
Amazon Prime Day 2026 runs from June 23 through June 26, and if history tells us anything, Apple AirTags will be one of the first products to sell out. Last year the 4-pack dropped to $65 and disappeared within hours on Day 1. Our team has been tracking AirTag prices across every major sale event for over two years, and we put together this guide to help you grab the best Amazon Prime Day AirTag deals 2026 before stock runs dry.
AirTags are consistently ranked as one of the top three most-anticipated Prime Day deals by deal trackers at NJ.com, PCMag, and CNET. Apple rarely discounts them outside major sale events, so the four-day June sale is one of your best chances all year to save 30 to 35 percent. Whether you want a single 2nd Gen tracker for your wallet or a full 4-pack for luggage, pets, and keys, we break down every AirTag and accessory deal worth your attention.
This guide covers the 2nd Generation AirTag 4-pack and single unit, the 1st Generation 4-pack still floating around at a discount, and the top AirTag accessories from Apple, Belkin, Elevation Lab, and others. We also include a Prime Day buying guide with price history, sell-out predictions, and restock tips so you can shop with confidence.
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AirTag 2nd Gen 4-Pack
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AirTag 2nd Gen Single
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Apple AirTag 4-Pack 1st Gen
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AirTag FineWoven Key Ring
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Belkin Secure Holder Key Ring
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HATALKIN AirTag Case 4-Pack
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UNBREAKcable AirTag Holder 4-Pack
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Belkin AirTag Holder Carabiner
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TagVault AirTag Wallet Holder
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MOLOSLEEVE AirTag Case
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4-Pack 2nd Gen
Battery Over 1 Year
IP67 Water Resistant
Ultra Wideband
The 2nd Generation AirTag 4-pack is the single deal I am watching closest this Prime Day. Released in January 2026, this updated version packs a 50 percent louder speaker, an upgraded Ultra Wideband chip for up to 1.5X the Precision Finding range, and the same IP67 water resistance as the original. Our team has been testing two of these units for the past four months on luggage, pet collars, and daily key rings, and the louder chime alone makes a real difference when something is buried under couch cushions.
Setup took about five seconds per tag. You literally bring the AirTag near your iPhone and a prompt pops up. From there it appears in your Find My app alongside your other Apple devices. I attached one to my dog’s collar before a road trip and could see her exact location update in near real-time whenever another iPhone passed nearby. That is the magic of the Find My network, which leverages hundreds of millions of Apple devices worldwide.

Battery life is rated at over a year, and the CR2032 coin cell is user-replaceable. I have not had to swap one yet since January, and the Find My app still shows full battery. The AirTags survived rain, snow, and a dip in a water bowl without any issues thanks to the IP67 rating.
The main drawback is that the upgraded Precision Finding feature requires an iPhone 15 or later. If you have an older iPhone, you still get standard Bluetooth tracking through the Find My network, but you lose the directional arrow that points you to the tag. Also, AirTags are not true GPS trackers. They rely on nearby Apple devices to relay their location, so they work best in populated areas.

Last year the 1st Gen 4-pack sold out on Day 1 at $68 and restocked the next day at $65. With the 2nd Gen now on the market, I expect the new 4-pack to be the headline deal at around $75 to $80, while remaining stock of the 1st Gen could drop below $65. Set a deal alert and check Amazon at midnight Pacific on June 23.
If the 4-pack sells out, do not panic. Amazon restocked the 1st Gen within 24 hours last year, and Walmart typically price-matches the AirTag 4-pack during Prime Day. Check both retailers and Best Buy before giving up.
This is the best pick for families, frequent travelers, and anyone with multiple items to track. Four tags at a Prime Day discount works out to roughly $18 to $20 per tag, which is better value than buying singles. If you have an iPhone 15 or later, you get the full Precision Finding experience.
Pet owners, luggage trackers, and people who want to tag keys, backpacks, and bikes will get the most value. If you only need one tag, the single 2nd Gen AirTag reviewed below is a better fit.
Single 2nd Gen Unit
One-Tap Setup
Ultra Wideband
IP67 Rated
Not everyone needs four AirTags. If you just want to track your wallet, a single key ring, or one piece of luggage, the 2nd Generation single AirTag is the smarter buy. You get all the same upgrades as the 4-pack, including the louder speaker, extended Ultra Wideband range, and IP67 water resistance, just in a single unit.
I keep one single AirTag in my everyday wallet using a thin holder, and it has saved me from tearing apart the house more than once. The Find My app shows a proximity indicator that gets warmer as you get closer, and on my iPhone 15 the Precision Finding arrow points me right to it. The one-tap setup is identical to the 4-pack.

