Before diving into market analysis, let's establish what this configuration actually means for B2B buyers and suppliers. The combination of 10000mAh capacity, SIRIM certification, and wireless charging represents a specific market positioning strategy targeting Southeast Asian buyers who prioritize regulatory compliance, portability, and convenience.
The 10000mAh capacity sits in the middle of the power bank spectrum. It's large enough to charge most smartphones 2-3 times, yet compact enough to meet airline carry-on regulations (under 100Wh, approximately 20000mAh limit for unrestricted travel). According to Fortune Business Insights, the 5000-19999mAh segment commands 56.99% of the global power bank market in 2025, making it the dominant capacity range [2].
Why 10000mAh Specifically? For B2B buyers in Southeast Asia, this capacity offers several advantages: it's light enough for daily commute use, meets airline regulations across all ASEAN countries without special approval, and provides sufficient power for 1-2 days of heavy smartphone use. However, it's not ideal for tablet charging, laptop backup, or extended off-grid scenarios where 20000mAh+ would be more appropriate.
SIRIM (Standards and Industrial Research Institute of Malaysia) certification is Malaysia's national standards body mark. As of May 2025, power banks have not yet been gazetted as products requiring compulsory SIRIM certification [3]. However, new battery regulations are expected to be ready by mid-2026, which may change this status.
KPDN has yet to gazette power banks as products requiring SIRIM certification. New regulations are expected to be ready by mid-2026. [3]
Currently, SIRIM certification for portable battery packs operates under a voluntary framework using either System 5 (factory audit + product testing) or System 1B (batch testing verification), based on IEC and MS standards [5]. For B2B exporters, obtaining SIRIM certification now serves as a proactive compliance measure and differentiation signal rather than a legal requirement.
What This Means for Your Business: If you're targeting Malaysian buyers or distributors who supply to government, education, or corporate procurement, SIRIM certification may already be a de facto requirement in tender specifications—even if not legally mandatory. Early adoption positions you ahead of the 2026 regulatory curve.
Wireless charging technology in power banks uses inductive charging (Qi or Qi2 standard) to transfer energy without physical cables. The key trade-off: wireless charging is approximately 50% less efficient than wired charging due to energy loss during electromagnetic transfer [4]. A 10000mAh wireless power bank typically delivers only 5000-6000mAh of usable capacity to the device.
However, wireless charging offers significant convenience benefits: no cable management, reduced port wear-and-tear, and compatibility with Qi-enabled devices (most modern smartphones). The emerging Qi2 standard (successor to Qi) promises improved efficiency and faster charging speeds, making it a future-proof feature for 2026 product lines.

