AceSpear AS2140104ENBL Check price on Amazon

AceSpear AS2140104ENBL Ankle Weights Review

4.5 (2,300) Amazon rating$17.90400+ bought last month

Our verdict

The AceSpear AS2140104ENBL pairs a 4.5-star rating across 2,300 reviews with 400+ bought last month at $17.90, making it one of the cheapest sets in this comparison while still posting strong demand numbers. Each unit weighs 1 pound, for a lighter 2-pound total pair.

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Best for

Buyers wanting a light, budget-friendly ankle weight for walking, casual home workouts, or gentle rehab-style movement, backed by a large and recent review base that suggests steady ongoing sales.

Skip if

Skip it if you need more than 1 pound per ankle for added resistance, since this is the lightest fixed-weight pair in the comparison. Anyone progressing toward heavier loads will outgrow it and need a second set.

  • Material Neoprene
  • Weight 1 Pounds
  • Size 1 lb x 2
  • Color Black
  • Priced 10% below the category median ($19.99 across 97 tracked models)

Our scorecard

4.5/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.5/5

    4.5 average across 2,300 owner ratings

  • Popularity4.2/5

    2,300 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

The AceSpear AS2140104ENBL is priced at $17.90, the second-lowest price point among the ankle weight sets compared here, just above the Graham-Field 1897's $15.41, but still cheaper than the Comfecto at $19.99, Cando at $19.09, and Theraband at $22.49.

At 2,300 reviews and a 4.5-star average, the AceSpear sits well ahead of the Cando (128 reviews), Graham-Field (169 reviews), and even the Theraband (1,500 reviews) in review volume, while matching the Theraband's 4.5-star score. Its 400+ bought last month figure is also the second-highest in this broader comparison, trailing only the Fragraim adjustable set's 700+, and well ahead of the Theraband's and PROIRON's 100+.

Each unit is listed at 1 pound, made of neoprene, in black, for a combined 2-pound pair. That puts it in a lighter weight class than the Cando's 3 pounds or Graham-Field's 4 pounds, but matches the general category of light-to-moderate ankle weights alongside the Comfecto and Theraband's 2-pound units. Combining a low price with a large, high-scoring review base and strong recent demand makes the AceSpear one of the stronger value propositions in this lineup.

Pros

  • Second-lowest price in this comparison at $17.90, just above the Graham-Field's $15.41
  • 2,300 reviews at 4.5 stars ties the Theraband for the highest rating in the group
  • 400+ bought last month is the second-strongest recent-demand figure among all compared sets
  • Neoprene material matches the more comfortable build used in the Comfecto and Theraband
  • 1 pound per unit suits lighter, beginner-friendly routines

Cons

  • Lightest per-unit weight in the group at 1 pound, versus 2 to 4 pounds for other listed sets
  • No adjustability, so progression requires a separate, heavier set
  • Black is the only listed color option
  • Review count, while strong, still trails the Fragraim's 10,300 by a wide margin
  • Buyers wanting a heavier single-session load will need to size up

Specifications

MaterialNeoprene
Weight1 Pounds
Size1 lb x 2
ColorBlack

Performance notes

At 1 pound per unit, the AceSpear is lighter than the Comfecto and Theraband's 2-pound units, the Cando's 3 pounds, and the Graham-Field's 4 pounds. That places it at the entry end of the ankle weight spectrum, suited to walking, light cardio, or rehab-style leg lifts rather than heavier resistance training. The neoprene build is shared with the Comfecto and Theraband, which tends to sit more comfortably against skin over longer wear than the nylon-polyester blend used in the Cando. Because the pair is sold as two separate 1-pound units rather than one heavier piece per side, the load can also be split unevenly if a routine calls for it. For buyers who want to start light and add a second, heavier pair later, the AceSpear's low price and light weight make it a reasonable starting point rather than a single long-term solution for progressive loading.

What buyers say

A 4.5-star average across 2,300 reviews is a strong pattern, matching the top rating in this comparison while covering more feedback than the Theraband's 1,500 reviews at the same score. The 400+ bought last month figure adds to that picture, indicating the product is still moving in meaningful volume rather than relying on older reviews. Compared to the Cando and Graham-Field, both under 200 reviews with no bought-last-month data, the AceSpear shows a considerably more active and consistent buyer pattern, second in this broader lineup only to the Fragraim's larger numbers.

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Frequently asked questions

How much does each AceSpear ankle weight weigh?

Each unit is listed at 1 pound, with the pair sold as 1 lb x 2 for a combined 2 pounds. That makes it lighter per unit than the Comfecto and Theraband's 2-pound weights.

Is the AceSpear a good value pick?

At $17.90, it's priced below the Comfecto, Cando, and Theraband while still carrying 2,300 reviews at 4.5 stars and 400+ bought last month, a demand pattern that outpaces most of the other sets in this comparison.

What material is the AceSpear ankle weight made from?

It's built from neoprene, the same material used in the Comfecto and Theraband listings, which tends to be more comfortable against skin than the nylon-polyester blend used in the Cando 10-0193.

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