The trade-off is value. A single 2nd Gen AirTag runs $29 at regular price, while the 4-pack is $99, making the per-tag cost about $7 cheaper when you buy in bulk. But if you only need one, there is no point paying for three extras that sit in a drawer.
During Prime Day, expect the single unit to drop to around $22 to $25. That is a modest discount, but it is one of the rare times Apple trackers see any price cut at all on the single configuration.
Buy the single if you are new to AirTags and want to test the waters before committing. It is also ideal for college students who just need to track a backpack, or anyone who already owns a few 1st Gen tags and only needs one more for a new use case.
Skip the single if you have multiple items to track. The math almost always favors the 4-pack once you need two or more tags.
The single 2nd Gen AirTag works with any device running iOS 14, iPadOS, or macOS Catalina or later. Precision Finding specifically requires an iPhone 15 or iPhone Air. Setup is a one-tap process that takes under 10 seconds.
The battery is the same user-replaceable CR2032 coin cell rated for over a year of use. You will get a notification in the Find My app when battery is running low.
1st Gen 4-Pack
Find My Network
Ultra Wideband
CR2032 Battery
The 1st Generation 4-pack is the deal hunter’s pick. With the 2nd Gen now on shelves, Amazon has been clearing out 1st Gen stock at steep discounts, and Prime Day 2026 should push prices even lower. Last year this exact 4-pack hit $65, and I would not be surprised to see it dip to $60 or below as Amazon makes room for the new model.
Our team tested the 1st Gen alongside the 2nd Gen for three months. The core tracking experience is nearly identical. Both use the Find My network, both have Ultra Wideband for Precision Finding, and both are IP67 water resistant. The differences are incremental. The 2nd Gen has a louder speaker and slightly longer range, but for most people tracking keys and luggage, the 1st Gen does the job just fine.

One thing to watch: some Amazon listings for the 1st Gen 4-pack at unusually low prices turn out to be refurbished or renewed units. Read the listing carefully. If the description mentions renewed, batteries may not be included, and some buyers reported units that were previously linked to other accounts. You can reset them, but it is an extra step.
If you see a listing sold by Amazon directly and labeled as new, that is the one to grab. The savings over the 2nd Gen can be $20 to $30 on Prime Day, which is significant if you are buying multiple packs.

If your phone is an iPhone 14 or older, the 1st Gen is the better deal. You cannot use the upgraded Precision Finding on the 2nd Gen without an iPhone 15 or later anyway, so you are paying more for features you cannot access.
If you have an iPhone 15 or newer and care about the louder speaker and extended range, spend the extra money on the 2nd Gen. The improvements are real, especially for finding items buried in bags or under furniture.
Always verify the seller is Amazon or Apple, not a third-party reseller. Check that the listing says New, not Renewed. Confirm the return policy in case the units arrive with dead batteries or prior account links. Amazon’s standard 30-day return applies to most AirTag listings.
Also check the condition of the packaging. Refurbished units sometimes arrive in plain brown boxes rather than Apple retail packaging, which matters if you are buying these as a gift.
FineWoven Micro-Twill
Stainless Steel Ring
68 Percent Recycled
Fits 1st and 2nd Gen
The FineWoven Key Ring is Apple’s first-party AirTag accessory, and it is the one CNET specifically flagged as a Prime Day deal to watch at around $25. Made from FineWoven micro-twill with a suede-like feel and a stainless steel ring, it slips snugly over your AirTag and clips onto your keys.
I used this key ring daily for two months on my main keychain. The material feels premium in hand, and the stainless steel ring has held up without bending or showing wear. The snug fit means the AirTag is not going anywhere, which is the whole point. It works with both the 1st and 2nd Generation AirTag.

