
Trackers feel like an easy win when the price is right. The payoff shows up the first time you don’t lose an hour retracing your steps.
At €17.99 ($21) for one or €59.99 ($71) for four, the Xiaomi Tag makes tracking feel like basic upkeep. A four pack lands in the same mental bucket as batteries and tape, and that’s a good thing. The low number makes it easier to tag more than one item without overthinking it.
Price: €17.99 ($21) Single | €59.99 ($71) 4-Pack
Where to Buy: Xiaomi Global
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What It Is, And Why The Timing Feels Right
Xiaomi Tag is a thin plastic tracker that runs on a CR2032 coin battery. Xiaomi says it’ll last about a year. That matters because it keeps the tag from becoming a charging chore. A drawer of coin cells feels calmer than a cable pile. The setup stays simple. That’s the point.

On paper, the list is solid for the money: Bluetooth 5.4, NFC, and an IP67 rating for dust and water. IP67 is not glamorous, but wet pockets and damp tile do not care. A built in speaker handles close range hunts, and the chirp carries across hardwood rooms. The shell will scuff, and it won’t ask for careful handling. That’s a fair trade. NFC can also support quick taps for pairing and ID flows on supported setups. The whole package stays practical instead of precious.
The headline is network support, because Xiaomi Tag works with Apple Find My and Google’s Find Hub. That pairing changes the shared item story, and it matters more than another spec bump when different phones share keys and bags. Apple’s network is established, while Google’s coverage can vary by place, so results can look uneven on travel days. Even so, cross platform support at this price feels like a pressure release for families that don’t want one phone brand to win. The pitch lands now because both networks are being pushed harder than they used to be. A cheap tag fits that moment better than a premium one.
The Missing UWB Part
Earlier HyperOS code references hinted at UltraWideBand. In European listings so far, UWB is not listed.
UWB is the feature that makes close range searches feel precise instead of hot and cold. It is the arrow and distance guidance that turns a hunt into a short walk. Without it, the process leans on beeps, pacing, and listening through fabric. That trade is not fatal, yet it is the one that will be felt.

The absence reads like a cost choice, since UWB hardware can raise the price without adding range. Bluetooth crowd sourced tracking still handles the scary losses, especially when a bag ends up in another building. A map pin beats a guess in bad weather and loud streets. The speaker still helps when the item is nearby, and the chirp cuts through quiet rooms. The downgrade is the missing arrow style guidance. That’s the part that feels modern.
Who Should Buy This
An earlier report from Gizmochina described two variants in development, including a possible UWB model. That leaves room for this launch to be the budget version first, with a pricier tag later.
Waiting can make sense when most losses happen within a few feet. That is where UWB is most noticeable. The wait can also feel irritating when keys are missing today. The cheaper model makes multiples easier to justify, and that matters for shared gear.

The battery choice is practical, and the IP67 rating matches real bags and real weather. The trade stays simple: cheap and flexible, but not the slickest close range experience. That swap makes tagging more items easier to justify. The tag won’t impress in the hand, but it should handle scuffs and daily knocks. If precision finding is the deal breaker, this may not be he right pick, but we’ll see.
Price: €17.99 ($21) Single | €59.99 ($71) 4-Pack
Where to Buy: Xiaomi Global
The Bottom Line
The Xiaomi Tag solves a simple problem without overcomplicating it. By prioritizing network compatibility over premium features like UWB, Xiaomi treats organization as a utility rather than a luxury. It’s not the most high-tech tracker available, but at this price, it doesn’t need to be. It’s a low-stakes buy that pays for itself the first time it finds your keys.
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