USB-C hosts are common on laptops, cameras, controllers and portable test equipment, while many accessories still use USB-A plugs. A USB-C male to USB-A female cable can keep those accessories usable, but buyers should confirm connector direction and workload before quotation.
Where it fits
This cable type is mainly used for field kits, photography tools, service fixtures and test benches where the host side is USB-C and the accessory side remains USB-A.
Quotation checklist
- Confirm USB-C male on the host side and USB-A female on the accessory side.
- State whether the use is basic control, file transfer, capture or temporary service access.
- Give the required cable length and whether the cable will be fixed, coiled or moved often.
- Share port photos when the accessory connector is not clearly documented.
Procurement mistakes to avoid
- Do not describe the item only as a USB-C adapter.
- Do not assume every host port can support the same accessory load.
- Do not combine USB-A female output and USB-C female extension requests in one line item.
Before requesting a quotation
Buyers can review the USB3.2 5Gbps C male to USB-A female cable, compare a right-angle tethered photography cable, or browse the USB-C product catalog.




