AceSpear Ankle Weights for Men Women Wrist Weights 2 * Review

4.6 (718) Amazon rating$16.90

Our verdict

At $16.90, the AceSpear ankle weight set undercuts every other product in this comparison on price while still posting a 4.6-star average across 718 reviews, the second-highest rating of the group tied with the SPORTBIT. That combination makes it a strong budget pick, though its listing does not break out material or per-unit weight specs.

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Best for

Price-conscious buyers who want a well-rated ankle weight without paying the $19 to $30 range the other listings in this comparison command, the 4.6-star average here matches the highest rating in the whole lineup.

Skip if

Skip this if you want to confirm exact per-unit weight or material before buying, this listing's available facts do not include a detailed spec breakdown the way the Cando, Theraband, or SPORTBIT listings do.

  • Priced 15% below the category median ($19.99 across 97 tracked models)

Our scorecard

4.6/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.6/5

    4.6 average across 718 owner ratings

  • Popularity3.1/5

    718 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

Budget shoppers comparing ankle weights usually start with price, and the AceSpear Ankle Weights for Men Women come in lowest in this entire lineup at $16.90, undercutting even the $15.41 Graham-Field by a hair and the $19.09 Cando by over two dollars.

What is notable is that the low price does not come with a lower rating. AceSpear holds a 4.6-star average across 718 reviews, tying the SPORTBIT for the best rating of any product compared here and beating the 4.5 stars on the APEXUP, Fragraim, and Theraband listings, plus the 4.3 stars on the Cando and Graham-Field sets. Its 718-review count also lands ahead of the Cando, Graham-Field, and Fragraim totals, though behind the Theraband's 1,500 and the SPORTBIT's 949.

The gap in this listing is recent momentum and detail. Bought last month sits at 0+, the same flat figure as the Cando, Graham-Field, and Fragraim, and the available facts do not list a per-unit weight, material, or color the way most of the other products in this comparison do. For buyers who prioritize price and rating above spec transparency, AceSpear is worth a look, but anyone wanting to confirm exact weight or material before buying should check the current listing directly.

Pros

  • Lowest price in this comparison at $16.90
  • 4.6-star average across 718 reviews, tying the SPORTBIT for the highest rating of any product here
  • 718 reviews beats the Cando, Graham-Field, and Fragraim review counts
  • Marketed for both men and women per the product listing
  • InStock availability

Cons

  • 0+ bought last month, no stronger a recent-demand signal than the lowest-priced alternatives
  • 718 reviews still trail the Theraband's 1,500 and SPORTBIT's 949
  • Listing facts do not include a specific per-unit weight or material breakdown
  • No color options listed

Performance notes

The available facts for this listing do not break out a per-unit weight, material, or color the way the Cando, Theraband, SPORTBIT, and Fragraim listings do, so there is less to interpret here than with those products. What can be said is that the product name references both men and women, and mentions wrist weights alongside ankle weights, pointing to the kind of dual-purpose, one-size design common in this category. At $16.90, it sits at the low end of the price range covered in this comparison, and a 4.6-star average suggests buyers are satisfied with whatever weight and material the set actually ships with. Anyone who needs a confirmed per-unit weight before buying, for a specific rehab protocol or a strength progression plan, should check the current product listing directly rather than relying on comparison shopping alone.

What buyers say

A 4.6-star average across 718 reviews ties the SPORTBIT for the best rating in this comparison and beats every other product here, including the 4.5-star APEXUP, Fragraim, and Theraband listings. The 718-review sample is solid, ahead of the Cando's 128, Graham-Field's 169, and Fragraim's 437, though smaller than the Theraband's 1,500 or SPORTBIT's 949. The weaker signal is recent activity, 0+ bought last month puts it in the same flat bucket as the Cando, Graham-Field, and Fragraim, rather than showing the current momentum the APEXUP, ELEAMY, Theraband, and SPORTBIT listings show. Overall, the pattern reads as a well-liked, budget-friendly product without a strong recent-purchase signal to confirm it is still trending.

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Frequently asked questions

Does the AceSpear ankle weight set list a specific weight per unit?

No, the available facts for this listing do not include a per-unit weight, material, or color breakdown. What is confirmed is the $16.90 price, the 4.6-star rating across 718 reviews, and InStock availability, all solid signals on their own even without a detailed spec sheet.

Is AceSpear the best-rated ankle weight in this comparison?

It ties for the best rating. AceSpear and the SPORTBIT both average 4.6 stars, ahead of the 4.5-star APEXUP, Fragraim, and Theraband listings and the 4.3-star Cando and Graham-Field sets, a clear edge across every other ankle weight in this comparison.

Is AceSpear seeing strong recent demand?

The listing shows 0+ bought last month, the same flat figure as the Cando, Graham-Field, and Fragraim listings, so recent momentum is not the AceSpear's strongest selling point compared to the APEXUP or ELEAMY, both of which show much higher recent purchase volume.

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