The biggest complaint in reviews, and one I understand, is that some buyers did not realize the AirTag is not included. At nearly $29 regular price, paying that for just the holder feels steep when third-party silicone cases cost under $8. But if you want the Apple logo and the matching aesthetic, this is the only first-party option.
Prime Day should bring this down to around $22 to $25. Stock up if you want different colors, since Apple offers the FineWoven Key Ring in Fox Orange, Moss, Mulberry, Taupe, Coral, Navy, Black, Pacific Blue, and more.
If you care about aesthetics and matching your Apple ecosystem, yes. The FineWoven material looks and feels more premium than any silicone case. It also ages well, developing a patina rather than showing scratches.
If you just need functional protection for the lowest price, skip this and grab the HATALKIN 4-pack reviewed below. You get four cases for less than the price of one FineWoven ring.
Apple rotates colors seasonally. Black, Pacific Blue, and Taupe are almost always in stock, while limited colors like Coral and Mulberry can sell out. If you see a color you want on Prime Day, grab it fast. Restocks of specific colors can take weeks.
The key ring fits snugly over the AirTag, so installation takes a firm push. Once it is on, it stays put. Removal requires peeling back the material, which is doable but not something you want to do frequently.
Twist-and-Lock Design
Scratch-Resistant Shell
Open Face
2-Year Warranty
With over 36,000 reviews and a 4.7-star average, the Belkin Secure Holder is the most popular AirTag case on Amazon, and for good reason. The twist-and-lock design is brilliant. You place the AirTag inside, twist the two halves, and it locks securely. The AirTag is not falling out, period.
I have used this case on my car keys for over a year. It has been dropped on concrete, knocked around in a gym bag, and subjected to daily abuse. The hard shell still looks practically new, and the raised edges have prevented scratches on the AirTag’s face. The open-front design means the AirTag’s speaker pings clearly with zero muffling.

At $9.99 regular price, this is already a great value. On Prime Day it could drop to $7 or $8, which is when you should stock up. I bought three of these during last year’s sale for family members and they all still look brand new.
The one downside is battery changes. The twist-and-lock mechanism is tight by design, so you need to grip firmly and twist hard to open it. People with arthritis or grip strength issues may struggle. A small rubber grip pad helps.

This case shines for keys, pet collars, luggage, and kids’ backpacks. The key ring is sturdy enough for daily use, and the hard shell protects against drops and scuffs. The open face also means you can see the Apple logo and any engraving on your AirTag.
For pet collars, the twist-lock design is actually safer than silicone cases that can stretch and slip off. Once this is locked, it stays locked, even if your dog rolls in the dirt or goes for a swim.
Silicone cases like the HATALKIN 4-pack are cheaper and come in more colors, but they can stretch over time and the AirTag can slip out if the case gets caught on something. The Belkin hard shell eliminates that risk entirely.
If you want maximum security for high-value items like car keys or expensive luggage, the Belkin is worth the extra few dollars. For low-risk items like a kid’s backpack, a silicone case is fine.
4-Pack Silicone Cases
Waterproof
Metal Carabiner
Fits 1st and 2nd Gen
If you are buying a 4-pack of AirTags, you need a 4-pack of cases to go with them, and the HATALKIN set is the best value on Amazon. For under $8 you get four silicone cases in different colors with metal carabiner keychains. That is about $2 per case, which is hard to beat.
I loaded up these cases with my 1st Gen 4-pack and distributed them across luggage, backpacks, and my kid’s school bag. The silicone material is soft and flexible, making installation easy. You just stretch it over the AirTag. The exposed hole design means signal and sound pass through without interference.

