AGPTEK Smart Watch Review: A Lightweight Fitness Tracker Worth Considering

AGPTEK Smart Watch for Women, 5ATM Waterproof Smartwatch for Android and iOS Phones, Fitness Tracker Watch with 100+ Sports Modes, Heart Rate Monitor Pedometer Sleep Monitor, Pink
AGPTEK
- 【ULTRA LIGHT & COMFORTABLE SMARTWATCH】Experience the ultra-light 34g design, up to 15% lighter than most smart watches on the market, with no sense of pressure when wearing! This AGPTEK smart watch adopts a soft liquid silicone strap that ensures an easy and comfortable fit for all-day wear, ideal for those seeking a smart watch without the bulk. NOTE: THE WATCH DOES NOT SUPPORT MAKING CALLS and SENDING MESSAGES.
- 【5ATM WATERPROOF & 100+ SPORTS MODES】The fitness watch upgraded to water-resistant up to 50 meters, superior to 3ATM, IP68 waterproof watches. It's your reliable life companion for swimming, washing hands, and rain. 100+ sports modes in the APP, including walking, running, cycling, skipping, football, basketball, Yoga, and more to track your activity data and motivate you to reach new heights in health goals!(Note: Avoid prolonged exposure to seawater, showers or saunas).
- 【24H HEALTH MONITOR & SMART REMINDER】This smart watch for women men provides 24H health tracking, monitoring your sleep, heart rate, blood oxygen, and stress status day and night, allowing you to understand and control your health at any time. With smart notifications, you can check messages and reminders in time. The water drinking reminder and sedentary reminder remind you to replenish water, stay away from sitting for a long time, and promote a healthier daily life! (We suggest keeping the Bluetooth distance within 8-10m for a stable Bluetooth connection.)
- 【200+ DIY DIALS & HIGH-RESOLUTION DISPLAY】The smart watch has built-in 4 dials and over 200 colorful watch faces in the app. You can also DIY watch faces by uploading your favorite photos, such as family, pets, nice pictures, etc to express your personality or match your daily outfit and mood! With a 360*360 high-resolution color screen, offers a clear, detailed view of your time, notifications, and fitness data. (NOTE: 1.3"/33mm is the display screen, and the whole watch face is 1.81"/46 mm).
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Featherlight 34g build — genuinely comfortable for all-day and overnight wear
- 5ATM waterproof rating handles swimming, rain, and hand-washing without issue
- 100+ sports modes cover most workout preferences from yoga to basketball
- 24-hour health tracking monitors heart rate, sleep, blood oxygen, and stress
- 200+ customizable watch faces and DIY photo option add personal flair
Cons
- No calling or texting — notifications only, which some buyers find limiting
- Blood oxygen readings can drift noticeably compared to medical-grade pulse oximeters
- No built-in GPS means outdoor route tracking relies on your phone
- Larger 46mm case may overwhelm smaller wrists — measure before buying
Quick Verdict
The AGPTEK Smart Watch is a budget fitness tracker that punches well above its price tag on comfort and waterproofing. After two weeks of daily wear — gym sessions, dog walks in the rain, and overnight sleep tracking — I can say the 34g weight genuinely disappears on your wrist, which is something pricier watches still struggle with. It's not a replacement for a Garmin or Apple Watch, but if you want solid basics without the premium price, this pink fitness tracker earns a solid 8.3/10 for the right buyer.
What Is the AGPTEK Smart Watch?
I unboxed this on a rainy Tuesday morning — not the most romantic setting for a first impression, but it meant I could immediately test whether the 5ATM waterproof claim held up during my commute. Spoiler: it did. The AGPTEK Smart Watch is a budget-friendly fitness tracker aimed at women who want health monitoring, workout tracking, and smart notifications without the bulk or price tag of flagship smartwatches.

The standout selling point is the 34g weight — AGPTEK claims it's up to 15% lighter than most competitors, and after wearing it alongside a Fitbit Inspire 3 for comparison, I'd say that number checks out. The soft liquid silicone strap doesn't pinch or trap heat, which matters when you're wearing it through a full workday and into sleep tracking at night. The 46mm case houses a 1.3-inch display, giving you plenty of screen real estate without feeling clunky.
Where it draws the line: no calling, no texting, no voice assistant. This is strictly a notification-and-tracking device, which keeps the price down but does limit its utility for some users.
Key Features
- Ultra-light 34g body — 15% lighter than most smartwatches; silicone strap for all-day comfort
- 5ATM waterproof — safe for swimming up to 50 meters, rain, and hand-washing
- 100+ sports modes — walking, running, cycling, yoga, basketball, football, and many more
- 24-hour health tracking — heart rate, blood oxygen (SpO2), sleep, and stress monitoring
- 200+ watch faces — 4 built-in dials plus DIY photo faces via the companion app
- 360×360 resolution display — crisp color screen with good daylight legibility
- Smart notifications — calls and messages displayed; no reply or call-answer capability
- Extra features — water-drinking reminder, sedentary alert, camera control, weather, music control, female health tracking
Hands-On Review
The first thing I noticed was how unobtrusive the AGPTEK Smart Watch felt. I'm not usually a fan of wearing anything to bed, but the sleep tracking mode is genuinely useful — it logged 6 hours 42 minutes one night when I thought I'd slept less, which made me reconsider my weekend habits. The sleep stages breakdown (light, deep, REM) is basic but consistent with what I've seen from mid-range Fitbits.

