







⌚ Elevate your fitness game with style and stamina!
The Amazfit Band 7 is a sleek, high-performance fitness tracker featuring a large 1.47” AMOLED always-on display, 18-day battery life, and 120 sports modes. It offers comprehensive health monitoring including heart rate, SpO₂, sleep, and stress tracking, all wrapped in a water-resistant design rated for 5 ATM. Integrated Alexa and Zepp OS provide smart daily assistance, making it the perfect companion for professionals seeking precision, durability, and seamless connectivity.








| ASIN | B09Z6CRHJ6 |
| Additional Features | ALEXA Built-in, Activity Tracker, Always On Display |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Band Color | black |
| Band Material Type | Silicone |
| Battery Average Life | 20 days |
| Battery Capacity | 232 Milliamp Hours |
| Battery Cell Type | Lithium Ion |
| Best Sellers Rank | #4,510 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #36 in Activity & Fitness Trackers |
| Brand | Amazfit |
| Built-In Media | Band 7 Fitness Tracker, Magnetic Charging Cable, User Manual |
| Case Material Type | Plastic |
| Color | Black |
| Communication Feature | Voice Communication (Amazon Alexa) |
| Compatible Devices | Android 7.0 and above, iOS 12.0 and above |
| Compatible Phone Models | All current Android 7.0 and above, all current iOS 12.0 and above |
| Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth |
| Controller Type | Amazon Alexa |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 out of 5 stars 9,318 Reviews |
| Display Type | OLED |
| GPS Geotagging Functionality | GPS Via Smartphone |
| Human Interface Input | Touchscreen |
| Item Dimensions | 1.84 x 0.95 x 0.48 inches |
| Item Weight | 0.06 Pounds |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer | Amazfit |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 2300 MB |
| Metrics Measured | Multiple |
| Model Name | band 5 |
| Model Number | Band 7 |
| Operating System | Zepp OS |
| Resolution | 198x368 |
| Screen Size | 1.47 Inches |
| Shape | Heart |
| Special Feature | ALEXA Built-in, Activity Tracker, Always On Display |
| Sport Type | Basketball, Camping & Hiking, Dance, Fishing, Swimming |
| Style Name | Band 7 |
| Supported Application | Fitness Tracker, Heart Rate Monitor, Sleep Amazon Alexa, Multisport Tracker |
| Supported Satellite Navigation System | GPS |
| Target Audience | Men,Women |
| UPC | 850037656707 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 1 year manufacturer |
| Warranty Type | Limited |
| Water Resistance Depth | 50 Meters |
| Water Resistance Level | Water Resistant |
| Waterproof Rating | IP68 |
| Wearable Computer Type | Activity Tracker |
| Wireless Communication Standard | Bluetooth |
| Wireless Compability | Bluetooth |
Y**A
Amazing watch! Amazing price!!
This is my first time using a watch. I normally don’t like anything on my wrists, but this one goes unnoticed. I love the fact that it reminds me to stand up and walk when I’m seated for a long time. I’ve been using it for a week now, and I love it. The battery lasts a long time, it syncs with my running app, and the sleep tracking, heart rate, and other features seem accurate. For the price, I really recommend it. I have an iPhone, so I can control music if I open Spotify on my phone, but it also has a remote app for Android. Since I don’t like wearing watches, that’s why I went for something economical just to try it, and it amazed me. I love it and don’t regret buying it at all. It has everything I need for training monitoring. I have no issues with the band, at least for me, it doesn’t open or get loose…
T**P
Great product!
