RitFit Soft Medicine Ball/Wall Ball for Strength and Conditioning Workouts, Review
Our verdict
The RitFit soft medicine ball set costs $249.88 for four color-coded weights, 10, 15, 20, and 25 pounds, and holds a 4.7-star average across 440 reviews, the highest rating and largest review base of any set-style ball in this comparison. It undercuts the CAP HHKCS-42's $259.99 six-piece set while covering a solid weight range.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Home gyms or small group training spaces that want a full progression of weights, 10 through 25 pounds, in one purchase, and buyers who want the highest-rated set-style option in this comparison at 4.7 stars.
Skip if
Skip it if you only need one weight. At $249.88, it costs roughly four to ten times what single-ball options like the JFIT ($64.35) or Yes4All ($25.99) charge, and half the balls in the set may go unused.
- Size 10+15+20+25lbs
- Color Blue,Green,Orange,Red
- Pieces 4
- Priced 480% above the category median ($43.10 across 41 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.7/5
4.7 average across 440 owner ratings
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Popularity2.9/5
440 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 shared training space, a garage gym used by more than one person, or a program that moves through weight increments knows a single medicine ball only covers one use case. The RitFit set answers that with four balls, 10, 15, 20, and 25 pounds, color-coded blue, green, orange, and red, for $249.88.
That price sits just under the CAP HHKCS-42's $259.99 six-piece set, but RitFit's 4.7-star rating across 440 reviews beats the CAP set's 4.3 stars across 184 reviews by a clear margin, both in satisfaction and in sample size. It's also the highest-rated product in this entire comparison group, ahead of the AEROMAT and Champion's 4.6-star balls.
The bought-last-month figure of 50-plus purchases is a meaningful signal too, well behind Champion's 300-plus but ahead of the JFIT, AEROMAT, and CAP listings, which show no notable recent volume. For a set-style purchase at this price point, that combination of strong rating, solid review count, and real recent purchase activity suggests RitFit is currently the standout option among the pricier, multi-weight products in this category. That makes it a rare case in this comparison where the priciest set-style option is also the best reviewed and among the most actively purchased.
Pros
- 4.7-star rating across 440 reviews is the highest of any product in this comparison
- Covers four distinct weights (10, 15, 20, 25 lbs) in one purchase, more range than any single-ball option
- Costs $10 less than the CAP HHKCS-42 six-piece set ($259.99) while rating nearly half a star higher
- 50+ bought last month shows real recent purchase activity, second only to Champion's 300+ in this group
- Color-coded weights (blue, green, orange, red) make it easier to grab the right ball at a glance
Cons
- At $249.88, it costs far more than single-ball options like Yes4All's $25.99 or the JFIT's $64.35
- Four pieces means storage space for four balls, more than a single-ball purchase requires
- Two pieces fewer than the CAP HHKCS-42's six-ball set, despite a similar price
- Still well behind Champion's 300+ bought-last-month figure, even as the strongest performer among the pricier sets
- No rack included in the listed specs, unlike the CAP set which bundles one
Specifications
| Size | 10+15+20+25lbs |
|---|---|
| Color | Blue,Green,Orange,Red |
| Pieces | 4 |
Performance notes
A four-weight set spanning 10 to 25 pounds covers a meaningful range for progressive training, from lighter rotational and cardio work up to heavier slams and carries, without needing to buy balls one at a time. The color coding by weight, blue, green, orange, and red, is a practical touch for anyone who wants to grab the right ball quickly in a shared space. At $249.88, the price reflects that range rather than a single item, and it lines up closely with the CAP HHKCS-42 set's $259.99, though CAP includes two more pieces. RitFit's higher 4.7-star rating against CAP's 4.3, backed by more than double the review count, suggests the set delivers on build quality across its four pieces rather than just one being strong and dragging the average down.
What buyers say
A 4.7-star average across 440 reviews is the strongest combination of rating and volume in this entire comparison set, ahead of Champion's 4.6 stars, the AEROMAT's 4.6 stars, and the CAP set's 4.3 stars. The 50-plus bought-last-month figure adds real weight to that rating, since it's the second-highest recent purchase signal in the group behind only Champion's 300-plus. That combination, a high rating, a large review base, and ongoing sales, suggests this isn't a product coasting on old reviews. Buyers appear to be actively choosing it now, not just historically, which is a more reliable signal than rating alone.
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Frequently asked questions
What weights come in the RitFit medicine ball set?
The set includes four balls at 10, 15, 20, and 25 pounds, each in a different color, blue, green, orange, and red, for easy identification. That range covers lighter conditioning work through heavier slam and carry training in one $249.88 purchase.
Is the RitFit set better than the CAP HHKCS-42?
By the numbers, yes on rating and review count. RitFit holds 4.7 stars across 440 reviews versus CAP's 4.3 stars across 184, and costs $10 less. CAP does include two more pieces, so the choice depends on whether extra pieces matter more than rating to you.
Does the RitFit set show strong recent demand?
Yes, relatively. It shows 50-plus bought last month, the second-highest figure in this comparison behind Champion's 300-plus, and well ahead of the JFIT, AEROMAT, and CAP listings, which don't show meaningful recent volume. That pattern suggests real, ongoing buyer interest rather than a one-time sales spike.