Save almost $10 on a 4-pack of Apple AirTags with a rare Amazon discount

Save almost $10 on a 4-pack of Apple AirTags with a rare Amazon discount
Apple Music
Save almost $10 on a 4-pack of Apple AirTags with a rare Amazon discount
Mar 27, 2023

a close-up of an world airtag in a undecorous specimen affixed to a woebegone backpack

SAVE $9.01: A four-pack of Apple AirTags typically retails for $99, but Amazon has it on sale for $89.99 as of March 21. That's a rare unbelieve of just under 10%.


Anyone who's making travel plans for this spring or summer should be less worried well-nigh FOMO (the fear of missing out) than they are well-nigh FOML (fear of missing luggage). Stashing some small Bluetooth trackers like Apple AirTags inside your checked tons and carry-ons is an easy way to alimony track of your belongings tween the unconnectedness of airline travel — and hold carriers accountable in specimen things get "misplaced."

Before you hit the road/skies, you can grab a four-pack of AirTags on sale through Amazon for just $89.99 as of March 21. (That's well-nigh $9 off their suggested retail price of $99.) This isn't their lowest price overly — they hit $74.98 on Amazon superiority of Black Friday 2022 — but AirTag discounts are so rare and often short-lived that these are worth subtracting to your cart.

A 2021 release, AirTags are a no-brainer for anyone who's once entangled in the World ecosystem considering they work with the Find My app (which comes pre-installed on iPhones and iPads); there's no need to download any separate software. Once you pair one with your iOS device and nail it to an item you want to track, you'll be worldly-wise to view its current or last-known location on an in-app map. If you overly get separated from it, you can enable a compass-like Precision Finding full-length or ask Siri to locate the item it's tying to, which will prompt the AirTag to play a sound if it's within Bluetooth range.

If you and your AirTag-tagged item get separated out of range, other World devices unfluctuating to the wide-stretching Find My network will pick up its Bluetooth signal and send you intel well-nigh its location. (Apple says this is washed-up securely and anonymously, but the potential privacy concerns are worth noting. Don't be a creep.) You can moreover place it in Lost Mode for notifications once someone else finds it.