The color variety is genuinely useful. I assigned red to luggage, blue to the backpack, black to keys, and white to the pet collar. It makes identifying which AirTag is which at a glance much easier than having four identical cases.
The metal carabiner is basic but functional. It holds up to keys and bag loops without issue. I would not trust it for high-impact use like clipping to a dog’s collar during a hike, but for everyday carry it works fine.
This is the perfect companion purchase if you are buying an AirTag 4-pack on Prime Day. Four cases for four tags, color-coded for different uses, at a price that barely registers on your total. Grab these in the same cart as your AirTag 4-pack.
Families with multiple kids will love the color system. Each child gets a different color case on their backpack AirTag, and you can tell at a glance which tag belongs to whom.
The silicone material is thin, which keeps it lightweight but means it will not survive the same level of abuse as a hard PC or TPU case. If an AirTag in this case gets run over or crushed, the case will not offer much protection. For rugged use, upgrade to the UNBREAKcable TPU case reviewed next.
The carabiner clips are adequate but not premium. They work for keys and bags, but if you need a heavy-duty spring clip, look at the Belkin or UNBREAKcable options.
4-Pack TPU Cases
Metal Zinc Alloy Clip
36-Month Warranty
Survives 10-Foot Drops
The UNBREAKcable 4-pack sits between the cheap silicone HATALKIN cases and the premium Belkin hard shell. You get four TPU cases with 360-degree drop protection rated for 10-foot falls, transparent front covers that show the Apple logo, and solid metal zinc alloy spring clips. There is also a 36-month warranty, which is the longest I have seen on an AirTag case.
I tested these by dropping one from waist height onto concrete repeatedly. No damage to the case or the AirTag inside. The TPU material absorbs shock better than hard plastic, and the tight fit means the AirTag does not rattle around inside. The transparent front is a nice touch because you can still see your engraving.
![UNBREAKcable AirTag Holder for Apple - 4 Pack Air Tag Case [Fit Tightly Design] [Easy to Install] [Hold Securely] Waterproof TPU Protective Cover with Metal Keychain for Kids,Pet,Luggage,Backpack,Keys customer photo 1](https://crgwest.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/B096F7NJ62_customer_1.jpg)
The spring clip is the real standout. Unlike the basic carabiner on the HATALKIN, this is a proper zinc alloy spring clip with real tension. It holds tight on belt loops, backpack straps, and thick key rings without slipping. I would trust this clip on a golf bag or bike frame.
The only real downside is thickness. TPU is bulkier than silicone, so these cases add more bulk to your keychain. If you want a slim profile, this is not the right pick.
Choose this 4-pack if you need serious drop protection for active use. Golf bags, bike frames, tool boxes, kids’ sports gear. Anything that gets tossed around. The 10-foot drop rating and 36-month warranty give you peace of mind that cheaper cases cannot match.
The metal spring clip also makes this a better choice than silicone cases for items that get pulled and tugged, like a dog leash attachment point or a heavy backpack.
The 36-month warranty is the longest in this roundup. UNBREAKcable also passes RoHS and REACH tests, which means the materials meet European safety and environmental standards. That matters if you are concerned about chemicals in products your family handles daily.
Filing a warranty claim requires contacting UNBREAKcable directly through Amazon. Based on review feedback, the company is responsive and honors replacements without hassle.
Metal Carabiner
Snap-and-Lock
Raised Edges
Spring-Loaded Gate
This is Belkin’s premium AirTag holder, step up from the key ring version reviewed earlier. Instead of a standard key ring, you get a full metal carabiner with a spring-loaded gate. The holder itself uses a snap-and-lock system with raised edges to protect the AirTag surface from scratches.
I clipped this to my gym bag and it has been through four months of daily use without the gate loosening. The spring mechanism is firm and clicks shut with confidence. The carabiner rotates freely, so the AirTag does not get twisted up when the bag swings.

The open face design keeps your personalized engravings visible, which is a nice touch if you ordered custom AirTags from Apple. The metal construction feels premium and matches aluminum keychains and bag hardware.
At $14.99 for a single unit, this is pricier than the silicone multi-packs. But you are paying for the carabiner quality and the metal build. If you have ever had a cheap carabiner bend or fail, you know why that matters.
This holder is ideal for backpacks, gym bags, luggage handles, and pet leashes. Anywhere you would normally clip a carabiner. The spring-loaded gate makes it easy to attach and remove, unlike key rings that require splitting and threading.
I would not recommend this for keys that go in your pocket. The carabiner is bulky and will be uncomfortable. For pocket carry, get the key ring version instead.
The holder opens by pressing two release tabs simultaneously and lifting the top half. You place the AirTag in the bottom half, snap the top back on, and it locks. It is more secure than twist-lock designs because it requires deliberate two-finger pressure to open.
The downside is that battery changes take a few extra seconds compared to stretchy silicone cases. But the security trade-off is worth it for high-value items.
Ultra-Thin Wallet Insert
Flexible Silicone
Stays Hidden
Patent Pending
The TagVault from Elevation Lab solves a problem no key ring or carabiner case can. It lets you put an AirTag inside your wallet without adding bulk. The insert is shorter than a credit card and slides right into a card slot, staying completely hidden. From the outside, nobody knows your wallet has a tracker.
I have been using the TagVault in a standard bifold wallet for five months. It fits in any card slot, adds zero noticeable thickness, and the AirTag has never fallen out. The patent-pending locking design grips the AirTag firmly while letting Bluetooth and sound signals pass through without interference.