I am very happy with this watch. I have previously owned a FitBit so I have been comparing the two. I really like this watch and it's half the price of a FitBit. There are a lot of settings in the app that you need to make sure to change to fit your needs -how often you want heart rate measured, allow access to contacts, make sure you receive notification of text messages and notifications in any other apps that you want to receive. I just received a notification through Google on my watch about a tornado warning, so that was nice! I have a Google pixel phone and it works well with the watch. A couple of differences I noticed between this and the Fitbit are: constant heart rate tracking - this one tracks on intervals which you can set as you want to (1 min, or 10 mins) whereas the Fitbit tracks constantly. Yeah can also track heart rate on demand with the watch. Also this one tracks calories burned during activity whereas the Fitbit estimates the calories burned throughout the day. However I will say that the Fitbit was always grossly overestimating my calories burned anyway, so that feature was of no value to me. The Fitbit I had would often tell me I burned 2500 calories during the day. I am a 5'3 women, if I based my diet around that and ate 2500 calories I would gain a LOT of weight. I should be eating more like 1700 calories, even on days I exercise. So to me that feature on the Fitbit is not accurate. The band is comfortable and the watch face size is perfect - not too big or small. Battery life seems to be really good. I only lost should 10% of the battery charge throughout the day and I received a lot of notifications. Anyway this is a good quality product at a great price. I personally don't see much advantage with a FitBit over this and this is half the price. If you aren't very tech savvy then have someone help you with setting up the app and changing settings etc. to fit your needs.
D**L
Decent product for the price but has some obvious flaws.
Decent product for the price but has some obvious flaws. The Amazfit works pretty well, but there are some issues with it: 1) The wrist band is weak. It will come undone relatively easily -- which is an issue for an exercise "work out tracking" watch. If you are jogging or sprinting there's a good chance it will come loose and fall off. I've remedied this by buying an alternative wrist band, but this feels like a basic design flaw that should not be there. 2) The Zepp App used to control/read data from the watch is clunky and confusing. It's not AWFUL, but could be a bit more intuitive. 3) There is no alarm and the watch cannot set off an alarm on your phone. It's wake up signal is to vibrate. Why can't it get my phone to play a jingle along with the vibrtation seeing as it's already linked to my phone? It works pretty well...just has some annoying flaws
J**S
Frustrating, annoying, and garbage.
Honestly would not recommend this watch at all. First, the heart rate monitor and sleep monitor are very inaccurate. I compared the heart rate measurement several times during various levels of rest or exercise with the readings from my blood pressure arm cuff. While I was expecting some inaccuracies maybe plus or minus a few bpm the watch would report 90 bpm when my blood pressure device read 130 bpm and when my blood pressure cuff read 90 this would often read anywhere from 70 to 140. Sometimes tapping the measure button would read 130 and then 2 seconds later read 80. Second, the device has a feature where if you press and hold the screen you can quickly change the watch face. This is extremely annoying as the screen is extremely sensitive and I found if my coat sleeve slid forward it would trigger it, or if I crossed my arms it would trigger it, or just resting my arms in my lap would trigger it. There is no way to disable this feature and with how sensitive the screen is to any kind of touch from anything it gets very frustrating very quickly. Finally, most of these issues could still be overlooked to an extent but after having it for only about four months the screen popped out on me and was dangling by the ribbon cable connecting it to the circuit board. I carefully set the screen back in place and glued it back in using a compound that would seal it from moisture so it wouldn't get damaged further but that didn't last long. I glued it once more with some heavy duty glue but that also failed after about a month. The third time it popped out and I glued it back in the screen had solid white vertical lines so I popped the screen out and discovered parts of the wiring on the ribbon cable had cracked due to the screen hanging freely by it. Now, with no functional screen whatsoever I am unable to turn the device off at all since there is no physical way to turn it off without using the screen. Thankfully I was at least able to turn my alarms off through the Zepp app so it would stop buzzing when sitting on my desk. Overall, this thing is cheap garbage and I wouldn't waste a penny on it. Only reason I give it 1 star is you can't give it 0 and my mom likes it cause she has metal allergies and this is the first fitness tracker she's found that does not have any metal against the skin.
