Announced earlier this year, the Moto Tag 2 has quietly gone on sale in select regions, bringing UWB-powered precise tracking to Android Find Hub along with a significantly improved battery life.
The Android Find Hub tracker market is well-stocked at this point, with plenty of options to choose from. What set the original Moto Tag apart from the crowd — and what carries over to the sequel — is UWB support for precise, directional tracking. That capability remains rare among Find Hub trackers, with virtually no competing options offering it.

That said, UWB was already available on the original Tag, which raises a fair question: what actually makes the Moto Tag 2 worth upgrading to?
Motorola Moto Tag 2
Easy to set up and locate on any Android phone: Just attach moto tag to your belongings, and use your Android phone to locate anything with pinpoint precision, anywhere in the world.
Beyond a new orange colorway, the headline improvement is battery life. Motorola is touting “over 600 days on a single battery” using a standard CR2032 cell — a substantial leap over its predecessor and a strong practical argument for the newer model.
Motorola has opened sales in select markets over the past few weeks. In the UK, the Moto Tag 2 is available for £29.99, while German buyers can pick one up for €40. The US launch hasn’t been officially announced yet, but the tracker is already appearing on Amazon through third-party sellers at $119.99 for a 4-pack — which works out to roughly $29 per unit, consistent with standard retail pricing. Early buyers have confirmed these are genuine products, and the listings don’t raise any obvious concerns — all are fulfilled by Amazon.
There’s currently no single-unit option available in the US, so the 4-pack is the only route for American buyers at the moment.