Most people glance at someone holding a phone and move on. That’s the entire point of this device. If you’ve ever thought that carrying obvious self-defense gear draws the wrong kind of attention — or simply isn’t practical in your daily routine — this is worth a close look. Who This Is Best For This one makes the most sense for women who commute, work late, travel alone, or just want something on them that doesn’t look like a weapon. It also suits college students, rideshare drivers, and anyone who spends time in parking structures, transit stations, or unfamiliar areas. The disguise isn’t a gimmick — it’s the feature. An attacker who doesn’t know what you’re holding is an attacker who hasn’t prepared for what’s coming. Is This the Right Fit? If you want something discreet, always charged, and genuinely capable of deterring a threat — and you’re not interested in carrying a visible holster or a dedicated self-defense tool that raises questions — this fits that need cleanly. It won’t replace situational awareness, but it gives you a real option when awareness alone isn’t enough. Key Features & Benefits 14,000,000-Volt Stun Capability — Delivers a significant electrical shock on contact; enough to interrupt muscle control and create the window you need to get clear. Realistic Smartphone Appearance — Designed to pass as a modern cell phone. No one around you knows what it is until you need them to. 120dB Built-In Alarm — That’s loud enough to draw attention from a distance and disorient someone at close range. Useful before or instead of deploying the stun function. 50-Lumen Flashlight — Practical for low-light situations and doubles as a way to temporarily impair an aggressor’s vision. Built-In Rechargeable Battery — Charges via USB. No AA batteries, no dead-battery surprises when it matters. Safety Switch — Prevents accidental discharge in your bag or pocket. How It Compares Feature This Cell Phone Stun Gun Standard Stun Gun Keychain Pepper Spray Disguised Design Yes — looks like a smartphone No No Alarm Included 120dB Varies No Rechargeable Yes, USB Some models No Best For Discreet daily carry Open carry or home use Distance deterrence Practical Details This stun gun is legal in most US states, but laws on stun devices vary — check your local and state regulations before ordering, especially if you’re in Hawaii, Rhode Island, or certain municipalities with restrictions. The device comes ready to charge out of the box. Recharge before first use and top it off periodically, the same as any device with a built-in battery. What’s in the box: the stun gun unit with built-in USB charging capability. At $24.95, this is one of the more sensible decisions you can make for everyday personal security. If you’ve been putting off carrying something because nothing felt right for your situation, this one solves a specific problem in a straightforward way. Add it to your cart and be done with it. Frequently Asked Questions Will it actually stop someone, or is 14 million volts just a number? The voltage figure in stun guns is largely a marketing convention — what matters more is amperage and contact time. What I can tell you honestly is that a properly functioning stun gun of this type delivers enough of a jolt to disrupt muscle function and cause significant pain, which is the goal. It buys you time to get away. No non-lethal device is a guarantee, but this is a real deterrent, not a toy. Could someone mistake it for a real phone and try to use it? It’s designed to look like a smartphone, not function as one. Up close it reads as a phone. There are no working buttons for calls or data. If you’re concerned about household confusion, store it where you store your other self-defense tools — somewhere accessible to you, not to children or guests who might grab it without knowing what it is. How often does it need to be recharged? That depends on how often you test or use it. For most people carrying it daily without regular discharge, a monthly top-up charge is a reasonable habit. The built-in USB connection makes it no more complicated than charging a pair of earbuds. Don’t let it sit dead for extended periods — that shortens battery life in any rechargeable device. Is the alarm useful, or is it just a selling point? 120 decibels is genuinely loud — comparable to a power saw or a car horn at close range. In a lot of situations, triggering the alarm is enough. It draws attention, disorients someone in close quarters, and signals to anyone nearby that something is wrong. I’d call it a legitimate feature, not a checkbox item.