Browse every 75% hall effect and 75 magnetic switch keyboard available. Find compact magnetic switch boards with function rows, adjustable actuation, and rapid trigger. Compare 75% HE keyboards by price, polling rate, and features across 40+ stores.


















Looking for a 75 magnetic switch keyboard or 75% hall effect keyboard? Browse every compact magnetic switch board with a function row in one place. The 75% layout keeps F-keys and arrow keys while magnetic hall effect switches add adjustable actuation and rapid trigger — ideal for competitive gaming and daily typing in a space-saving footprint.
Our database tracks every 75 magnetic switch keyboard and 75% hall effect board currently on the market. Filter by brand, polling rate, connectivity, and price to narrow down compact magnetic switch keyboards from Keychron, Wooting, Epomaker, and other manufacturers. New 75% models with hot-swap magnetic sockets and gasket mounting are added as they launch.
A 75 magnetic switch keyboard combines the best of two trends: the compact function-row layout and hall effect switch performance. You keep dedicated F-keys for gaming macros and IDE shortcuts without the width of a TKL, while magnetic sensors deliver per-key actuation tuning and rapid trigger that traditional mechanical switches cannot match. For desk setups where mouse space matters and competitive latency is a priority, a 75% magnetic switch board is a strong daily driver.
Competitive gamers favor 75% hall effect keyboards because the layout leaves more room for low-sensitivity mouse movement while magnetic switches enable sub-millimeter reset distances. Look for models with 8K polling rates, per-key calibration, and firmware that supports dynamic actuation profiles. Rapid trigger on a 75% board means faster counter-strafing and ability spam without sacrificing the function row.
Hall effect switches measure key travel with magnets instead of metal contacts, so actuation depth is software-defined on every key. On a 75% board you can set lighter actuation on WASD for gaming and heavier points on the function row for accidental-press protection. This per-key flexibility is the main reason buyers pick a 75% hall effect keyboard over a traditional 75% mechanical board.
Full-size hall effect keyboards offer a numpad for spreadsheet work, but most gamers and developers do not need one daily. A 75% hall effect keyboard drops the numpad while keeping the function row and arrow cluster in a footprint barely larger than a 65%. You get the same magnetic switch benefits — unlimited lifespan, rapid trigger, adjustable actuation — in a board that fits tighter desks and LAN bags.
Traditional 75% mechanical keyboards offer more switch variety in feel and sound, from thocky linears to silent tactiles. A 75 magnetic switch keyboard trades that variety for consistency and performance features: no switch degradation, uniform actuation across the board, and gaming-focused firmware. If rapid trigger and adjustable actuation matter more than switch acoustics, a 75% hall effect layout is the compact sweet spot.
Check polling rate, connectivity, and whether the board supports hot-swap magnetic switches before buying. Aluminum cases and gasket mounting improve typing feel on premium 75% hall effect models. Compare prices across vendors on KeebFinder — the same 75% HE board can vary significantly between stores. Pair your purchase with keycaps that support the 75% layout's compact right-side cluster.