The JAMJAKE Stylus Pen is the rock-bottom budget pick: an active stylus with tilt sensitivity and palm rejection that, in GeekDad's blind testing, was indistinguishable from a far pricier stylus, all for around $25. With over 98,000 reviews at 4.4 stars, it is a proven everyday writer. The plastic build feels cheap and there is no pressure sensitivity, but for basic note-taking on a budget it covers the essentials.

Full review
Real-World Performance
The JAMJAKE Stylus Pen's claim to fame is delivering competent active-stylus performance at the lowest price in this roundup. In a hands-on comparison, GeekDad ran it against a more expensive stylus and found that 'in a blind test, there's nothing that would distinguish it from the Stylus Pro', a striking result for a pen around $25. It is a genuine active stylus with a fine 1.5mm precision tip, tilt sensitivity and palm rejection, so it handles writing, sketching and basic calligraphy competently, as SlashGear noted in highlighting that it offers 'a lot' for $24.99.
Like the other budget and mid-range pens here, it lacks pressure sensitivity, so it is not for pressure-dependent art apps. But for note-taking, annotating documents and general iPad use, reviewers found it perfectly capable. Battery life is generous for the class, with fast USB-C charging and very long standby, and the enormous base of over 98,000 reviews at a 4.4-star average indicates it reliably does what most buyers need it to.
Build Quality and Design
Where the JAMJAKE shows its budget roots is the build. GeekDad described it as 'light and made of cheap-feeling plastic, almost like a disposable ballpoint pen', an honest assessment of a pen at this price. It does not have the aluminum heft of the Logitech Crayon or Adonit Note+ 2, nor any premium finishing touches, and it feels more disposable in the hand than the rest of this group.
That said, the functional design is sound: the replaceable fine tip did not scratch or mark the iPad's display in testing, and JAMJAKE includes spare tips in the box. It charges over USB-C with fast top-ups, and the white colorway is clearly styled to resemble the Apple Pencil. There is no magnetic attachment or wireless charging like the ZAGG Pro Stylus 2, and no shortcut buttons or interchangeable nib hardnesses like the Adonit, but the core hardware, a precise tilt-capable tip with palm rejection, is all present at a price that makes the plastic build easy to forgive.
What Reviewers Loved
Reviewers loved that the JAMJAKE delivers the essentials, tilt, palm rejection, a precision tip, for a price that makes it nearly an impulse buy. GeekDad's blind-test finding that nothing distinguished it from a pricier stylus was the strongest endorsement, suggesting that for everyday writing the gap between budget and premium pens is smaller than the price difference implies. SlashGear pointed to its status as one of the most-reviewed styluses available, with that 98,000-plus review base and 4.4-star average signaling broad, consistent owner satisfaction.
The fast charging and long standby battery drew positive mentions as practical conveniences, and the included replacement tips add value. For parents buying for kids or anyone who wants to add stylus capability to an iPad without commitment, reviewers framed the JAMJAKE as the low-risk, low-cost way to do it, covering the basics competently at a price nothing else here matches.
Where It Falls Short
The JAMJAKE's weaknesses are the inevitable consequences of its price. The plastic build feels cheap and somewhat disposable, as GeekDad noted, so it lacks the durability and premium feel of the aluminum Logitech Crayon and Adonit Note+ 2. There is no pressure sensitivity, ruling it out for professional digital art, where the Adonit Note+ 2 is the only suitable pick here.
It also omits the convenience features of pricier rivals: no magnetic attachment or wireless charging like the ZAGG Pro Stylus 2, no programmable buttons or interchangeable nibs like the Adonit. And while its everyday writing is competent, it does not carry the officially-licensed Apple Pencil input quality of the Logitech Crayon, so the most demanding users may notice the difference even if blind testers did not. These limitations are why it sits at the bottom of this ranking, though they are entirely reasonable trade-offs at its price.
Who It's Best For
The JAMJAKE Stylus Pen is the pick for bargain hunters, students on tight budgets, and parents buying a stylus for kids who might lose or break a pricier one. If you want basic, capable active-stylus functionality, tilt, palm rejection, a precision tip, at the absolute lowest price, it covers the essentials and the huge review base confirms it works as advertised for most people.
It is the wrong choice for digital artists, who need the Adonit Note+ 2's pressure sensitivity, and for anyone who wants a premium build or convenience features like wireless charging, where the Logitech Crayon and ZAGG Pro Stylus 2 are far better. Even the slightly pricier Metapen A8 offers a marginally more refined experience for a few dollars more. But as the cheapest competent stylus here, the JAMJAKE earns its place for the buyer whose top priority is spending as little as possible.
Value at This Price
At around $25, the JAMJAKE is the cheapest stylus in this roundup, and its value lies in delivering competent active-stylus basics for the least money. GeekDad's blind-test result and the 98,000-plus reviews at 4.4 stars show that, for everyday writing and note-taking, it covers the fundamentals well enough that most owners are satisfied. You give up build quality, pressure sensitivity and convenience features, but you spend less than on anything else here. The closest comparison is the Metapen A8, which costs only a little more and offers a marginally better experience and a much higher trust score, so for a few extra dollars the Metapen is arguably the smarter budget buy. The JAMJAKE's value case is therefore narrow but real: it is the right pick specifically when the absolute lowest price is the deciding factor, such as buying for children or as a no-risk first stylus, and on that basis it earns its spot to round out the group.
Strengths
- +Indistinguishable from pricier styluses in blind testing
- +Tilt sensitivity and palm rejection at a rock-bottom price
- +Fine 1.5mm precision tip for writing and sketching
- +Fast charging with very long standby battery life
- +Over 98,000 reviews at a 4.4-star average
Watch-outs
- −Light, cheap-feeling plastic build
- −No pressure sensitivity for professional art
- −No magnetic attachment or wireless charging
- −Feels disposable compared with aluminum rivals
How it compares
The JAMJAKE Stylus Pen is the cheapest option here, undercutting even the Metapen A8 while offering the same core tilt and palm rejection. Like the Logitech Crayon, ZAGG Pro Stylus 2 and Metapen A8 it has no pressure sensitivity, so the Adonit Note+ 2 remains the artist's pick, and its plastic build is less premium than any rival, but it covers the basics for less money than anything else in this group.
Who this is for
At a glance: Bargain hunters, students and parents buying for kids who want a basic, capable iPad stylus at the lowest possible price.
Why you’d buy the JAMJAKE Stylus Pen
- Indistinguishable from pricier styluses in blind testing.
- Tilt sensitivity and palm rejection at a rock-bottom price.
- Fine 1.5mm precision tip for writing and sketching.
Why you’d skip it
- Light, cheap-feeling plastic build.
- No pressure sensitivity for professional art.
- No magnetic attachment or wireless charging.
Rating sources
“In a blind test, there's nothing that would distinguish it from the Stylus Pro.”
“For a price tag of $24.99, it does have a lot to offer. Like the Apple Pencil, the JamJake pen is an active stylus with a precision tip.”
“The brand holds an average rating of 4.5, testifying to its excellent reputation.”
Our 4.2 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



