Fragraim adjust-weight-0011to20lbblackfbajp Ankle Weights Review
Our verdict
The Fragraim adjustable ankle weight, listed as adjust-weight-0011to20lbblackfbajp, carries a 4.5-star average across 10,300 reviews and 700+ bought last month at $61.99. That review volume and recent purchase count dwarf every other ankle weight in this comparison, making it the clear demand leader despite being the priciest option.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Buyers who want to size their resistance up or down without owning multiple fixed-weight sets, and who don't mind paying more upfront for a product with an unusually large and active review base.
Skip if
Skip it if $61.99 is more than you want to spend on ankle weights, or if you only need a fixed, lightweight option like the 2-pound sets in this comparison. Anyone on a tight budget should look at the $15 to $22 fixed-weight alternatives instead.
- Priced 210% above the category median ($19.99 across 97 tracked models)
Our scorecard
-
Owner rating4.5/5
4.5 average across 10,300 owner ratings
-
Popularity4.8/5
10,300 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
The Fragraim, model adjust-weight-0011to20lbblackfbajp, is priced at $61.99, well above the other three ankle weight sets compared here, which range from $15.41 to $24.99. The model name itself points to an adjustable design spanning roughly 1 to 20 pounds in black, a range far wider than the fixed 2 to 4 pound units offered by the Comfecto, Cando, Graham-Field, or Theraband listings.
The standout figure is demand. With 10,300 reviews at a 4.5-star average, the Fragraim has more than six times the review volume of the next-largest set in this group, the Theraband 25871 at 1,500 reviews. Its 700+ bought last month figure is also far ahead of the Theraband's 100+, and both the Cando and Graham-Field show no bought-last-month activity at all.
That combination of scale and price suggests the Fragraim occupies a different tier of the ankle weight category, one built around adjustability rather than a simple fixed-weight pair. For a buyer weighing a single higher-cost purchase against multiple cheaper fixed sets, the review data here is the largest and most active of any product in this comparison.
Pros
- 10,300 reviews is by far the largest review base in this comparison
- 4.5-star average holds up despite the unusually high review volume
- 700+ bought last month is the strongest recent-demand figure among all compared sets
- Adjustable design, per the model name, covers a wider weight range than the fixed 2 to 4 pound alternatives
- In stock and currently available
Cons
- At $61.99, it costs more than double the next most expensive set in this comparison
- No detailed spec sheet listed for material or exact size breakdown
- Buyers who only need a light fixed weight may be paying for range they won't use
- Higher price point puts it out of reach for budget-focused buyers
- Black is the only color noted in the listing name
Performance notes
Where the Comfecto, Cando, Graham-Field, and Theraband are all fixed-weight units in the 2 to 4 pound range, the Fragraim's model name points to an adjustable range of roughly 1 to 20 pounds. That's a meaningfully different use case: instead of buying a second pair to progress in resistance, an adjustable set lets the same unit scale up as strength or endurance improves. The tradeoff shows up in price, since $61.99 is well above the $15 to $25 range of the fixed-weight competitors. For buyers doing varied routines, walking one week and heavier resistance training the next, an adjustable range this wide removes the need to own multiple sets, though the exact increments within that 1 to 20 pound span aren't broken out in the available facts.
What buyers say
A 4.5-star average holding steady across 10,300 reviews is a difficult pattern to fake or sustain by accident, since that volume of feedback tends to surface real issues if they existed. The 700+ bought last month figure reinforces that this isn't a one-time spike, it points to consistent, ongoing purchase activity rather than a listing coasting on old reviews. Compared to the rest of this ankle weight lineup, where review counts top out at 1,500 and bought-last-month figures max out at 100+, the Fragraim's numbers are in an entirely different range, suggesting significantly broader market reach and a much wider pool of buyers weighing in on the same product.
More from Fragraim
Similar home gym and fitness equipment to consider
Frequently asked questions
What weight range does the Fragraim ankle weight cover?
The listing's model name, adjust-weight-0011to20lbblackfbajp, indicates an adjustable range of roughly 1 to 20 pounds in black, wider than the fixed 2 to 4 pound options from the other brands in this comparison.
Is the Fragraim worth $61.99 compared to cheaper ankle weights?
It costs more than double the next priciest option here, the PROIRON at $24.99, but it also carries 10,300 reviews at 4.5 stars and 700+ bought last month, both far higher than any fixed-weight alternative in this comparison.
How does the review volume compare to other ankle weights?
At 10,300 reviews, the Fragraim has more than six times the review count of the next-largest set, the Theraband 25871 at 1,500. That gap suggests a much larger customer base overall.