Insane Deal Gives You Chance to Own Apple Pencil 2 for Just $89 [31% Off]

Uzair Ghani
Apple Pencil 2 drops to just $89.

For an extremely limited time only, you can grab the second-generation Apple Pencil for an insanely low price of just $89.

Apple Pencil 2 with Full Features for iPad Currently Discounted to Just $89, Just $10 More than the USB-C Apple Pencil

This is a massive 31% discount and one which you shouldn’t miss. Why? Because Apple announced a very, very stripped down version of the Apple Pencil 2 with USB-C for $79, and that one is simply not worth getting. Instead, pick this one up, brand new, and it will cost you just $10 more than a brand new USB-C Apple Pencil.

Related Story You’ll Never Run Into Storage Problems Again With The Silicon UD90, As The 4TB PCIe NVMe Gen 4 SSD Is Going For $450 On Amazon

Buy Apple Pencil (2nd Generation): Pixel-Perfect Precision and Industry-Leading Low Latency - Was $129, now just $89

Unlike the USB-C Apple Pencil, this one offers you the complete wireless freedom you are truly looking for. It pairs wirelessly, it charges wirelessly, it has pressure sensitivity. Basically, it has it all.

The only thing it doesn’t have is support for the tenth-generation iPad. If you own that iPad, you might want to give this deal a complete miss. But, if you were hoping to pick up the USB-C Apple Pencil for your iPad Air or iPad Pro, you found yourself the deal of the century.

This deal is likely going to end very, very soon. There are no discount codes or coupons needed here at all. Just add it to your cart, checkout, and you’ll have it over the weekend with free delivery.

If you buy something from a Amazon affiliate link, Wccftech may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

Uzair Ghani Photo

About the author: Uzair has been writing about tech for a little under 10 years. Started off in the Symbian days, migrated to Android, eventually settling on iOS and Mac to make a living. Loves photography, drones, talking about the latest tech, and firmly believes that iPad is the future of computing. Served as Editor-in-Chief with Redmond Pie for five years, author at The Readers Eye and many other freelance gigs. Wccftech is now his current home.

Follow Wccftech on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds.

Button