ERIC Ceinture Lestée Weight Belt Review
Our verdict
The ERIC Ceinture Lestee costs $34.90 and carries a 4.6-star average across 1,500 reviews, a rating that matches the Schiek and beats the Harbinger 360982's 4.4. Its nylon build with a chain listed in the color field points to a loading-style belt, and its 50+ bought-last-month figure shows steady, if modest, current demand.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Buyers who want a nylon, one-size loading belt with a chain accessory at a price well under the Schiek's $59.95 or the Harbinger 360982's $49.99, while still landing on a 4.6-star rating across 1,500 reviews.
Skip if
Skip it if you specifically need a leather waist-support belt for heavy squats or deadlifts, since the nylon build and chain accessory here point toward plate-loading use rather than torso compression under a bar.
- Material Nylon
- Size One Size
- Color With Chain
Our scorecard
-
Owner rating4.6/5
4.6 average across 1,500 owner ratings
-
Popularity3.7/5
1,500 owner reviews, more than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other home gym and fitness equipment we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
Picture clipping a chain to a nylon belt to add plates for a set of weighted step-ups or dips at the end of a workout. That is the scenario the ERIC Ceinture Lestee is built around, a one-size nylon belt listed with a chain, priced at $34.90.
On price, it undercuts every leather belt in this comparison. The Schiek SCH1014/1717/691 runs $59.95 and the Harbinger 360982 runs $49.99, both well above this belt's $34.90, while the Harbinger 28900 at $35.25 sits almost exactly at the same price point. Its 1,500 reviews land below the Harbinger belts' 2,900 and 2,200 and the Schiek's 1,300 is close by comparison, putting it in a similar review-volume tier to the Schiek specifically.
On rating, the 4.6-star average ties the Schiek and beats the Harbinger 360982's 4.4, though it trails the Harbinger 28900's 4.7. Its 50+ bought-last-month figure beats the Schiek and Harbinger 360982, both at 0+, while falling short of the Harbinger 28900's 100+. Taken together, it reads as a mid-pack performer on rating with reasonably steady recent demand at a below-average price.
Pros
- Priced at $34.90, cheaper than the Schiek ($59.95) and Harbinger 360982 ($49.99)
- 4.6-star average across 1,500 reviews, tying the Schiek's rating and beating the Harbinger 360982's 4.4
- 50+ bought last month, ahead of the Schiek and Harbinger 360982, both listed at 0+
- Nylon construction with a chain accessory noted in the listing, suited to plate-loading exercises
- One-size fit removes waist-sizing guesswork compared to Medium or Large-specific belts in this set
Cons
- 4.6-star rating still trails the Harbinger 28900's 4.7
- 1,500 reviews is a smaller sample than the Harbinger 28900's 2,900 or Harbinger 360982's 2,200
- 50+ bought last month is half the Harbinger 28900's 100+
- Nylon and chain construction is not a substitute for a padded leather belt if waist compression is the goal
- No weight or dimension specs listed beyond material, size, and the chain-accessory color note
Specifications
| Material | Nylon |
|---|---|
| Size | One Size |
| Color | With Chain |
Performance notes
The listed material, nylon, combined with a chain noted in the color field, points toward a belt designed to have plates hung from it for loaded bodyweight work such as dips, pull-ups, or weighted step-ups, rather than a thick leather belt meant to brace the spine under a barbell. Nylon is lighter and less rigid than leather, which is why belts like the Harbinger 360982 use leather when compression under heavy loads is the goal. The one-size listing suggests the nylon strap is adjustable rather than fixed to a single waist measurement, which fits a chain-loading design where the belt only needs to sit securely around the hips. At $34.90, the pricing lines up with other nylon or mixed-material options in this set rather than the premium leather belts, reflecting the lower material cost of nylon versus leather or steel hardware.
What buyers say
A 4.6-star average across 1,500 reviews puts this belt in solid standing, matching the Schiek's rating exactly and beating the Harbinger 360982's 4.4, though it falls short of the Harbinger 28900's 4.7. The review count, while smaller than the two Harbinger belts, is still substantial enough to suggest the rating is not based on a small or recent sample. The 50+ bought-last-month figure indicates ongoing, moderate demand rather than a stalled listing, especially set against the Schiek and Harbinger 360982, both showing 0+ recent buys. Overall, the pattern suggests a consistently well-reviewed belt that continues to sell at a steady, unspectacular pace.
Similar home gym and fitness equipment to consider
Featured in
Frequently asked questions
Is the ERIC Ceinture Lestee suited to squats and deadlifts?
Its nylon build and chain accessory suggest a loading belt for weighted dips, pull-ups, or step-ups rather than a compression belt for squats and deadlifts. Buyers wanting spine and core support under a barbell may be better served by a leather option like the Harbinger 360982 or Schiek referenced in this comparison.
How does the price compare to other belts in this category?
At $34.90, it is close to the Harbinger 28900's $35.25 and considerably cheaper than the Schiek's $59.95 or Harbinger 360982's $49.99. That makes it one of the more affordable options while still carrying a 4.6-star rating across 1,500 reviews.
What does the 50+ bought-last-month figure suggest?
It indicates moderate, ongoing demand. It beats the Schiek and Harbinger 360982, both at 0+ for the same period, but trails the Harbinger 28900's 100+. Combined with its 4.6-star rating, it points to a steady, dependable seller rather than a fading or surging listing.