Key Takeaways
- Cheapest wireless lightweight: The Glorious Model D 2 Pro (Renewed) drops to its lowest price we’ve tracked, well under $30.
- Best spec sheet under $50: The Corsair M75 Wireless packs a 26,000 DPI sensor and swappable side buttons.
- Travel pick: The Razer Orochi V2 runs up to 950 hours on a single battery and ships sold by Amazon.
- Discount range: Mice in this roundup run 41% to 73% off, with renewed Glorious models leading the savings.
The $50 ceiling used to mean a corded mouse and not much else. That changed. This week’s pool has genuine 8K-polling, sub-60g wireless gaming mice landing under that line, mostly through renewed listings and deep cuts on current models.
Renewed Glorious mice are doing the heavy lifting here, with the Model D 2 Pro and the Series 2 PRO both wireless and both under $50. Corsair’s M75 sneaks in at $47 with a sensor that reads far higher than anything else in this group. If you want new and sold by Amazon, the Razer Orochi V2 and HyperX Pulsefire Haste 2 Mini are the safe bets.
Prices verified June 4, 2026. These are our SlashSkill Picks across wireless gaming, wired alternatives, and a couple of cheap everyday mice for travel. You can browse all deals if you want the wider computers list.
Which wireless gaming mice under $50 are worth it?
These five are the heart of the roundup: true wireless gaming mice that clear the $50 line. The Glorious models lead on price thanks to renewed listings, while Corsair, Razer, and HyperX cover lightweight and travel use.
Glorious Model D 2 Pro
This renewed Model D 2 Pro is the standout value of the group, landing well under $30 for a mouse that normally costs three figures. It’s the wireless Pro version with the ergonomic right-handed shell, so it suits palm and claw grips on larger hands. Renewed means inspected and tested, not new, but the bestseller rank near 1,800 says buyers are happy with it.
- Wireless Pro version
- Ergonomic right-handed shell
- Renewed condition
Corsair M75 Wireless
The Corsair M75 Wireless has the most serious spec sheet under $50: a 26,000 DPI sensor and swappable side buttons that work for left or right-handed players. It runs Corsair’s iCUE software for RGB and macro tuning if you already use other Corsair gear. At $47 new, it’s the FPS-focused option here for anyone who wants room to grow into the settings.
- 26,000 DPI sensor
- Swappable side buttons
- iCUE software
Glorious Series 2 PRO Wireless
If weight is your priority, the Series 2 PRO is the lightest in this roundup at 55g, with 8K wireless polling and a 26K sensor. The compact symmetric shape favors fingertip and claw grips, so smaller hands and FPS players will like it most. This is the renewed listing, which is how a wireless 8K mouse fits under $50 at all.
- 55g super light
- 8K wireless polling
- 26K sensor
Razer Orochi V2
The Orochi V2 is the travel pick. It’s tiny, runs on a single AA or AAA battery for up to 950 hours, and switches between 2.4GHz and Bluetooth. That makes it a clean fit for a laptop bag and the summer travel season. It ships new and sold by Amazon, so returns are straightforward.
- Up to 950hr battery
- 2.4GHz and Bluetooth
- Compact travel size
HyperX Pulsefire Haste 2 Mini

HyperX Pulsefire Haste 2 Mini – Wireless Gaming Mouse for PC Compact Lightweight Bluetooth 2.4GHz Black
The Pulsefire Haste 2 Mini is HyperX’s small, light wireless option with both Bluetooth and 2.4GHz. It’s a good match for smaller hands or anyone who found the original Haste too big. New and sold by Amazon at $39.99, it’s the no-surprises buy if renewed listings make you hesitate.
- Bluetooth and 2.4GHz
- Compact lightweight
- Sold by Amazon
What about wired gaming mice at this price?
Skip the battery question and you get more sensor and more buttons for the money. These three are wired, but each clears or sits right at $50 and brings features the wireless picks can’t match yet.
Razer Basilisk V3
The Basilisk V3 is Razer’s ergonomic workhorse with 11 programmable buttons and the HyperScroll tilt wheel that free-spins when you flick it. The 26K optical sensor and Chroma RGB round it out. At under $40 wired, it’s the pick for MMO and productivity users who want buttons mapped to everything.
- 11 programmable buttons
- HyperScroll tilt wheel
- 26K optical sensor
Razer Cobra
The Cobra is a 58g lightweight wired mouse with Gen-3 optical switches and RGB underglow, here in the Minecraft Edition. Its bestseller rank of #29 makes it one of the most popular mice in this entire group. Good for fast-paced shooters where the cable weight is a non-issue thanks to the Speedflex cord.
