Weight TW21-68 Weight Belt Review

4.6 (318) Amazon rating$25.99100+ bought last month

Our verdict

At $25.99, the Weight TW21-68 Weight Belt undercuts every belt in this comparison while posting a 4.6-star average across 318 reviews, matching the Schiek's rating despite costing $34 less. With 100-plus units bought last month, it shows genuine, ongoing demand rather than a one-time sales spike, making it a reasonable budget pick for neoprene fans.

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Best for

Budget-conscious lifters who want a neoprene belt with double-EVA padding in a medium size, and who are satisfied with a 4.6-star track record backed by 318 reviews rather than the thousands some competing brands carry.

Skip if

Skip it if a medium fit, sized for a 32 to 36 inch waist, is too small or too large for you, since no other size is listed. Anyone set on a leather belt should look elsewhere too, since this one is neoprene.

  • Material Neoprene
  • Size M(32-36inches)
  • Color Black (Double EVA)
  • Priced 21% below the category median ($32.99 across 88 tracked models)

Our scorecard

4.5/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.6/5

    4.6 average across 318 owner ratings

  • Popularity1.9/5

    318 owner reviews, fewer 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

Neoprene belts trade the rigidity of leather for flexibility and comfort, and the Weight TW21-68 Weight Belt goes further with a double-EVA foam layer, sized for a 32 to 36 inch waist and finished in black. At $25.99, it undercuts every other belt in this lineup, including the $59.95 Schiek and the $35.25 Harbinger 28900.

Despite the low price, the rating holds up. A 4.6-star average across 318 reviews ties the Schiek SCH1014/1717/691 exactly, even though that belt costs more than double. The review count is smaller than the thousands racked up by the Harbinger models, but 318 is still enough to indicate a consistent pattern rather than a handful of lucky five-star ratings.

One hundred-plus units sold last month matches the pace of the Harbinger 28900, the strongest seller in this group, which suggests the low price is not scaring off buyers looking for a lighter, more flexible belt. The tradeoff for that price and comfort is the medium-only sizing and the neoprene material itself, which will not offer the same unyielding brace that a thick leather belt provides under a maximal lift.

Pros

  • Priced at $25.99, the least expensive belt in this comparison by a wide margin
  • 4.6-star average across 318 reviews, matching the pricier Schiek belt exactly
  • 100-plus units bought last month, on par with the top-selling Harbinger 28900
  • Double-EVA foam construction for a softer feel than rigid leather belts
  • In stock and ready to ship

Cons

  • Only offered in a medium size, fitting a 32 to 36 inch waist
  • Neoprene will flex more under a heavy lift than the leather belts it's compared against
  • 318 reviews is solid but far behind the Harbinger 28900's 2,900
  • No large or small size listed for buyers outside the medium range

Specifications

MaterialNeoprene
SizeM(32-36inches)
ColorBlack (Double EVA)

Performance notes

Neoprene and double-EVA foam construction point to a belt built for comfort and quick adjustability rather than the maximum rigidity a thick leather belt provides. That tradeoff matters most during heavy squats or deadlifts, where a stiffer belt gives more resistance for the core to push against. For moderate loads, general strength training, or lifters who find leather uncomfortable against bare skin, the softer neoprene build is a practical middle ground. The belt is sized specifically for a 32 to 36 inch waist, which is a narrower window than the one-size options offered by the Harbinger 28900 or the large-only Harbinger 360982, so fit is more precise but also more restrictive. Buyers outside that waist range will need to look at a different size or a different belt entirely, since no alternate sizing is listed here.

What buyers say

A 4.6-star average across 318 reviews is a strong showing, equal to the highest rating in this comparison set and achieved at a fraction of the price of the belts that match it. The review count is modest next to the 1,300 to 2,900 range some rivals carry, but it is not a thin sample, and the rating held at that level across 318 separate buyers rather than a handful. The 100-plus units bought last month puts it in the same demand tier as the best-selling belt here, the Harbinger 28900, suggesting the value proposition is resonating with a steady stream of new buyers rather than fading interest.

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Frequently asked questions

Is the Weight TW21-68 Weight Belt a good value?

At $25.99, it is the cheapest belt in this comparison, yet its 4.6-star average across 318 reviews matches the $59.95 Schiek belt exactly. For buyers who do not need leather's rigidity, the neoprene build offers a comparable rating at less than half the price of some rivals here, which is a meaningful gap for a budget-minded shopper.

What size does it fit?

The belt is sized for a 32 to 36 inch waist, described as a medium. That is narrower than the one-size listings from the Harbinger 28900 and 360982, so it suits a more specific range of body types rather than a broad, adjustable fit, and buyers outside that waist measurement should look elsewhere.

How does demand compare to other belts in this lineup?

With 100-plus units bought last month, it matches the pace of the Harbinger 28900, the strongest seller among the belts considered here. That level of ongoing demand, combined with a 4.6-star rating, suggests the low price has not come at the cost of buyer satisfaction or sales momentum.

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