F2C SUVELAM Kettlebell Review
Our verdict
The F2C SUVELAM Kettlebell costs $23.99 and carries a 4.7-star rating across 1,100 reviews, with 200-plus buyers a month. Its 30 pound build sits mid-pack among the alternatives here, and the review volume backs up the price point as a dependable, no-frills option for anyone building a home kettlebell rotation.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Best for lifters who want a mid-weight 30 pound kettlebell for swings, goblet squats, and carries without spending much, and who don't mind a plastic-shell design over traditional cast iron.
Skip if
Skip it if you specifically want traditional cast iron for its cold, dense feel, or if you need a full weight range from one brand, since the Sunny NO. 066-5 line offers more size options at a lower per-pound cost.
- Material High Density Polyethylene
- Weight 30 Pounds
- Color Black, Blue, Red, Yellow
- Priced 40% below the category median ($39.99 across 59 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.7/5
4.7 average across 1,100 owner ratings
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Popularity3.4/5
1,100 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 someone clearing a corner of the garage for kettlebell swings, Turkish get-ups, and goblet squats, and needing one bell that can do double duty for both. The F2C SUVELAM Kettlebell is built for that kind of single-weight setup: a 30 pound piece molded from high density polyethylene and sold in black, blue, red, or yellow, priced at $23.99.
Against the field of kettlebells tracked here, the F2C sits in an interesting middle spot. The JFIT J-VKB8 undercuts it at $18.99 with a stronger 4.8-star rating across 784 reviews, and the Sunny NO. 066-5 is cheaper still at $16.21 with 4.6 stars across 2,600 reviews and 400-plus monthly buyers, though it's cast iron rather than a coated shell. The Ader Premier Set, at $1,448 with only 3.2 stars across 4 reviews, is a different product category entirely: a full rack system rather than a single bell.
At 4.7 stars across 1,100 reviews and 200-plus buyers a month, the F2C SUVELAM has enough volume behind it to trust the rating. For a single 30 pound bell in a color-coded shell, it's a reasonable buy, though shoppers chasing the lowest price per pound have real alternatives on this list.
Pros
- Priced at $23.99, it's cheaper than the multi-weight BalanceFrom set and well under the $1,448 Ader rack system.
- A 4.7-star average across 1,100 reviews gives the rating real statistical weight.
- 200-plus units bought last month shows steady, active demand rather than a stale listing.
- The 30 pound weight covers swings and goblet squats without needing a second bell right away.
- High density polyethylene shell and four color options (black, blue, red, yellow) make it easy to color-code weights in a shared gym space.
Cons
- The JFIT J-VKB8 rates higher at 4.8 stars, so it isn't the top-rated bell in this weight class.
- At $16.21, the Sunny NO. 066-5 sitting at 4.6 stars across 2,600 reviews undercuts it on price.
- A single 30 pound bell means lifters progressing past that load need to buy again.
- The molded plastic shell doesn't have the traditional cast iron feel some kettlebell lifters prefer.
Specifications
| Material | High Density Polyethylene |
|---|---|
| Weight | 30 Pounds |
| Color | Black, Blue, Red, Yellow |
Performance notes
A 30 pound kettlebell sits in the range most home users reach for once they've moved past a starter weight, useful for two-handed swings, goblet squats, and heavier carries, though it's on the heavy side for overhead work like snatches unless the lifter already has that strength built up. High density polyethylene construction means the outer shell is a durable plastic rather than raw cast iron, which typically makes for a smoother surface against forearms during racked positions and reduces the risk of chipped paint scratching floors. The four color options, black, blue, red, and yellow, point to this being sold as part of a color-coded weight system, which matters for households or small gyms stocking more than one bell size, since color lets users grab the right weight without checking a stamped number each time.
What buyers say
A 4.7-star average holding steady across 1,100 reviews is a large enough sample that the rating isn't likely to be skewed by a handful of early buyers. That review count, combined with 200-plus units bought in the last month, suggests a product that keeps selling well after its initial launch period rather than one that spiked and faded. Compared to the Ader Premier Set's 3.2 stars across only 4 reviews, which barely qualifies as a pattern at all, the F2C's numbers carry far more weight for buyers trying to judge reliability from a distance. It doesn't beat the JFIT's 4.8-star average, but the gap is small enough that price and weight choice probably matter more than the quarter-star difference.
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Frequently asked questions
Is the F2C SUVELAM Kettlebell good for beginners?
At 30 pounds, it's better suited to lifters who already have some swing and squat experience rather than absolute beginners, since many starter kettlebell routines begin closer to 15 to 20 pounds. Someone new to kettlebell training might want to check a lighter option before committing to this weight.
How does the price compare to other kettlebells in this lineup?
At $23.99, it costs more than the JFIT J-VKB8 at $18.99 and the Sunny NO. 066-5 at $16.21, both of which also carry strong ratings. It's dramatically cheaper than the $1,448 Ader Premier Set, which is a full rack system rather than a comparable single bell.
What is the kettlebell made of?
It's molded from high density polyethylene rather than traditional cast iron, giving it a coated plastic shell available in black, blue, red, or yellow. That construction tends to be gentler on floors and forearms than bare cast iron, though it departs from the classic all-metal feel some lifters expect.