Plugable’s new dock supports five displays from one USB-C port

Plugable has announced a new docking solution for Windows and Mac users that supports up to five simultaneous displays, including a mix of 4K and 8K. The new $279.95 UD-7400PD dock actually supports more displays than the pricier Thunderbolt 5 docks that have recently launched which max out at three 4K screens. But Plugable’s latest […]

May 14, 2025 - 21:30
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Plugable’s new dock supports five displays from one USB-C port
A multi-display computer setup on a desk.
Plugable’s new USB-C dock supports up to five screens, including a mix of 4K and 8K. | Image: Plugable

Plugable has announced a new docking solution for Windows and Mac users that supports up to five simultaneous displays, including a mix of 4K and 8K. The new $279.95 UD-7400PD dock actually supports more displays than the pricier Thunderbolt 5 docks that have recently launched which max out at three 4K screens. But Plugable’s latest comes with some performance limitations that could make it better suited for those wanting more screen real estate for spreadsheets and other productivity apps.

Unlike solutions such as CalDigit’s recently announced $370 TS5 dock that only supports a trio of 4K displays when connected to a computer that supports Thunderbolt 5, the Plugable UD-7400PD works with machines featuring at least a video-capable USB 3.2 Gen 2 port. That standard, supporting transfer rates of 10Gbps, debuted back in 2017, meaning Plugable’s new dock should work across a large number of existing PCs. Plugable’s new multi-display USB dock pictured from the front and back against a white background.

Using its two HDMI connections and three USB-C ports, the dock can drive up to five 4K 60Hz displays, three 8K 30Hz displays, or a combination of the two with four 4K screens plus an additional 8K one. It’s all made possible through Synaptics’ new DisplayLink DL-7400 chipset and the DisplayLink technology that compresses video feeds on the host computer so they can be transmitted through slower USB-C ports which are then decompressed using dedicated hardware in the dock.

Plugable’s new multi-display dock pictured from the front and back with its ports all labeled.

You’ll need to install DisplayLink’s software on your computer to make it all work, and the approach could result in reduced performance for applications like games that produce a large amount of data. Apps like spreadsheets, by comparison, compress well because they’re relatively static. DisplayLink also doesn’t support High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP) which could prevent you from watching content from streaming platforms like Netflix on the external displays.

The UD-7400PD dock also includes a front-facing 10Gbps USB-C port with 30W of power delivery and two 10Gbps USB-A ports. There’s also a 2.5Gbps ethernet port, a 3.5-millimeter headphone jack, and a host USB-C port that can charge laptops with up to 140W of power delivery. Given most productivity apps don’t require the latest and greatest processors and graphics cards, despite the few downsides of the technology, Plugable’s new dock provides an alternate path to an elaborate multi-screen setup without the added costs of upgrading all your gear to be Thunderbolt 5 compatible.