- SEO
Content Strategy for SEO: Planning Content That Ranks
17 Apr, 2026
£101.18 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
If you’re already in Apple’s ecosystem and want a keyboard that just behaves—reliable typing feel, solid build, and effortless pairing—this Magic Keyboard is a good buy. For office use, it’s the kind of accessory that doesn’t fight you: it stays consistent across devices and is genuinely pleasant for long stretches of work. At £84.28 ex-VAT, it’s not “cheap”, but it’s priced more like a premium IT convenience item than a bargain peripheral.
That said, it’s not the best value if your fleet is mixed (Windows-heavy, lots of generic setups, or people who want lots of function-key behaviour without thinking). Also, if your team standardises on ergonomic layouts or needs strict compatibility with specific device-management workflows, you’ll want to check this fits your environment—otherwise you’re paying for Apple polish rather than operational simplicity. My take: buy it for Apple-centric teams and exec/knowledge-worker desks; think twice for broad procurement across mixed platforms where standard wired/enterprise keyboards would deliver similar productivity for less.

Kensington
Kensington KB435 EQ - Keyboard - multi-device, rechargeable - compact - wireless - 2.4 GHz, Bluetooth - QWERTY - UK - space grey - retail - FSC cardboard

HP
HP Desktop 320K - Keyboard - USB - UK (pack of 12)

HP
HP 655 - Keyboard and mouse set - wireless - 2.4 GHz - UK - black

Lenovo
Lenovo Preferred Pro II - Keyboard - USB - QWERTY - UK - black