuperSpeed 5Gbps | 5 Gbps | A (blue), C |
| USB 3.2 Gen 2 | SuperSpeed 10Gbps | 10 Gbps | A, C |
| USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 | SuperSpeed 20Gbps | 20 Gbps | C only |
| USB4 | USB4 | 40-80 Gbps | C only |
Important: The connector shape does not determine speed. A USB-C cable can be USB 2.0 (480 Mbps) or USB4 (80 Gbps). Always check the cable spec, not just the plug shape.
USB-C: not all cables are equal
USB-C is the connector, not the standard. This is the single biggest source of confusion. A cheap USB-C cable from a gas station might only support USB 2.0 speeds (480 Mbps) and 15W charging. A quality USB-C cable rated for USB 3.2 Gen 2 supports 10 Gbps data and up to 240W USB Power Delivery.
What to look for on USB-C cables:
- Data speed rating: USB 2.0, 3.2 Gen 1 (5Gbps), 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps), or USB4
- Power delivery: 60W, 100W, or 240W (EPR)
- E-marker chip: Required for cables supporting >60W power delivery or >5Gbps data. Without an e-marker, the cable defaults to USB 2.0 speed and 60W max.
- Length: USB 3.2 Gen 2 is limited to ~1m passive. Longer runs need active cables or Thunderbolt-rated cables.
Charging: watts matter more than amps
Charging speed is determined by watts (W), not just amps. Watts = Volts × Amps. USB Power Delivery (PD) negotiates voltage and current between the charger and device. A 65W USB-C PD charger delivering 20V × 3.25A charges a laptop in half the time of a 15W charger delivering 5V × 3A, even though both are USB-C.
Common cable mistakes
- Charge-only cables: Some cheap cables have only power wires and no data lines. They charge but cannot transfer files.
- USB 2.0 cables for external drives: Your USB 3.2 SSD will crawl at 480 Mbps if connected with a USB 2.0 cable. Always match cable speed to device speed.
- Non-compliant USB-C cables: Poorly made cables with incorrect resistors can damage USB-A ports, phones, and laptops. Buy from reputable sources with USB-IF certification.
Shop USB cables
- USB cables (USB-A, USB-B, USB-C, Micro, Mini)
- AV cables and adapters
- Network patch cables
- Power cables
Need USB cables in bulk for IT deployments, retail, or kitting? Request volume pricing — we stock USB-A to C, C to C, and USB-B printer cables in lengths from 3ft to 15ft.
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