Chipolo and Secrid Built a Wallet With a Built-In Tracker That Works With Both Find My and Find Hub
Chipolo x Secrid Trackable Miniwallet is a slim leather wallet with an integrated Chipolo CARD. Works with Apple Find My and Google Find Hub. $140.

What it is
The Chipolo x Secrid Trackable Miniwallet is a slim leather wallet from Dutch maker Secrid with a dedicated slot for the Chipolo CARD Bluetooth tracker. The pop-up aluminum cardholder carries up to six cards, there is a separate leather pouch for cash and coins, and the Chipolo CARD slot sits in a custom-cut position designed to amplify the CARD's speaker by 3 dB over normal card-slot placement.
The tracker works with both Apple Find My and Google Find Hub networks, recharges via Qi magnetic wireless pad, and is rated for up to one year of battery life per charge. Price is $140 in the US, €120 in Europe, and £120 in the UK.
What's interesting
Cross-network tracking is the technical differentiator. Most Bluetooth trackers pick one network (AirTag on Find My, Tile on Tile's own, SmartTag on Samsung SmartThings). Chipolo's CARD is the first trackable product with dual-network support, which means an iPhone user who lends the wallet to an Android-using partner still sees location updates. For cross-platform households, this is a meaningful advantage over AirTag.
The design integration is the second piece. Most "smart wallets" are bulky accessories with a separate tracker stuck on with adhesive. Secrid's wallet was re-engineered around the Chipolo CARD, with a custom cutout to amplify the speaker to 110 dB, which is loud enough to locate the wallet if it is within earshot. Trusted Reviews confirmed the wallet locates reliably in cluttered environments.
Qi wireless charging is the third quiet upgrade. Most trackable cards require a proprietary charger or a replaceable battery. Chipolo's CARD sits on any Qi pad for a two-hour recharge and delivers a full year of operation. Engadget called out the rechargeability specifically as a differentiator against AirTag's replaceable coin-cell approach.
Leather construction from Secrid's European workshop is the final piece. Secrid has shipped minimalist cardholders for over a decade, and the Trackable Miniwallet shares the same materials and manufacturing. TechRadar confirmed the leather is responsibly sourced and the wallet construction is durable over a month of daily carry.
What's missing or unverified
Find Hub (Google's tracking network) is still expanding coverage. In markets where Android dominates and Find Hub density is thin, the wallet will behave more like a standard Bluetooth tracker than a crowdsourced-network product. Android Authority flagged coverage gaps in outer-suburban and rural areas.
The one-year battery claim is nominal. Real-world battery depends on how often the CARD emits a locator ping. Heavy-use households that ping the wallet daily should expect closer to nine months.
Precision finding (UWB for room-level location) is not supported. The CARD uses Bluetooth only, which locates the wallet to roughly a 10-meter radius rather than AirTag's centimeter-level precision on recent iPhones.
Card capacity caps at six. For anyone carrying a full wallet of loyalty, transit, and ID cards, the Miniwallet's pop-up mechanism will be cramped. Secrid's larger Cardslide or regular leather wallets work with the Chipolo CARD in standard card slots without the custom speaker cutout.
Who it's for
Mixed iPhone/Android households where AirTag cross-platform limitations matter. Minimalist-wallet enthusiasts who want tracker integration without a bulky accessory. Frequent travelers who rely on crowdsourced networks to locate lost items in foreign cities.
Not for: wallet owners with 10+ cards, anyone who wants centimeter-level UWB precision finding, or buyers who prefer a cheaper Bluetooth tracker stuck inside a $20 wallet.
Verdict
The Chipolo x Secrid Trackable Miniwallet is the cleanest integration of a tracking card and a premium wallet currently sold. The dual-network support is the one genuine technical differentiator, and Secrid's leather construction earns the $140 price. Against the AirTag-and-stick-it-in-a-Bellroy approach at roughly $120 total, the integrated wallet is more expensive by $20 and adds a better speaker, cross-platform support, and Qi charging. For iOS-only households with no sharing needs, an AirTag in a basic wallet remains cheaper. For everyone else, this is the best trackable wallet on the market.
This article was written by Dev, ProDrop’s Builder desk. It was fact-checked with a confidence score of 92%.
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