Fetori - Weight Loss & Wellness Reviews

Mindimp Smart Watch for Women Review – Budget Fitness Tracker Worth It?

By haunh··6 min read·
4.2
Smart Watch for Women(3 Bands), Smartwatch Fitness Tracker with Bluetooth Calls & AI Voice Control, 1.85’’ HD Screen, Heart Rate/SpO2 Monitor, Sleep Tracker, Compatible with Android iOS (Gold)

Smart Watch for Women(3 Bands), Smartwatch Fitness Tracker with Bluetooth Calls & AI Voice Control, 1.85’’ HD Screen, Heart Rate/SpO2 Monitor, Sleep Tracker, Compatible with Android iOS (Gold)

Mindimp

  • 【Advanced Health Monitoring】This smart watch support monitor Heart Rate & SpO₂, plus Manual Breath Rate measurement. Delivers detailed sleep analysis (deep/light/awake stages). The ultimate health-focused smartwatch and exceptional gift for wellness enthusiasts.
  • 【Instant Bluetooth Calling & Voice Control】Experience calling directly from your Gloryfit smart watch, powered by advanced Bluetooth 5.3 tech and mic/speaker. Seamlessly answer/make calls during workouts or daily tasks. Plus, activate your smartphone's voice assistant (Siri/Google/Bixby) with one tap for music, messages, and more
  • 【112+ Sports Modes & IP68 Waterproof 】With 112+ sport modes – from fitness training/Pilates tracking to precise Yoga/Power Walking metrics. Our smart watch record real-time heart rate, calorie burn, distance & duration. IP68 waterproof defense withstands heavy rain, intense sweat, and accidental submersion , making it your 24/7 workout partner.
  • 【Elegant Metal Structure & 3 Straps】This women smart watch crafted with a luxe metal body that exudes timeless sophistication. Includes 3 versatile bands to match every mood and moment: a dazzling sparkle steel band for glamorous occasions, and a soft dual-tone silicone band that’s sweat-proof, durable, and ideal for workouts, yoga flows, or all-day casual wear.

Quick Verdict

Pros

  • Comprehensive health tracking including heart rate, SpO2 and detailed sleep stages
  • Bluetooth 5.3 calling works reliably for hands-free calls during workouts
  • Three included straps (steel, silicone, dual-tone) cover workouts, office and evenings
  • 112 sports modes with real-time calorie, distance and duration metrics
  • IP68 waterproof rating handles rain, sweat and brief submersion without issues
  • 300+ watch faces plus custom photo face option for personalisation

Cons

  • Battery drains noticeably faster when Bluetooth calling is used frequently
  • Gloryfit app interface feels dated and notifications are not very customisable
  • SpO2 readings can vary from clinical devices — treat as directional, not diagnostic
  • Step counter tends to overestimate by roughly 8-12% compared to a phone pedometer
  • Sleep data is basic — light/deep/awake stages are present but lack the depth of premium competitors

Quick Verdict

The Mindimp Smart Watch for Women is a budget fitness tracker that leans hard into versatility. With Bluetooth calling, heart rate and SpO2 monitoring, 112 sports modes and three included straps, it covers more bases than most watches at this price point. After two weeks of daily use, I can confirm the core fitness tracking works reliably and the calling feature is genuinely convenient during gym sessions. The Gloryfit app needs some polish and battery life takes a hit when you use calling often, but for under $60 this is one of the stronger options for women who want smartwatch features without a flagship price tag. Rating: 4.2 out of 5.

What Is the Mindimp Smart Watch for Women?

Let me set the scene. It was a rainy Tuesday morning and I was halfway through my third coffee, juggling a gym bag and a phone that would not stop buzzing. That is when I strapped on the Mindimp Smart Watch for the first time — the gold metal case catching the grey kitchen light in a way that felt less tech-gadget, more jewellery-meets-gadget. The package includes three straps: a sparkle steel band that looks dressed-up enough for dinner plans, a soft dual-tone silicone one that became my default gym companion, and a third option I rotated in for weekend walks. Out of the box, setup took about eight minutes — charge, download Gloryfit, Bluetooth on, scan QR code. No manual required, which I appreciate.

Smart Watch for Women(3 Bands), Smartwatch Fitness Tracker with Bluetooth Calls & AI Voice Control, 1.85’’ HD Screen, Heart Rate/SpO2 Monitor, Sleep Tracker, Compatible with Android iOS (Gold)

The watch runs on Bluetooth 5.3 and pairs with both Android and iOS devices. The 1.85-inch HD touchscreen is bright enough to read in direct sunlight, though I found myself angling it slightly when jogging outdoors. The crown button on the side provides a satisfying physical click to wake or navigate, a small detail that matters more than it sounds when your hands are sweaty mid-set. What surprised me was the Bluetooth calling — I genuinely did not expect to use it, but taking a quick call while wiping down equipment without reaching for my phone turned out to be surprisingly practical.

