HANDBODE S01HB07D0005P-A1 Dumbbells Review
Our verdict
The HANDBODE S01HB07D0005P-A1 pair costs $21.99 and carries a standout 4.8-star average, edging out both PowerBlock and Yes4All's 4.7-star scores. But that rating rests on only 181 reviews and 50-plus monthly purchases, a fraction of the volume behind those established names, so the high score comes with less proof behind it.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Best for budget-minded buyers drawn to the highest star rating in this comparison, 4.8, who don't mind that the sample size behind it, 181 reviews, is much smaller than the tens of thousands backing bigger-name alternatives.
Skip if
Skip it if you weigh review volume heavily, since 181 reviews and 50-plus monthly purchases are the smallest numbers in this lineup, or if you need a heavier set than the 10-pound total this listing specifies.
- Material Alloy Steel, Rubber
- Weight 10 Pounds
- Color Black
- Pieces 2
- Priced 63% below the category median ($59.44 across 88 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.8/5
4.8 average across 181 owner ratings
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Popularity1.4/5
181 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
Someone sorting a dumbbell search by star rating alone would land on the HANDBODE S01HB07D0005P-A1 first, it carries a 4.8-star average, the highest number in this comparison. The pair is built from alloy steel and rubber, weighs 10 pounds combined, comes in black, and sells for $21.99 with two pieces included. Amazon shows 50-plus units bought in the past month.
The catch sits in the numbers behind that rating. 181 reviews is a small sample next to Yes4All's 18,568 or even PowerBlock's 2,782, and 50-plus monthly buyers trails every other option here, including JFIT's 500-plus at a much lower $7.99 price point. A near-perfect score built on 181 opinions carries real weight, but it hasn't been stress-tested by the volume of buyers that the bigger names have seen.
At $21.99, the price lands close to Yes4All's $20.12, making the two a near-direct price comparison. Yes4All wins on proof of demand by a wide margin, while HANDBODE wins on raw rating. Buyers who trust a smaller but stronger rating over a much larger, still-strong one have a real case for this pair. Buyers who want the reassurance of scale should look at the higher-volume alternative instead.
Pros
- 4.8-star average is the highest rating of any product in this comparison, ahead of PowerBlock and Yes4All's 4.7.
- Priced at $21.99, close to Yes4All's $20.12 and far below PowerBlock's $399.99.
- Alloy steel and rubber construction combines durability with a coated exterior.
- Comes as a set of two pieces rather than a single unit.
- Currently InStock with no listed availability issue.
- 10-pound combined weight fits light strength work and toning routines.
Cons
- Only 181 reviews back the 4.8-star average, a small sample next to the 18,568 behind Yes4All's DSAX.
- 50-plus units bought last month is the lowest demand figure in this entire comparison.
- 10 pounds combined is a light total for lifters looking to progress toward heavier compound work.
- The lengthy alphanumeric model name (S01HB07D0005P-A1) offers little brand recognition or history to lean on.
- No adjustability, so once the 10-pound total is outgrown, a new set is needed.
Specifications
| Material | Alloy Steel, Rubber |
|---|---|
| Weight | 10 Pounds |
| Color | Black |
| Pieces | 2 |
Performance notes
Alloy steel paired with a rubber coating is a common combination for dumbbells aimed at home use, the steel provides the mass, and the rubber layer protects floors and reduces the clang that bare metal makes when set down. At 10 pounds combined across two pieces, this set sits toward the lighter end of the category, suited to toning, rehab, or higher-rep accessory work rather than heavy compound lifts. The $21.99 price puts it in direct range with Yes4All's $20.12 pair, though Yes4All's listing specifies 16 pounds combined, a heavier option at essentially the same cost. For buyers who specifically want a lighter set, or who already have heavier dumbbells and need a lighter pair to round out a rack, the 10-pound total here fits a specific, narrower use case rather than being an all-purpose choice.
What buyers say
A 4.8-star average is the standout number in this lineup, technically outperforming PowerBlock and Yes4All's 4.7-star scores. But the volume behind it tells a different story, 181 reviews and 50-plus monthly purchases are both the smallest figures among the four products compared here. That combination, a very high rating on a comparatively small base, usually means either a newer listing that hasn't accumulated a large audience yet or a smaller niche product that satisfies the buyers it reaches without reaching many of them. It's a genuinely strong pattern as far as it goes, just one built on far less data than the tens of thousands of reviews backing the market leaders.
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Frequently asked questions
Why does the HANDBODE dumbbell have a higher star rating than bigger brands like PowerBlock?
Its 4.8-star average is based on 181 reviews, a much smaller sample than PowerBlock's 2,782 or Yes4All's 18,568. Smaller review counts can produce higher or more volatile averages, so the rating is real but less statistically settled than the bigger-volume alternatives.
How much weight do you get with the HANDBODE dumbbell set?
The listing specifies 10 pounds combined across two pieces made of alloy steel and rubber. That's on the lighter end of this comparison, suited to toning, rehab, and lighter strength work rather than heavy compound lifting like the 105-pound TYZDMY pair covers.
Is 50-plus purchases last month a red flag for this product?
It's the lowest bought-last-month figure among the alternatives compared here, but it's not necessarily a red flag on its own. Combined with a strong 4.8-star rating, it more likely reflects a smaller-reach listing than a quality issue, though buyers wanting proof of scale should note the gap.