A tripod-style phone stand designed for desk recording now reflects pricing at nine dollars and fifty-eight cents, reduced from thirteen dollars. The stand targets iPhone users filming content, running video calls, or using their phones as secondary cameras during work-from-home setups.
Phone stands occupy a strange product category. They’re essential for anyone recording regularly, but they’re also easy to improvise with books, boxes, or whatever happens to be nearby. The decision to actually buy one usually comes after the improvised solutions fail enough times to justify spending money on a real fix.

The four-dollar difference pushes the stand into impulse purchase range. At thirteen dollars, some users hesitate and add it to a cart without checking out. At nine and change, the friction drops. The stand isn’t expensive either way, but the lower number feels closer to throwaway money than budgeted spending.
SIMILAR
This 71-inch iPhone tripod with wireless remote drops to $12.74 from $44.99
iPhone 17 Pro Max clear cases fall to $11 as users debate protection trade-offs
Apple Watch braided band pricing hits $7.59, testing user replacement patterns
COOPER ChatStand competes in a market flooded with nearly identical tripod designs. The adjustable arm and phone grip mechanism show up across dozens of brands, often with only minor cosmetic differences. Night Black as a color option exists mostly to differentiate the listing from competitors offering the same stand in different finishes.
Stands like this get purchased in bursts. A user sets up a home office, realizes the phone needs to be at eye level for calls, and searches for a solution. The price at that exact moment determines whether they buy immediately or keep searching. Current pricing sits below where it was, which likely converts some of those searches into purchases that might have stalled out otherwise.
"Note: Readers like you help support The Apple Tech. We may receive a affiliate commission when you purchase products mentioned on our website."








