
Menu contextual replacement key QWERTY (PT) Black for Logitech MX Keys
Menu contextualReplacement key for Logitech keyboard MX Keys
In stock
Specifications
- Category
- Function keys
- Keyboard layout
- QWERTY (PT)
- Compatibility
- MX Keys (PC)
- Color
- Black
- Size
- 1U (standard)
About the Menu contextual replacement key
Lost or broke the Menu contextual key on your Logitech MX Keys? This is the precise replacement, hinge included — far cheaper and faster than buying a whole new keyboard. Each order is the single Menu contextual key shown — pick exactly the key you need and keep typing in minutes.
Compatibility
This Menu contextual keycap is cut for QWERTY (PT) keyboards and fits MX Keys (PC) along with the wider MX Keys, MX Keys S, MX Keys Mini and MX Keys for Mac family, which all share the same key profile. The legend and character set match the QWERTY (PT) layout, so the key you receive is exactly the one printed on your keyboard.
Why the Menu contextual key fails
The Menu contextual key is part of the function row that drives shortcuts, media and brightness controls. These keys are pressed less often than letters but their thin hinges are just as fragile when a fingernail or cleaning catches them at an angle. Because we sell each key individually, you only pay for the key you actually need.
How to install it
Replacing the Menu contextual key takes under a minute and needs no tools. Line the new cap up over the white scissor hinge and press straight down until you feel a soft click. The plastic key cap hinge is included, so you can also fix a key that lost its clip — not just the visible cap.
Menu contextual key — questions
- Does this Menu contextual key fit my Logitech MX Keys?
- Yes — it is made for QWERTY (PT) MX Keys (PC) and the shared MX Keys key profile (MX Keys, MX Keys S, MX Keys Mini and MX Keys for Mac). Just confirm your keyboard uses the QWERTY (PT) layout so the printed characters match.
- Is the hinge included with the Menu contextual key?
- Yes. Every Menu contextual replacement ships with the scissor key cap hinge and the rubber dome cup, so you can repair a key that lost its clip or no longer springs back — not only a cracked cap.
- My Menu contextual key still doesn't work after I replaced the cap — why?
- If the key was unresponsive rather than just physically broken, the fault is usually the scissor hinge or the rubber cup underneath. Both are included here, so replace the full mechanism and test again.







