NÜOBELL® Adjustable Dumbbell Set, 5-50 LB or 5-80 LB, Easy Review

4.7 (103) Amazon rating$702.00

Our verdict

The NUOBELL Adjustable Dumbbell Set runs $702 for a single 5-80 pound pair, and its 4.7-star average across 103 reviews is solid, but a bought-last-month figure of 0+ is the detail that matters most here: this is a premium tool with a thin recent sales trail compared to rivals moving thousands of units a month.

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Best for

Best for lifters who already have a fully equipped rack and bench and want one adjustable pair that spans 5 to 80 pounds per hand, without a rack of fixed-weight dumbbells taking over the garage floor.

Skip if

Skip it if $702 feels steep for a single pair, or if the 0+ bought-last-month count worries you; the PowerBlock at $399.99 or Yes4All fixed pairs at $20.12 each cover similar weight ranges for less.

  • Weight 80 Pounds
  • Color Green
  • Pieces 2
  • Priced 1081% above the category median ($59.44 across 88 tracked models)

Our scorecard

4.5/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.7/5

    4.7 average across 103 owner ratings

  • Popularity0.8/5

    103 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

Anyone who has tried to fit a full rack of iron plates into a one-car garage knows the appeal of a single adjustable pair. The NUOBELL Adjustable Dumbbell Set promises exactly that, a 5-80 pound range packed into two pieces, priced at $702.

The listed specs show an 80-pound top end per handle, a green colorway, and a two-piece count, meaning this is sold as a matched pair rather than a single dumbbell. At 4.7 stars across 103 reviews, the rating sits right alongside the PowerBlock's 4.7 stars from 2,782 reviews, which is a meaningfully larger sample. A 103-review base is enough to see a pattern, but it is thin next to a set that has moved through thousands of buyers.

Price is where the real decision lives. At $702, this set costs almost double the PowerBlock's $399.99 and dwarfs fixed-weight options like the Yes4All pair at $20.12 or the JFIT at $7.99. Those cheaper options top out well below 80 pounds and require buying multiple pairs to reach that range, so the comparison is not apples to apples. Still, buyers watching their budget should weigh the 0+ bought-last-month figure against the PowerBlock's 1,000+ and the Yes4All's 2,000+, since recent purchase volume is one more way to read how a product is currently performing on the market.

Pros

  • Single pair covers a 5 to 80 pound range, per the listed spec sheet, replacing what would otherwise be a rack of individual dumbbells.
  • 4.7-star average rating matches the top-rated PowerBlock in this comparison set.
  • Two-piece count means both dumbbells of the pair are included in the $702 price, not sold individually.
  • In-stock availability with no listed backorder delay.
  • 80-pound top end per handle is on par with or above most home-gym adjustable dumbbells in this range.

Cons

  • At $702, it costs roughly 76 percent more than the $399.99 PowerBlock 50-pound set.
  • Only 103 reviews on record, a small sample compared to the PowerBlock's 2,782 and the Yes4All's 18,568.
  • Bought-last-month figure of 0+ suggests little recent purchase momentum relative to competitors moving 1,000+ to 2,000+ units.
  • No weight increments are listed beyond the 80-pound max, so buyers cannot confirm the adjustment steps from the spec sheet alone.
  • Price puts it well outside the budget tier occupied by fixed-weight options like the $7.99 JFIT or $20.12 Yes4All.

Specifications

Weight80 Pounds
ColorGreen
Pieces2

Performance notes

The spec sheet lists an 80-pound capacity per handle and a two-piece count, which for an adjustable dumbbell set typically means each dumbbell dials from a low starting weight up through that maximum in a series of steps, rather than requiring a stack of separate plates. That kind of range is meant to cover everything from light accessory work to heavy compound lifts with the same two dumbbells, which is the main appeal of paying more for adjustability instead of buying a full rack of fixed pairs. The green color listed is cosmetic and does not affect function. Because the pair replaces multiple fixed-weight dumbbells, floor space and storage footprint shrink considerably compared to something like the Yes4All or JFIT lines, where reaching an 80-pound top end would require several separate pairs stacked on a rack.

What buyers say

A 4.7-star average is a strong number on its own, and it lines up with the same 4.7 stars posted by the PowerBlock across a much larger 2,782-review base. What stands out here is the gap between review volume and recent purchase activity: 103 reviews is a modest sample for a $702 item, and the 0+ bought-last-month figure is the lowest of any product in this comparison, well behind the PowerBlock's 1,000+ and the Yes4All's 2,000+. That combination reads as a product with a loyal but small buyer base rather than one currently moving in volume. It does not mean the rating is unreliable, just that fewer recent buyers are generating fresh signal at the moment.

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Frequently asked questions

Is the NUOBELL Adjustable Dumbbell Set worth $702?

It depends on what you are replacing. If you currently own several fixed-weight pairs taking up floor space, one $702 set covering 5 to 80 pounds can be worth the premium. If you only need moderate weights occasionally, a fixed pair like the $20.12 Yes4All or $7.99 JFIT covers far more ground per dollar.

How does the review count compare to other adjustable dumbbells?

At 103 reviews, this set has a far smaller sample than the PowerBlock's 2,782 reviews at a similar 4.7-star rating, or the fixed-weight Yes4All pair's 18,568 reviews. A smaller review base still shows a consistent rating pattern, but it offers less certainty than products with review counts in the thousands.

Should I worry about the 0+ bought-last-month figure?

It is worth noting. A 0+ figure means recent sales volume was not prominent enough to register, unlike the PowerBlock's 1,000+ or the Yes4All's 2,000+ figures. That does not undo the 4.7-star rating from 103 reviews, but it is a signal that current buyer interest may be lower than higher-volume competitors.

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