THEFITGUY PROD_00083 Weight Belt Review
Our verdict
The THEFITGUY PROD_00083 Weight Belt costs $42.95 and holds a 4.3-star average across 165 reviews. With 300-plus units bought last month, it matches the top demand pace in this comparison, even though its rating and review count both trail its sibling listing, the PROD_00073, and several other belts here.
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Buyers who want a one-size neoprene and nylon belt and prioritize strong recent demand, since 300-plus units bought last month puts it among the top sellers in this comparison, ahead of most rivals despite a mid-tier star rating.
Skip if
Skip it if you want the highest possible rating or the deepest review history, since 4.3 stars across 165 reviews is on the lower end of both metrics in this comparison. Budget shoppers should also note this is one of the pricier belts here at $42.95.
- Material Neoprene, Nylon
- Size One Size Fits Most
- Priced 30% above the category median ($32.99 across 88 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.3/5
4.3 average across 165 owner ratings
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Popularity1.2/5
165 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
The THEFITGUY PROD_00083 Weight Belt is priced at $42.95, tying it with its sibling listing, the PROD_00073, as one of the more expensive products in this comparison. It combines neoprene and nylon in a one-size-fits-most design, which favors ease of fit over the precise waist ranges stated by belts like the Fitgriff FG030.
The rating sits at 4.3 stars across 165 reviews, both figures on the lower end of this comparison. It trails the 4.5-star, 181-review PROD_00073 slightly, and it is well behind top performers like the RDX WBS's 4.4-star average across 11,200 reviews or the Hip FB3927's 4.6 stars across 713.
What stands out is demand. Three hundred-plus units bought last month ties the pace of the RDX WBS, the strongest historical seller in this comparison by review count, and outpaces the 200-plus figure posted by its own sibling listing. For a buyer who weighs current sales momentum heavily, that figure is a meaningful counterbalance to the more middling star rating and thinner review base.
Pros
- 300-plus units bought last month, matching the RDX WBS for the strongest demand signal in this comparison
- Neoprene and nylon combination for a lighter, flexible feel than rigid leather belts
- One-size-fits-most design simplifies the buying decision
- In stock and available now
- Outsells its own sibling listing, the PROD_00073, by 100 units last month
Cons
- 4.3-star rating is on the lower end of this comparison, behind belts rated 4.4 to 4.7
- 165 reviews is one of the smaller samples in this set
- Priced at $42.95, among the more expensive belts compared here
- One-size fit may not suit buyers at either extreme of typical waist measurements
Specifications
| Material | Neoprene, Nylon |
|---|---|
| Size | One Size Fits Most |
Performance notes
A neoprene and nylon blend combines the flexibility of nylon with the cushioning neoprene provides, which generally trades some rigidity for comfort compared with a thick leather belt like the Harbinger 360982. The one-size-fits-most approach removes the need to check a specific waist range before ordering, unlike belts such as the Fitgriff FG030 with its stated 33.5 to 43 inch fit, though it also means less precision for buyers outside a typical size window. At $42.95, the price places this belt closer to premium products in this comparison than to the budget nylon options, so the value case rests more on the strong recent demand figure than on the star rating alone, which sits in the lower half of the group.
What buyers say
A 4.3-star average across 165 reviews is a modest showing relative to this comparison, sitting below the 4.4 to 4.7 range posted by several other belts, including its own sibling listing at 4.5 stars. The review sample of 165 is also on the smaller side, though not the thinnest in this set. The clear bright spot is demand: 300-plus units bought last month ties the RDX WBS for the top demand figure among all products compared here, and it exceeds the 200-plus figure from the PROD_00073. That pattern suggests a belt that is currently selling briskly even though its accumulated rating and review base are more middling than standout.
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Frequently asked questions
How does this belt compare to its sibling, the THEFITGUY PROD_00073?
The PROD_00073 carries a higher 4.5-star rating on 181 reviews, while this one sits at 4.3 stars across 165 reviews. However, this listing outsold its sibling last month, with 300-plus units bought versus 200-plus, suggesting stronger current demand despite the slightly lower rating.
What size does the THEFITGUY PROD_00083 fit?
It is listed as one size fits most, built from a neoprene and nylon combination. That approach favors a simpler buying decision over the precise waist ranges given by belts like the Fitgriff FG030, though it may fit less precisely at either extreme of typical waist sizes.
Is the $42.95 price worth it given the 4.3-star rating?
The rating itself is on the lower end of this comparison, but the 300-plus units bought last month ties the RDX WBS for the strongest demand signal in the entire set. For buyers who weigh current sales momentum heavily, that figure offsets the more middling star rating.