Heart rate monitoring during workouts is where I'd apply a caveat. During a steady 30-minute run, the numbers tracked closely with my chest strap (122 bpm vs 119 bpm — close enough for casual training). But during a HIIT session with rapid arm movements, the wrist optical sensor lost the plot a bit, spiking to 185 when I was closer to 165. If you're training for a race and need precise heart rate zones, this won't replace a chest strap.
The 100+ sports modes sound like marketing fluff, but I actually used more than I expected. The "outdoor walking" mode paired with my phone's GPS gave me decent distance and pace data. I tried the yoga mode on a whim during a morning stretch session — it logged duration and estimated calories, which felt like a bonus for something I'd otherwise not track at all.

Water resistance is where this watch genuinely impressed me. I wore it into the shower (against the official recommendation, I'll admit) and it came out fine. The real test was a cold-water swim at the lake — 40 minutes in, still ticking. The notification system is clean: incoming texts and app alerts appear with vibration, and I can glance down to decide whether to pull out my phone. What I wish they'd added: quick replies or at least a "dismiss" gesture. Instead you have to open the app to clear notifications on the watch itself.
By the end of week two, I was reaching for it out of habit rather than novelty. The battery held up to five days with moderate use — that's sleep tracking, two workouts, and notifications running all day. Your mileage will vary if you crank the brightness or use always-on mode constantly.
Who Should Buy It?
Women seeking a no-fuss fitness tracker — if you want heart rate, sleep, and workout logging without learning a complex ecosystem, this delivers straightforward basics.
Budget-conscious shoppers wanting waterproofing — the 5ATM rating at this price is genuinely competitive. Most trackers at $30-50 only offer IP68 or 3ATM.
Users who prioritize comfort over features — the 34g weight and soft strap make this one of the more wearable budget trackers I've tested.
Casual athletes who dislike bulky watches — 100+ modes cover gym routines, swimming, cycling, and more without requiring a sports-specific device.
Skip this if you need built-in GPS for accurate outdoor route tracking without your phone, calling or texting capability, or medical-grade health accuracy. If any of those are dealbreakers, look at the Garmin Forerunner 45 or Apple Watch SE instead — they'll cost you $100-200 more, but they close those gaps.
Alternatives Worth Considering
Fitbit Inspire 3 — Similar price point and all-day comfort, but lacks the 5ATM swimming rating and large display. Better ecosystem if you want Fitbit Premium features down the line.
Xiaomi Band 8 — Strong competitor with built-in GPS (finally), excellent battery life, and a more refined companion app. Screen is smaller and the design is more utilitarian.
Garmin Forerunner 45 — Step up in price but offers built-in GPS, advanced running dynamics, and Garmin Coach. Significantly bulkier and more masculine in design if that matters.
FAQ
Yes — the 5ATM rating means it's safe for pools, open-water swimming, and daily water exposure like rain and hand-washing. Avoid prolonged seawater soaks, hot showers, and saunas.
Final Verdict
The AGPTEK Smart Watch for Women is exactly what it sets out to be: an affordable, lightweight fitness tracker that covers the essentials without overreaching. The 5ATM waterproofing and 34g comfort are its genuine strengths, and for anyone transitioning from a basic pedometer or upgrading from a worn-out band-style tracker, the upgrade will feel meaningful. I was pleasantly surprised by how little I thought about wearing it — that sounds simple, but comfort is where most budget trackers trip up.
It's not a replacement for a dedicated running watch or a health monitoring device, and the absence of calling and GPS will be non-starters for some buyers. But at its price point, asking for Garmin-level features would be unfair. What you get is reliable daily tracking, genuinely useful smart reminders, and a watch that looks better than the specs suggest.
Would I recommend it? Yes — with the caveat that you measure your wrist before ordering, since the 46mm case runs large. Check the current price on Amazon using the link below.