Motorola lists Moto Tag 2 with 600-day battery, UWB and Google Find Hub support

Announced at CES 2026, the second-generation Moto Tag is now quietly available in the UK and Europe, and via third-party sellers in the US, and it remains the only Find Hub tracker with built-in Ultra-Wideband.

Motorola lists Moto Tag 2 with 600-day battery, UWB and Google Find Hub support

Motorola's Moto Tag 2 has started reaching buyers. First announced earlier this year, the tracker has quietly gone on sale in recent weeks, positioning itself as the most technically capable item tracker in Google's Find Hub ecosystem.

The device is now selling for £29.99 in the UK and €40 in Germany. In the US, Motorola has not officially opened its own sales channels, but third-party sellers on Amazon are offering a 4-pack at $119.99, roughly $30 per tracker. Early buyers have reported the units are authentic, with all listings fulfilled by Amazon.

What's Actually New?

The Moto Tag 2 retains UWB support from its predecessor while upgrading from Bluetooth 5.4 to the newer Bluetooth 6.0 standard. That connectivity jump is more consequential than it sounds. The Moto Tag 2 is the first Bluetooth 6.0 tracker shipping at retail, and it pairs that with Channel Sounding, a Bluetooth 6.0 feature that provides centimeter-level distance measurement beyond what UWB alone covers.

The UWB support allows for much more accurate nearby positioning compared to standard Bluetooth trackers. In practice, your phone can guide you toward a lost item with directional indicators and precise distance measurements, rather than simply telling you it's "nearby." That's especially useful indoors, where traditional Bluetooth trackers can feel frustratingly imprecise.

Battery life is the headline upgrade. Motorola is touting "over 600 days on a single battery" using a standard CR2032 cell.

Motorola lists Moto Tag 2 with 600-day battery, UWB and Google Find Hub support

This is a major improvement over the original Moto Tag's one-year battery claim, using the same replaceable coin cell format.

On durability, water resistance moves from IP67 on the original to IP68 on the Moto Tag 2, meaning the device survives immersion in up to 1.5 meters of water versus 1.0 meter before. The chassis is otherwise identical, so existing cases, holders, and adhesive mounts fit the new tracker.

The Catch With Channel Sounding

The Moto Tag 2's most advanced feature comes with a significant hardware requirement. Channel Sounding only activates on phones running Android 16 with Bluetooth 6.0 hardware support. That currently limits the full experience to a narrow slice of devices. UWB itself is also restricted to select higher-end flagships from Google, Samsung, and Motorola. On mid-range or older devices, the Moto Tag 2 still works over Bluetooth and through the Find Hub crowd network, but the precision "point your phone like a scanner" functionality remains gated behind the latest hardware.

Find Hub Is the Network

The Moto Tag 2 is powered by UWB, Bluetooth Channel Sounding, and the Find Hub network of over a billion devices, giving users advanced capabilities to know where their belongings are — whether that's using UWB to find a car in a parking lot, or Bluetooth Channel Sounding to locate keys misplaced inside a house.

Device location data is end-to-end encrypted, meaning only the tag owner or anyone with whom the owner has explicitly shared the tag within Find Hub can view its location. The tracker is also compatible with automatic unknown tracker alerts across both Android and iOS, guarding against unwanted tracking.

Beyond location finding, the built-in button can ring the user's connected phone or trigger the camera shutter remotely.

Still the Only UWB Option on Find Hub!

The original Moto Tag launched in 2024 as a Find Hub tracker for Google's network, and to this day it remains the only Find Hub tracker with UWB. The Moto Tag 2 preserves that distinction. Every other tracker on the network relies on Bluetooth alone for proximity finding, which translates to less precise nearby location.

The Moto Tag 2 is an Android-only tracker. iPhones can detect it as an unknown tracker for anti-stalking purposes but cannot pair with it, locate it, or manage it. Users who need cross-platform compatibility will need to look at alternatives from Chipolo or Pebblebee.

The device is available on Amazon at $42.98 for a single unit and $119.96 for a 4-pack, and directly from Motorola's online store with 3-pack and 5-pack bundles. Motorola announced Q2 2026 retail availability at CES 2026 in January, and the product launched on schedule.

Between Google reworking Find My Device into Find Hub and Motorola iterating on the Moto Tag line, the Android tracking platform is finally closing the gap with Apple's tightly integrated ecosystem — though the full precision experience still requires a very recent phone to unlock.