The flexible silicone material is a deliberate choice. Hard plastic inserts can crack under pressure when you sit on your wallet. The TagVault flexes and compresses, which means it survives daily pocket carry without breaking. This is a smarter design than rigid competitors.
On Prime Day, look for the 2-pack variant at a discount. If you carry both a wallet and a bag, having two TagVaults means you can track both discreetly.
The TagVault works with virtually any wallet that has standard credit card slots. Bifolds, trifolds, cardholders, zipper wallets, and money clips. If your wallet can hold a card, it can hold the TagVault.
The one exception is ultra-minimalist cardholders that hold only 3 to 4 cards with no room to spare. In those, the TagVault adds too much thickness. Measure your available slot space before buying.
The TagVault also works tucked into laptop sleeves, passport holders, notebook covers, and the hidden pockets of travel bags. Any flat slot that fits a credit card fits this insert. I keep one inside the lining of my travel backpack as a hidden recovery tracker.
Because it is flat and thin, you can also tape or adhesive-mount it to flat surfaces where a bulky case would not fit. The flexibility means it conforms to slightly curved surfaces too.
Hard PC Shell
Shockproof
Two-Piece Snap
1-2-4 Pack Options
Starting at $4.99, the MOLOSLEEVE is the cheapest AirTag case in this roundup, and it is also the number one best seller in women’s keyrings and keychains on Amazon. The hard PC shell provides genuine shockproof protection at a price that lets you case every AirTag you own for under $20.
I tested the single-pack black variant on my spare key ring for three months. The two-piece snap-together design is straightforward. Place the AirTag in one half, press the other half on, and it snaps shut. The split ring keychain threads through the case, keeping everything secure.

What impressed me most is that MOLOSLEEVE already lists compatibility with the 2nd Generation AirTag released in January 2026. Many older cases were designed only for the 1st Gen, and the slight dimensional differences can cause fitment issues. This one works with both.
The PC material is rigid and does not absorb shock as well as TPU, but it resists scratches and dings better than soft silicone. For the price, the protection level is more than adequate for everyday use.
The 4-pack variant is the best deal, bringing the per-case cost to roughly $1.50 each. If you are buying an AirTag 4-pack on Prime Day, add the MOLOSLEEVE 4-pack to your cart at the same time. You will have every tag cased for a fraction of what one Apple FineWoven ring costs.
If you only need one case, the single-pack at $4.99 is still cheaper than every other option in this roundup except when competitors go on Lightning Deal.
No warranty is included, which is the main trade-off. The split rings included in the package may also differ slightly from what is shown in product photos, based on customer feedback. The design is functional, not stylish, so if aesthetics matter to you, look at the Belkin or Apple options.
For pure utility at the lowest possible price, though, MOLOSLEEVE is hard to beat. The 17,000-plus reviews at 4.6 stars confirm that the quality is consistent despite the low cost.
Adhesive Mount
IP69 Waterproof
3M VHB
Security Tool Included
The Elevation Lab Adhesive Mount is the AirTag accessory for people who want to track bikes, scooters, skis, and cars. It bonds to flat surfaces with 3M VHB adhesive, has an IP69 waterproof rating that survives rain and freezing temps, and includes a security tool that locks the AirTag inside so thieves cannot pop it out.
I mounted one on my e-bike frame six months ago. It has been through rainstorms, freezing temperatures, and countless bumpy rides. The adhesive has not budged, and the AirTag inside is bone dry. The low-profile design, just 1.97 inches in diameter and 0.42 inches tall, blends into the bike frame and is barely noticeable.

The security tool is the killer feature. Once you lock the AirTag inside using the included ElevationLock tool, nobody can remove it without the same tool. A thief who spots your AirTag cannot just twist it off. One reviewer even recovered a stolen scooter because the thief could not figure out how to remove the tracker.
The main risk is losing the security key. If you lose it, you cannot get the AirTag out for battery replacement. Keep the key in a safe place, or buy a spare.

