SFSpecFits

USB-C vs USB-A

USB-A is the large rectangular plug that has been on computers since 1996. USB-C is the smaller, reversible oval plug found on most smartphones, laptops, and accessories since roughly 2016. Both are on the market simultaneously; here is how to choose.

Side-by-side comparison

Feature USB-A USB-C
ReversibleNoYes
Max USB speed10 Gbps (USB 3.2 Gen 2)40 Gbps (USB4 / Thunderbolt 4)
Max charging (USB PD)7.5 W (BC 1.2 standard)240 W (USB PD 3.1)
Video outputNo (USB-A only)Yes (via Alt Mode)
Thunderbolt supportNoYes (Thunderbolt 3 and 4)
Backward compatible with older devicesYes — all USB-A generations fit all USB-A portsNo — requires USB-C port on device
Common on new laptops (2024)Often still present (1–2 ports)Dominant on premium laptops

Verdict by scenario

You should use USB-C when:

USB-A is still fine for:

Does USB-C always mean fast charging?

No. The USB-C connector shape says nothing about Power Delivery support. A USB-C port that only supports USB 2.0 will charge at 2.5 W (5 V / 0.5 A). For fast charging, the charger must support USB PD (or a proprietary protocol like Qualcomm Quick Charge) and the device must request it. Always check wattage ratings, not just the connector type.

Backward compatibility

USB-A connectors are physically backward compatible across all speed generations. USB-C is not compatible with USB-A without an adapter. USB-C to USB-A adapters are passive and lossless, but they cap speed at the slower of the two sides — usually the USB-A side.

See also