Where to Buy Gtech Battery Chargers Trade
If you’re in the vacuum cleaner repair trade and you work on Gtech machines, you already know the score. You buy raw stock and half of it turns up missing chargers. Or the charger is there but it’s bent, cracked, or has a dodgy plug. You can’t resell a vacuum without a charger, and customers don’t want to pay for a repair if they’ve got no way to charge it.
We started buying Gtech-compatible chargers by the ten. Not the horrible black square ones you see all over Amazon, but grey ones that look like the originals. And they work. If you’re doing volume or want to build up a bench stock, this is the way to go.

The reason most of us buy them in tens is simple. You’re never left short, and you’re not paying through the nose each time you need one. We’ve used them in-house and sold plenty. They’re reliable, they look the part, and they do what they’re supposed to. No complaints, no overheating, no warranty returns. They’re also CE marked and tested — none of that questionable import nonsense.
If you’re running a repair bench and sending machines out with proper cables and chargers, you don’t want one that gives up after a week. These don’t.
We’ve also noticed a difference in customer complaints since switching to these. Fewer follow-up calls, fewer “it’s not charging” returns. That alone makes it worth stocking up.

Why not just buy them on Amazon or eBay?
Most people don’t realise how much Amazon or eBay skims off your order. It can be anywhere between 16 and 35 percent. Sellers can’t absorb that. They just add it onto the price. You think you’re getting a deal, but you’re not.
Then there’s the delivery. Amazon and eBay push sellers into offering “free delivery,” which obviously isn’t free. It’s just rolled into the price. Want it quicker? You’ll pay again. Most sellers on these platforms use budget couriers, and we’ve all had something left in a puddle or flung over a gate at 8pm.
Good luck getting a VAT receipt, too. It’s either not available or you have to message someone in another time zone and wait a week. Trade doesn’t have time for that.
There are also the well-publicised issues with Amazon’s working conditions, returns being dumped by the pallet, and tax avoidance stories. If you still buy from them after reading all that, fair enough — but don’t expect to get the best price or the best service.
The real issue is this: online retail is now mostly middlemen. Amazon, eBay, Google Shopping, Uber Eats — they all insert themselves between the buyer and the seller and take a cut. If you want the best price, buy direct. No platform fees, no inflated RRP, and usually better delivery options. That’s how trade works.

So where do you get them?
If you want ten Gtech chargers at a proper trade price, buy direct from here: Ten Gtech chargers for the trade
If you’re not in a rush, delivery is free because the order is over £30. If you need them quickly, pay the extra few quid and they’ll turn up next day via Royal Mail Tracked or DPD — not Evri.
If you’re local to South Manchester and you want to collect or speak to someone in person, check their page here. They do a lot of other appliance cables, chargers, spares, and vacuum repairs too.
Remember, trade sales mean no returns and no fuss. If you’re buying from someone who knows what they’re doing — and in this case, you are — that won’t be a problem.
Building a relationship with a proper supplier means you’ll get better prices, faster support, and real product knowledge when you need it. It’s worth more than a penny-per-unit saving. Plus, when stock is tight or a new part comes in, you’ll often hear about it first.
Buy right, buy once, and keep your customers happy. That’s the game.