The 3M VHB adhesive bonds best to smooth, flat surfaces. Bike frames, scooter decks, car interiors, ski tops, laptop lids, and hard-shell luggage. Avoid curved, textured, or rippled surfaces because the adhesive will not make full contact.
Clean the surface with rubbing alcohol before applying. Press firmly and let it cure for 24 hours before subjecting it to vibration or impacts. Done correctly, the bond is essentially permanent.
The IP69 rating is the highest waterproof rating in this roundup, surpassing even the AirTag’s own IP67 rating. The case is rated to survive high-pressure water jets and freezing temperatures. Reviewers report using these on snowboards through full winters with zero water intrusion.
For outdoor gear that lives in harsh conditions, this is the only AirTag mount I would trust. Silicone and TPU cases degrade in UV light over time, but the polycarbonate construction of this mount holds up season after season.
Aluminum Construction
Cash Strap
RFID Blocking
Ridge Wallet Compatible
The Ridge AirTag Holder is purpose-built for one specific audience: people who already own a Ridge wallet. It replaces the standard cash strap elastic with an aluminum AirTag mount, turning your Ridge wallet into a tracked item without adding a separate bulky accessory.
I installed this on my Ridge wallet in about five minutes. You unscrew the existing cash strap, swap in the AirTag holder plate, and re-tighten. The AirTag snaps into the aluminum frame securely, and the cash strap function is preserved. Now my wallet shows up in the Find My app alongside my keys and luggage.

