
Portronics MPort Vault Pro 15-in-1
15-port USB-C hub, 100W PD, Ethernet, dual display.
Best Indian brand docking station. 15 ports, dual HDMI, Ethernet, 100W PD. Portronics domestic warranty. Good for WFH users wanting feature-rich dock from a local brand.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
Portronics MPort Vault Pro 15-in-1 Review India 2026 — Best Indian Brand Docking Station?
Portronics MPort Vault Pro 15-in-1: When an Indian Brand Goes All In
At ₹4,699–5,299, the MPort Vault Pro is Portronics's statement product in the hub category. Fifteen ports is a lot to claim on a single USB-C connection, and this hub earns a closer look than their budget lineup — both because of what it offers and where it inevitably hits its architectural limits.
I've been using this on a Windows 11 laptop for two weeks, putting it through a range of scenarios from productivity to light video editing.
What 15 Ports Actually Means
Fifteen ports sounds impressive, but the breakdown matters. You get 2x USB-A 3.0, 2x USB-A 2.0 (same bandwidth caveat as the Honeywell — the 2.0 ports are for peripherals, not drives), 1x USB-C data, 1x USB-C PD 100W, 2x HDMI, 1x VGA, 1x Gigabit Ethernet, 1x SD, 1x microSD, 1x 3.5mm audio. That's your fifteen.
The two HDMI ports have the same limitation as every dual-HDMI hub in this price range — one at 4K/30Hz, one at 1080p/60Hz. No amount of marketing changes the USB-C bandwidth ceiling. Portronics is honest about this in the spec sheet; Port 1 is 4K@30Hz, Port 2 is 1080p@60Hz. Accept it or spend more.
The upgrade that makes the Vault Pro meaningful is the Gigabit Ethernet — 1000Mbps, not the 100Mbps that the Lemorele provides. If you're on a fast fibre connection or doing local NAS transfers, this matters. I ran speed tests at 450–600 Mbps download through this hub on a gigabit fibre line, which is close to what you'd expect from USB-to-Ethernet adapter overhead.
Audio jack quality is better than expected — low noise floor, works cleanly with desktop headphones. The VGA port is there for connecting to older projectors, which is genuinely useful in an Indian corporate or education context where projectors haven't all been updated.
India Pricing and Why Portronics Makes Sense Here
₹4,699–5,299 puts this in a range where imported competition from UGREEN and Anker gets serious. But the Portronics advantage in India is clear: pan-India service centres, a customer support line, and warranty replacement that doesn't require international shipping logistics.
Amazon India and Flipkart both carry the Vault Pro. Portronics is also available at Croma and select regional chains. For corporate buyers or procurement departments, Portronics is a registered Indian company with a GST invoice that's straightforward for input tax credit purposes.
The hub is rated 100–240V on the PD input path, handles Indian voltage realities. The plastic housing does get warm under sustained load with all ports active — I'd place it on a hard surface rather than fabric.
Who Should Buy This
Buy the Vault Pro if you want the most comprehensive port selection from an Indian brand with domestic support. Specifically: if you need gigabit Ethernet (versus the 100Mbps on the Lemorele), dual monitor output, card readers, and audio jack — all at under ₹5,300 — this hub covers it. Also a strong pick for people who travel to offices with older projectors, given the VGA port.
If after-sales service security matters more than raw performance (common in enterprise purchasing), the Portronics ecosystem is the safest choice in this price range.
Who Should Skip This
Skip this if you need both HDMI outputs at 4K@60Hz — the bandwidth constraints remain. The UGREEN Revodok Pro 11-in-1 handles proper 4K output with DisplayPort 1.4. Also skip if you need Thunderbolt passthrough — this hub doesn't support it.
Questions
A: No. Like all dual-HDMI hubs in this price range without Thunderbolt 4, it maxes at 4K@30Hz on one port and 1080p@60Hz on the other. For dual 4K@60Hz, you need Thunderbolt 4 hardware.
A: Yes, and it's one of the reasons I recommend this over the Lemorele at a similar (slightly higher) price point. Real-world speeds through the hub on a gigabit connection clock around 450–600 Mbps, which is normal USB-to-Ethernet overhead.
A: For most WFH setups — monitor, keyboard, mouse, Ethernet, headphone — yes. It won't match the build quality and bandwidth of a dedicated USB-C dock like the HP USB-C Dock G5, but for ₹5,000 versus ₹15,000, the Vault Pro handles the core use case.
A: Portronics has significantly improved their warranty handling. One year coverage, service centres in major cities, and courier-based replacement for other locations. They have a customer support line that answers — unusual for Indian accessory brands at this price point.