An iPad on its own is a good media tablet; the accessories are what decide whether it becomes a note-taking device, a sketchpad, or a part-time laptop. The problem is that the accessory market mixes genuinely transformative add-ons with overpriced bundles that gather dust. In 2026 the core decisions are clearer than ever: the right stylus, keyboard, case, and connectivity turn an iPad into a serious tool, and a few popular extras are simply not worth the money. This guide sorts them out.
What changed in 2026
- Styluses got more capable across price tiers. Low-latency, tilt-aware styluses are now available from both first-party and reputable third-party makers, narrowing the gap for casual users.
- Keyboard options diversified. Beyond the official folio, third-party keyboard cases with better key travel and trackpads have become genuinely competitive.
- USB-C maturity unlocked accessories. With USB-C standard across the lineup, hubs, external displays, and storage work more reliably than in the Lightning era.
- Note-taking and drawing apps deepened. Software improvements made a good stylus more valuable, since the apps now make better use of pressure and tilt.
- Stands and mounts proliferated. Adjustable stands that position the iPad as a second screen or drawing surface are cheap and widely available.
What actually matters
The two accessories that change what an iPad is are the stylus and the keyboard. If you want to take handwritten notes or draw, a responsive, low-latency stylus is the centrepiece, and latency and palm rejection matter far more than fancy extras. If you want to write or work, the keyboard is the deciding purchase, and the right one depends on how much you actually type.
Everything else is supporting cast. A solid case is cheap insurance against the most common damage. A USB-C hub or dock matters only if you genuinely connect drives, displays, or peripherals. A stand helps if you use the iPad at a desk. Buy these to fit how you work, not to complete a collection. If handwriting is your main use, it is also worth comparing the iPad against dedicated devices in our tablets for note-taking guide before buying a stylus.
Ranked picks by use case
| Accessory |
Best for |
What to prioritise |
Approx price tier |
| Stylus |
Notes and drawing |
Low latency, tilt, palm rejection |
Mid |
| Keyboard case |
Writing and email |
Key travel, trackpad, weight |
Mid to upper |
| Protective case |
Everyone |
Drop protection, corner coverage |
Low |
| USB-C hub |
Connecting peripherals |
Power passthrough, display out |
Low to mid |
| Adjustable stand |
Desk and drawing use |
Stable angles, build quality |
Low |
How to choose
- Decide the iPad role first. Note-taking points to a stylus; laptop replacement points to a keyboard; media use needs little beyond a case and stand.
- Judge a stylus by latency and rejection, not features. Smooth tracking and reliable palm rejection matter more than gimmicks.
- Match keyboard to typing volume. Light users are fine with a slim folio; heavy writers should prioritise key travel and a trackpad even at extra weight.
- Buy connectivity to your real needs. Get a hub only if you actually attach storage, a display, or wired peripherals.
- Protect the investment cheaply. A good case costs little relative to a repair and prevents the most frequent damage.
What to skip
- Cheap third-party styluses with high latency — laggy, jittery input ruins note-taking and drawing.
- Overpriced accessory bundles — you pay for items you will never use to get the one you wanted.
- Bulky armoured cases for desk-bound iPads — protection you do not need at the cost of weight and feel.
- Screen protectors that wreck stylus feel — some textured films help drawing, but cheap ones add latency and haze.
- Proprietary docks for a single port need — a simple USB-C hub usually does the job for less.
FAQ
Can an iPad really replace a laptop?
For writing, email, browsing, and many creative tasks, a keyboard-equipped iPad can replace a laptop. Heavy multitasking, certain pro software, and complex file workflows still favour a real computer.
Is a first-party stylus worth the premium?
For serious drawing and frequent note-taking, the lowest latency and best palm rejection justify the cost. Casual users can do well with a reputable third-party stylus for less.
Which keyboard should I buy for an iPad?
Match it to your typing. A slim folio suits occasional use, while a full keyboard with good travel and a trackpad suits anyone writing for hours.
Do I need a USB-C hub?
Only if you connect external drives, displays, or wired peripherals. If you work entirely wirelessly, a hub adds clutter without benefit.
Where to go next
To extend mobile productivity further, see Best Tablets for Note-Taking in 2026, Best Portable Monitors for Travel in 2026, and Best Laptop Accessories in 2026.