ELEAMY ANKLE088 Ankle Weights Review

4.5 (37) Amazon rating$64.88100+ bought last month

Our verdict

The ELEAMY ANKLE088 costs $64.88 and delivers 15 pounds of adjustable ankle weight, roughly five to seven times heavier than the 2-to-4-pound alternatives compared here. With a 4.5-star rating and 100+ bought last month, it's built for buyers who want serious resistance, not the light toning weights most of this category offers.

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Best for

Buyers who've outgrown light 2-to-4-pound ankle weights and want real resistance for jogging, cycling, or walking, using the cast iron and metal 15-pound pair with a one-size adjustable, neoprene and nylon wrap.

Skip if

Skip it if you want a light toning weight for rehab or beginner leg lifts. Fifteen pounds is a major step up from the 2-to-4-pound options here, and at $64.88 it costs more than triple the cheapest alternative.

  • Material Cast Iron, Iron, Metal, Neoprene, Nylon
  • Weight 15 Pounds
  • Size One Size & Adjustable
  • Color Black, A Pair
  • Feature Cycling, Jogging, Runing, Swimming, Walking
  • Priced 225% above the category median ($19.99 across 97 tracked models)

Our scorecard

4.2/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.5/5

    4.5 average across 37 owner ratings

  • Popularity0.3/5

    37 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

Most ankle weights in this comparison sit in the 2-to-4-pound range, meant for light resistance added to walks or leg-raise sets. The ELEAMY ANKLE088 is a different category of product. Built from cast iron, iron, metal, neoprene, and nylon, it weighs 15 pounds per adjustable, one-size pair, finished in black.

That weight figure is the headline. The Cando 10-0193 tops out at 3 pounds, the Graham-Field 1897 at 4 pounds, and the Theraband 25871 at 2 pounds, all costing between $15.41 and $22.49. The ELEAMY costs $64.88, more than three times the Theraband's price, but it's also delivering roughly five to seven times the resistance by weight, so the per-pound cost is arguably more competitive than the sticker price suggests.

On review signals, the ELEAMY holds a 4.5-star average, matching the Theraband and just 0.1 stars below the top-rated Wellrox Bangles, but across only 37 reviews, a much smaller base than any of the lighter alternatives. Still, 100+ bought last month shows active, current demand, matching the Theraband's own 100+ figure. Listed features spanning cycling, jogging, running, swimming, and walking suggest a multi-activity design rather than one built for a single use case.

Pros

  • 15-pound weight per pair dwarfs the 2-to-4-pound range of every other ankle weight compared here
  • 4.5-star rating, matching the Theraband 25871 and just 0.1 stars behind the top-rated Wellrox Bangles
  • 100+ bought last month shows active current demand despite a small 37-review base
  • One-size adjustable fit works across cycling, jogging, running, swimming, and walking per the listed features
  • Neoprene and nylon wrap over the cast iron and metal weight should distribute the load rather than concentrate it in a hard strap

Cons

  • At $64.88 it's the most expensive ankle weight in this comparison, more than triple the Graham-Field's $15.41
  • Only 37 total reviews is a thin sample next to the Theraband's 1,500 or even the Wellrox's 585
  • 15 pounds is far too heavy for buyers wanting a light toning or rehab weight
  • No breakdown of weight increments is listed beyond the fixed 15-pound figure

Specifications

MaterialCast Iron, Iron, Metal, Neoprene, Nylon
Weight15 Pounds
SizeOne Size & Adjustable
ColorBlack, A Pair
FeatureCycling, Jogging, Runing, Swimming, Walking

Performance notes

A 15-pound ankle weight is a meaningful strength-training load, not a light accessory. For comparison, the next heaviest alternative here, the Graham-Field 1897, tops out at 4 pounds, meaning the ELEAMY is delivering nearly four times the resistance. That kind of weight changes how it's used: it suits controlled leg-raise or hip-extension work more than a full jog or run, even though running is listed as a feature. The cast iron and metal core, wrapped in neoprene and nylon, should keep the mass close to the ankle rather than swinging loosely, which matters more as weight increases. The one-size adjustable design needs to secure a 15-pound load without shifting, a bigger engineering demand than securing 2 or 3 pounds. Listed across cycling, jogging, running, swimming, and walking, the multi-activity claim is broad, and buyers should weigh whether a 15-pound weight suits high-impact movement like running.

What buyers say

A 4.5-star average puts the ELEAMY on par with the Theraband 25871 and just behind the Wellrox Bangles' 4.6, but the 37-review count is a fraction of the Theraband's 1,500 or the Wellrox's 585, so the rating carries less statistical weight. The 100+ bought-last-month figure matches the Theraband's own recent-demand number and beats the Cando and Graham-Field, both showing no bought-last-month activity. Given the small review base, the rating reads more like an early, positive signal than a fully proven track record. For a niche, heavy-weight product at a premium price, that combination of few reviews but consistent recent sales suggests a smaller but satisfied buyer pool rather than mass-market adoption.

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Frequently asked questions

How heavy are the ELEAMY ANKLE088 ankle weights?

They weigh 15 pounds per pair, far heavier than the 2-to-4-pound weights typical of this category, making them suited to buyers wanting real resistance rather than light toning.

Is $64.88 a reasonable price for these ankle weights?

It's the highest price among the ankle weights compared here, but it also delivers roughly five to seven times the weight of the 2-to-4-pound alternatives, so the cost-per-pound is more competitive than the sticker price alone suggests.

Can I trust a 4.5-star rating from just 37 reviews?

It's a smaller sample than competitors like the Theraband's 1,500 reviews, so treat it as an early positive signal. The 100+ bought last month does suggest the rating reflects a genuinely active, satisfied recent buyer pool.

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