BalanceFrom Vinyl Kettlebell Set, 30/45/50/75 Pound Options, Cement-Filled Strength Review
Our verdict
The BalanceFrom Vinyl Kettlebell Set costs $59.99 and covers four weights, 30, 45, 50, and 75 pounds, in one purchase, backed by a 4.5-star rating across 1,500 reviews and 700-plus buyers a month, the strongest demand signal among the kettlebells compared here, making it a solid pick for anyone who wants a full progression without buying bells one at a time.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Best for households setting up a shared kettlebell station, since the set covers four separate weights, 30 to 75 pounds, letting different family members or a single lifter progressing over time use one purchase instead of four.
Skip if
Skip it if you only need one weight, since single bells like the Sunny NO. 066-5 at $16.21 or the JFIT at $18.99 cost far less and both carry higher star ratings than this set.
- Priced 50% above the category median ($39.99 across 59 tracked models)
Our scorecard
-
Owner rating4.5/5
4.5 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
Anyone setting up a home kettlebell corner from scratch faces the same question: buy one weight and add more later, or get a spread of sizes up front. The BalanceFrom Vinyl Kettlebell Set answers that by bundling 30, 45, 50, and 75 pound cement-filled vinyl bells into a single $59.99 purchase.
Against single bells like the JFIT J-VKB8 at $18.99 or the Sunny NO. 066-5 at $16.21, the BalanceFrom set costs more per transaction but delivers four separate loads instead of one, which changes the math for anyone who would otherwise need to buy several bells separately. The JFIT edges it on rating at 4.8 stars across 784 reviews, and the Sunny holds 4.6 stars across 2,600 reviews, both slightly ahead of the BalanceFrom's 4.5 stars, but neither offers a weight range in a single box. The $1,448 Ader Premier Set is the only other multi-piece option here, and its 3.2-star rating across just 4 reviews gives it almost no track record to judge.
With 1,500 reviews behind its 4.5-star average and 700-plus buyers a month, the BalanceFrom set has by far the largest sales volume of any kettlebell product compared here. For anyone who wants a range of weights without shopping four separate listings, that combination of scale and reasonable rating makes it a practical starting point.
Pros
- One $59.99 purchase covers four weights, 30, 45, 50, and 75 pounds, instead of buying each bell separately.
- A 4.5-star rating across 1,500 reviews is a large enough sample to trust as a genuine pattern.
- 700-plus units bought last month is the highest demand figure of any kettlebell compared here.
- Cement-filled vinyl construction keeps the bells from ringing or chipping the way bare cast iron can.
- The weight spread (30 to 75 pounds) supports progression as a lifter gets stronger, without a second purchase.
Cons
- At 4.5 stars, its rating trails both the JFIT (4.8 stars) and the Sunny NO. 066-5 (4.6 stars).
- $59.99 is a bigger upfront cost than any single bell on this list aside from the Ader set.
- Buyers who only need one weight are paying for three sizes they may never use.
- No separate rack or storage stand is mentioned, so four bells still need somewhere to sit.
Performance notes
A four-weight spread from 30 to 75 pounds is built around progression rather than a single training goal. The 30 pound bell suits swings and goblet squats for someone still building base strength, while the 75 pound end moves into heavy carries, deadlift-style movements, or advanced swing work for a lifter who has already outgrown lighter loads. Cement-filled vinyl construction is a common approach for multi-weight sets because it lets a manufacturer produce a wide range of loads from the same mold family while keeping the outer shell soft enough to protect flooring compared to raw cast iron. That vinyl coating also tends to reduce the clanging noise that metal-on-metal kettlebell racks can produce, which matters in a shared living space or an apartment gym where noise is a real constraint on when someone can train.
What buyers say
1,500 reviews at a 4.5-star average is the largest review base among the kettlebells in this comparison, and 700-plus units bought last month suggests the set keeps moving well past any initial launch spike. That volume matters more than the small rating gap versus the JFIT's 4.8 stars or the Sunny's 4.6 stars, since both of those competitors have far fewer reviews backing their averages. A rating built on 1,500 data points is statistically harder to dismiss as luck or a run of easy customers. Set against the Ader Premier Set's 3.2 stars across only 4 reviews, the BalanceFrom's combination of scale and consistency reads as the more dependable buy for anyone shopping by review pattern alone.
Similar home gym and fitness equipment to consider
Frequently asked questions
How many weights come in the BalanceFrom set?
The set includes four weights: 30, 45, 50, and 75 pounds, all made from cement-filled vinyl. That range covers everything from lighter swing work up through heavier carries and strength moves, so most lifters won't need to buy an additional bell for a while.
Is $59.99 a good price for four kettlebells?
Compared to buying four single bells separately, $59.99 for a 30 to 75 pound spread is competitive, especially next to the $1,448 Ader Premier Set. Single bells like the Sunny NO. 066-5 at $16.21 are cheaper per unit, but only cover one weight each.
Does the BalanceFrom set sell well?
Yes. It shows 700-plus units bought in the last month, the highest figure of any kettlebell compared here, alongside 1,500 reviews averaging 4.5 stars. That combination of high review volume and steady monthly purchases suggests ongoing, active demand rather than a one-time promotional spike that fades quickly.