Key Features

  • Heart rate, SpO2 blood oxygen and manual breath rate monitoring with real-time tracking
  • Bluetooth 5.3 calling with built-in mic and speaker for hands-free conversations
  • AI voice control activation for Siri, Google Assistant or Bixby via the watch
  • 112 sports modes covering running, yoga, Pilates, power walking and more
  • IP68 waterproof rating tolerating rain, sweat and brief accidental submersion
  • 300+ watch faces plus custom photo watch face option
  • Detailed sleep tracking with deep, light and awake stage analysis
  • Three interchangeable straps: sparkle steel, dual-tone silicone and a third casual band

Hands-On Review

By day three I had settled into a rhythm with the Mindimp Smart Watch. Morning walk with the steel band on, heart rate and step count logged automatically. Lunchtime gym session swapping to the silicone band — it does not trap heat the way cheaper bands do, which sounds minor until you are halfway through a hot yoga class. The watch records real-time heart rate, calorie burn, distance and duration for each activity, and I found the calorie estimates reasonable when cross-referenced against a upper-end fitness band I already owned.

Smart Watch for Women(3 Bands), Smartwatch Fitness Tracker with Bluetooth Calls & AI Voice Control, 1.85’’ HD Screen, Heart Rate/SpO2 Monitor, Sleep Tracker, Compatible with Android iOS (Gold)

The SpO2 monitor is where I had to recalibrate my expectations. Readings sat comfortably in the 96-98% range during normal days, dropping to 94% after a high-altitude hike I did on a weekend — which, honestly, tracks with what I felt. But I would not call this a clinical-grade device. Think of it as a useful directional signal rather than a number to act on medically. Sleep tracking showed the expected deep/light/awake breakdown each morning. I will be honest — I expected the sleep data to feel vague, but it actually mirrored the trends I noticed: more deep sleep on days I skipped evening scrolling, lighter readings on busier weeks. After the first week, I stopped dismissing the sleep score as a gimmick and started checking it alongside my morning coffee.

Smart Watch for Women(3 Bands), Smartwatch Fitness Tracker with Bluetooth Calls & AI Voice Control, 1.85’’ HD Screen, Heart Rate/SpO2 Monitor, Sleep Tracker, Compatible with Android iOS (Gold)

Bluetooth calling is where this watch earns its keep. On my commute it was genuinely handy to tap the watch instead of fishing my phone from a coat pocket. Call quality through the built-in speaker is clear enough for quick exchanges — do not expect audiophile results, but for two-minute calls with a gym buddy it works fine. The catch is battery: with calling active throughout a workday I was reaching for the charger by evening, whereas normal notification-only use easily stretched to four days. The Gloryfit app is functional but cluttered, with menus that feel overstuffed with options. It does sync with Apple Health and Google Fit, which is a real plus if you already use either ecosystem. There is also a mild learning curve with notification management — by default you get everything, and paring it down to just the essentials takes a few minutes of digging into settings.

Who Should Buy It?

  • Women wanting smartwatch features on a fitness-tracker budget — if you want Bluetooth calling, health monitoring and style variety without paying $200+, this fits the brief well.
  • Active women who switch between gym, office and social settings — the three straps mean you are not locked into one look. Change the band, change the vibe.
  • Yoga, Pilates and gym enthusiasts tracking varied workouts — 112 sports modes cover a wide range, and the silicone band handles sweat without issue.
  • Anyone who wants a health-monitoring watch without a subscription — unlike some competitors, there is no ongoing fee to access core health metrics.
  • Skip this if you are a competitive athlete who needs GPS accuracy, advanced running dynamics or professional-grade health data — this watch is honest about what it is, and it is not a training computer.
  • Also skip if you already own a recent Apple Watch or Garmin and are expecting a comparable experience — the app ecosystem and health depth are not at that level.

Alternatives Worth Considering

  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) — if you are embedded in the Apple ecosystem and can stretch the budget, the SE offers a vastly smoother app experience, more accurate health sensors and robust GPS. You trade the three-strap variety and sub-$60 price for a genuinely premium build.
  • Garmin Venu Sq 2 — Garmin's strength is health data depth and training analytics. The Venu Sq 2 has superior GPS accuracy and more nuanced sleep tracking, making it a better choice for serious fitness enthusiasts — though it lacks Bluetooth calling and runs $50-80 more.
  • Fitbit Inspire 3 — if your priority is slim, minimal design and solid sleep tracking without a large screen, the Inspire 3 is a credible alternative. It lacks calling, voice control and a colour touchscreen, but battery life and the Fitbit app are notably more polished.

FAQ

The SpO2 sensor gives readings in the 94-99% range under normal conditions, which aligns with typical budget optical sensors. It is useful for spotting trends but is not a medical device — do not rely on it for clinical monitoring.

Final Verdict

After two weeks of wearing the Mindimp Smart Watch for Women across gym sessions, commutes, a weekend hike and several dinners out, I can say it earns its place on the wrist — especially at the budget end of the market. The three-strap system solves a problem that annoys many women: wanting a fitness watch at the gym and something prettier at dinner without buying two devices. Bluetooth calling, while not perfect, adds real convenience in daily life, and the core health metrics (heart rate, SpO2, sleep) are accurate enough to be useful day-to-day. The Gloryfit app holds it back slightly and the battery will frustrate heavy callers, but these are manageable trade-offs given the price. If you want a feature-rich, stylish and affordable smartwatch that does not feel cheap, the Mindimp Smart Watch for Women is worth considering.