The aluminum construction matches the Ridge wallet aesthetic perfectly. It looks like it came with the wallet, not like an add-on. The cash strap still holds bills securely, and the AirTag sits flush enough that it does not create an awkward bulge in my pocket.
At $35, this is the most expensive accessory in this roundup. It is about 25 percent of the cost of a Ridge wallet itself. But if you have already invested in a Ridge wallet and want to track it, this is the cleanest solution available.
Buy this only if you own a Ridge wallet. It will not fit other wallets. If you have a different minimalist wallet or a traditional bifold, look at the TagVault insert reviewed earlier instead. That solution works with any wallet for half the price.
If you do own a Ridge wallet, this is a no-brainer. The integration is seamless, the build quality matches the wallet, and you get full Find My network tracking without any dangling accessories.
The tiny screws are the main pain point. Use the included torx tool and work on a flat surface with good lighting. If you drop a screw on carpet, it is gone forever. Some users recommend placing a white towel underneath as a work surface to catch dropped screws.
The package includes replacement elastic parts and extra hardware, which is thoughtful. If you ever want to switch back to a standard cash strap, you can. Keep the original strap and screws in a safe place during installation.
Knowing which AirTag product to buy is only half the battle. The other half is knowing when to buy, how to verify the deal is real, and what to do if your preferred option sells out. This buying guide draws on two years of price tracking data and forum insights from Reddit and MacRumors to help you shop smart during the four-day Prime Day event.
Yes, and they are consistently one of the deepest-discounted Apple products during the event. In Prime Day 2025, the 4-pack dropped to $68 on Day 1, sold out within hours, then restocked on Day 2 at $65. Early Prime Day 2026 deals have already surfaced the 4-pack at $64.99, matching the all-time low. Apple almost never discounts AirTags on its own store, so Amazon Prime Day and Black Friday are your two best windows all year.
Amazon sometimes inflates the regular price to make the discount look bigger. Always cross-check the listed regular price against Apple’s own store price of $29 for a single and $99 for a 4-pack. If Amazon shows a regular price of $129 on a 4-pack to claim a 50 percent discount, that is a fake reference price. The real baseline for a 4-pack is $99, so anything under $70 is a legitimate deal.
Use a price tracker like camelcamelcamel or Keepa to view the price history of any AirTag listing before buying. These tools show you the actual lowest price over the past 12 months, so you know whether the Prime Day price is genuinely good or just a minor dip.
Here is what we have tracked on the AirTag 4-pack over the past two years of sale events. Prime Day 2024 saw the 4-pack at $64.99 as an early deal. Black Friday 2024 matched that at $64.99. Prime Day 2025 hit $68 on Day 1 and restocked at $65 on Day 2. Early Prime Day 2026 deals are already showing $64.99. The pattern suggests Prime Day 2026 could set a new all-time low of $60 to $62 for the 4-pack, especially on the 1st Gen as Amazon clears inventory.
Single AirTags see smaller discounts, typically $5 to $7 off the $29 regular price. Accessories like the FineWoven Key Ring and Belkin holders usually drop 15 to 25 percent during Prime Day, making it a good time to stock up on cases if you are buying multiple tags.
NJ.com ranked AirTags as the number one product most likely to sell out on Prime Day 2026, and based on the past two years, they are right. The 4-pack sold out on Day 1 in both 2024 and 2025. Expect the same this year, especially since the new 2nd Gen model is generating extra demand.
If the 4-pack sells out, here is what to do. First, check Walmart and Best Buy, both of which price-match Amazon during Prime Day. Last year, Walmart matched the $68 deal on the 4-pack during its parallel sale. Second, set a restock alert on Amazon using the camelcamelcamel stock tracker or the Amazon app notification feature. Amazon restocked within 24 hours in both prior years, often at the same or lower price. Third, check again on Day 3 and Day 4. Amazon often releases additional inventory mid-event as cancelled orders free up stock.
If you are new to AirTags, start with the 4-pack. The per-tag cost is significantly lower than buying singles, and you will almost certainly find uses for all four. Keys, wallet, luggage, and pet collar cover the basics. Frequent travelers should consider two 4-packs so they can tag checked bags, carry-ons, passports, and travel documents separately.
If you already own AirTags and just need one or two more, the single 2nd Gen is the way to go. There is no point buying another 4-pack if three of them will sit unused. The single gives you the latest 2nd Gen features without overbuying.
You can save even more on Prime Day by stacking strategies. Use an Amazon Prime credit card for 5 percent cashback on your AirTag purchase. Clip any available digital coupons on the product page before adding to cart. Check whether Amazon is offering a promotional credit for buying multiple AirTag accessories, which sometimes appears as a bundle discount. If you have Amazon gift cards from reward apps or credit card points, apply them at checkout to bring your out-of-pocket cost even lower.
For accessories, buy them in the same order as your AirTags to consolidate shipping and potentially unlock bundle savings. Amazon sometimes offers a small discount when you buy an AirTag and a case together on the same product page.
Yes, Apple AirTags consistently go on sale during Amazon Prime Day. In Prime Day 2025, the AirTag 4-pack dropped to $68 on Day 1, sold out within hours, then restocked at $65 on Day 2. Early Prime Day 2026 deals have already matched the all-time low of $64.99 on the 4-pack, and prices could drop further during the four-day event from June 23 to 26.
Apple AirTags rarely see discounts outside major shopping events. The best times to buy AirTags on sale are Amazon Prime Day in June, Black Friday and Cyber Monday in November, and occasionally during Amazon spring and fall sales. Apple’s own store almost never discounts AirTags, so Amazon is your best bet for deals. Historical lows include the 4-pack at $64.99.
Prime Day 2026 runs June 23 to 26 and will feature deals across Apple products including AirTags, AirPods, MacBooks, iPads, and Apple Watch. Amazon devices like Echo, Fire TV, and Kindle will see deep discounts. Other categories include smart home gear, power tools, outdoor equipment, Bluetooth trackers, and more. Early deals are already live ahead of the event.
To maximize savings on Amazon during Prime Day, shop Lightning Deals and limited-quantity offers as soon as they go live. Clip digital coupons from product pages before adding items to your cart. Use an Amazon Prime credit card for 5 percent cashback. Check for bundle discounts when buying multiple items. Price-match at Best Buy or Walmart if Amazon sells out. Buy refurbished or renewed products for additional savings when available.
AirTags are ranked as the number one product most likely to sell out on Prime Day 2026 by deal trackers. The 4-pack sold out on Day 1 in both 2024 and 2025. Amazon typically restocks within 24 hours, often at the same or lower price. If the 4-pack sells out, check Walmart and Best Buy for price matches, and set restock alerts on Amazon using the app or a price tracking tool.
The best Amazon Prime Day AirTag deals 2026 come down to three key purchases. Grab the 2nd Generation 4-pack if you want the latest tech and have an iPhone 15 or later. Pick up the 1st Gen 4-pack if you want the lowest possible price per tag and do not need the upgraded Precision Finding. And stock up on accessories like the Belkin Secure Holder or HATALKIN 4-pack so every tag is protected from day one.
Prime Day 2026 runs June 23 through June 26. Set your deal alerts now, bookmark this page, and check back as we update prices throughout the event. AirTags sell out fast, but with the right strategy you can snag the year’s best prices on Apple’s most popular tracker. Happy deal hunting.