The Snap Invisible Phone Tripod Stand is a MagSafe-compatible folding stand from MOFT that rides flat on the back of an iPhone and opens into a working desk tripod. Folded, it's a flat pad that Cult of Mac puts at 0.25 inches thick and 3.2 ounces. The bet is permanence: the stand is already on the phone when the video call connects or the group photo needs a steady frame.

Two stages. The first fold props the phone at a shallow kickstand angle for watching at a desk. Unfold the rest and the pad climbs an A-frame leg that lifts the screen 2.8 inches in portrait and about 4.5 inches in landscape, per Cult of Mac, enough to put the front camera near eye level. And since the grip is a magnet, the phone spins between portrait and landscape without refolding anything.
Key specs
| Folded | 0.25 in thick, 3.2 oz (91 g) |
| Material | MOVAS vegan leather, 20 colors |
| Hinge | Manganese steel, rated for 5,000 folds |
| Fits | iPhone 12 and later; non-MagSafe phones via an included metal ring |
MOVAS is MOFT's vegan leather, and the tripod ships in 20 colors, Light Pink and Misty Cove among them. Inside the fold sits a manganese steel hinge MOFT rates for 5,000 open-and-close cycles. Phones without MagSafe get a stick-on metal ring in the box, so iPhoners holding onto an iPhone 11 or older aren't shut out, and Android phones work the same way.

Ed Hardy at Cult of Mac gave it five stars and credited MOFT's knack for stands that fold up small, then open far bigger than their folded footprint suggests. He also found the A-frame holds steady through screen taps, but a bump from the side tips it over. Leave it on for months and a slower kind of wear shows up. One Threads user who never takes hers off reports the edges peeling and the leather collecting grime, and still calls herself obsessed, because the half-open stand doubles as a finger rest while typing. 9to5Mac kept one on an iPhone for two weeks and landed close: "thin enough to permanently leave it on your iPhone without noticing."
Fits anyone whose phone is the webcam and the in-flight screen, and who'd rather carry nothing extra to prop it up.
It also restates an old iPhoner position: MagSafe is still underused, and the accessory ideas keep outrunning the adoption. A tripod that disappears onto the phone is the job the magnets were waiting for.