- 58g lightweight
- Gen-3 optical switches
- Speedflex cable
Logitech G502 Hero Bundle

Logitech G502 Hero Wired Gaming Mouse + G440 Hard Gaming Mouse Pad Bundle – Black
This bundle pairs the Logitech G502 Hero, one of the best-selling gaming mice ever made, with the G440 hard pad. The G502 has adjustable weights and a sculpted shape that’s a known quantity for a lot of players. At just under $52 for both pieces, it’s the only ready-to-go kit in the roundup.
- G502 Hero mouse
- G440 hard pad
- Adjustable weights
Budget wireless mice for work and travel
Not everyone shopping this list is gaming. These two are cheap, reliable wireless mice with year-plus battery life, the kind you toss in a bag and forget about.
Lenovo 300 Wireless
The Lenovo 300 is a plain, ambidextrous 2.4GHz mouse with a claimed 12-month battery life and a nano receiver. At under $9 and sold by Amazon, it’s the office or backup mouse to grab without overthinking. Its top-100 bestseller rank reflects how many people use it for exactly that.
- 2.4GHz nano receiver
- 12-month battery
- Ambidextrous design
UGREEN Wireless Mouse
The UGREEN wireless mouse adds a bit more: 5-level DPI up to 4000, six buttons, and an 18-month battery claim. It’s ergonomic and works across laptops, Macs, and Chromebooks. At under $8, it’s a solid step up from a bare-bones office mouse without spending real money.
- 4000 DPI 6 buttons
- 18-month battery
- Ergonomic design
A mousepad to pair with it
A new mouse glides better on a flat cloth surface than on a bare desk. This Corsair pad is cheap, sold by Amazon, and sized for most setups.
Corsair MM200 Mousepad
The MM200 is a medium cloth pad at 360 x 300mm with an anti-slip base, tuned for both optical and laser mice. At under $7 it’s an easy add-on to any of the mice above. Sold by Amazon, so it qualifies for fast shipping alongside your mouse.
- 360 x 300mm cloth
- Anti-slip base
- Sold by Amazon
Frequently asked questions
Is a wireless gaming mouse under $50 good enough for competitive play?
Yes. Mice like the Glorious Series 2 PRO and Corsair M75 offer 8K polling and 26K sensors that match much pricier models. The main tradeoff at this price is buying renewed rather than new, which means inspected and tested condition instead of factory-sealed.
What does “Renewed” mean for the Glorious mice in this list?
Renewed products are inspected, tested, and cleaned to work and look like new, often with a limited warranty through the seller. It’s how a wireless 8K-polling mouse drops under $50. If you want a factory-sealed unit, the Razer Orochi V2 and HyperX Pulsefire Haste 2 Mini are new.
Wireless or wired for gaming on a budget?
Wired mice give you more sensor and more buttons for the same money, like the Razer Basilisk V3 with 11 programmable buttons. Wireless wins on desk clutter and travel. If you want zero battery worries, the wired options here are the better deal feature-for-feature.
Which mouse here is best for small hands?
The Glorious Series 2 PRO at 55g, the Razer Orochi V2, and the HyperX Pulsefire Haste 2 Mini are all compact and light, built for fingertip and claw grips. Larger ergonomic shapes like the Glorious Model D 2 Pro and Razer Basilisk V3 suit bigger hands and palm grip.
The bottom line
Discounts across this group run 41% to 73% off, with the steepest cuts on renewed Glorious mice and the shallowest on the Logitech bundle. Wireless gaming mice clearing $50 used to be rare outside major sale events, so seeing five of them this week is the pattern worth noting.
If I had to pick one, the Corsair M75 Wireless at $47 new is the most complete buy: full warranty, swappable buttons, and a sensor that outclasses its price. The Glorious Model D 2 Pro is the better grab if you’re comfortable with renewed and want to spend the least. I’d skip the budget office mice unless you specifically need a cheap travel spare, since they aren’t gaming-grade.
Father’s Day pricing tends to push computer peripherals lower in early June, so Razer and Logitech may extend or deepen these cuts over the next week. The renewed Glorious deals are the ones more likely to sell out, since stock is limited by nature. If you see the mouse you want at a price you like, that’s the one to buy now rather than wait on.