E**S
Happy with purchase, one week in
I've been using the Amazfit Band 7 for a week, and I'm impressed with its battery life. I was at 40% after 7 days, and it took about an hour to charge from 40% to 100%. I have many options turned on that drain battery, such as always tracking heart rate. One hour a week to get back to 100% doesn't seem unreasonable. I was initially discouraged by its accuracy on my first workout. At parts of my workout when I knew my heart rate was over 150, it was reporting 137. However, my second workout (exactly like the first) was amazing. It was completely accurate, every time I checked and compared to the machine. I'm not sure what learning it did between the first and second workouts, but it was spot on. The only thing I can complain about is the lack of a web interface for the app. I'm now using a combination of MyFitnessPal for food tracking, GoogleFit to get BMI info from a scale, and the Zepp App for health tracking. All of these apps are connected through the Health Connect app. Once set up, the communication between the apps works without a hitch. For me, the additional options and functionality of the Amazfit Band 7 vs the Fitbit Charge 3 are so worth a little bit of finicky app setup. I'm not taking a star off for this because it is my choice of usage. I use the tracker and food log for accountability between calorie burn and calorie intake. Others might not have that requirement. I've attached a long screenshot of a workout report. I can't really speak to sleep tracking other than it seems more accurate than the FitBit Charge 3. I have no way to confirm. The Charge 3 seemed to track every time I rolled over at night as 'awake'. This one does not. The total length asleep seems accurate. I decided to ditch Fitbit after my Charge 3 display got completely non-functional after 2 years. I was skeptical of the Amazfit Band 7 at first, but I'm glad I gave it a try, especially given it was well over half the price of the Fitbit Charge 5 (Prime Day discounting). I did purchase the 5.99 warranty and hope to go 3 years before having a non-functioning tracker again. Overall, I'm very happy with the Amazfit Band 7. It's a great fitness tracker with good battery life, a nice display, accurate heart rate tracking, and a variety of features. I would definitely recommend it to anyone looking for a new fitness tracker.
I**N
Attractive toy at attractive price
This tracker has all the right ideas, which can be indeed very helpful for anybody who is more or less seriously wants to address his/her fitness and overall health status and optimize the training schedule for maximum benefit, getting results without overachieving and actually hurting him/her itself. It is also compact enough to not be annoying and cumbersome, particularly if you want to sleep in it (to track your sleep quality). Unfortunately, that seems where it ends. The metrics it provide are somewhat confusing and sometime may look contradictory (like showing Training Load to be execessive, so telling you slow down and take some rest while at the same time showing your Exertion for the day is under 50% goal, prompting you to do some workout to catchup). Ok, thats something one can learn to understand, not main problem. The main problem is accuracy - I had if for a month and its not getting any better. I start warm up and it shows BPM shoot to 180. No frigging way, Id feel it. Check by just counting pulse and its as I about feel - 120. Next moment it drops to 88 (too good to be true), count the pulse and its 100. At one point start some easy routing, like Tai Chi, check it in the middle and it shows 48bpm (!) - time to go to emergency. Of course, pulse counting give me 84, as expected and as felt. That means most of the rest of the metrics can go down the drain as most of it based on your heart rate as measured. So definitely, for anything where heart rate varies its virtually useless. A little better for steady aerobics, like cycling - not immediately but eventually it shows about right bpm with about 10% certainty. For swimming though is virtually useless - it can check how many laps you did (yeah, like I dont know) and 'estimate' calories you burned but it cant count heart rate due to water messing up sensors accuracy (so it just does not count it). At night happened now and the I wake up and even get out of bed for short time - in the morning it shows good night sleep with not wake ups (?), does not catch it (though I can see its measuring something when Im up - by red sensors glow when I go to take a leak). But it has 120 (or so) faces (??) - and wtf do I need them for? Maybe a couple could be useful, for everyone's preference, but otherwise unless you are 10 years old and is fascinated by the fact, its absolutely useless feature. So it the end thats what it is seems to be - a toy for kids for budget price. The problem is before I shed $200 and up for better device Id like to be sure its indeed that much better and can provide more or less accurate metrics and Im not sure at all. So for now I stay with it, use it just for general idea but mostly rely on self-assessment, as frankly how it should be and for free too. Otherwise, display is good, phone app for it is working fine (aside from some confusion about metrics shown in different places), charging is ok (lasted for me about week or a little less). Look is fine for me - I would not want more prominent or bright color device on my wrist. Some women might find it a little awkward as its design (who designed it?) is not great - its thing and long and length is actually instead of going along the wrist, goes across, so women or kids with narrow wrist will find it sticking beyond the wrist and it will not help neither its accuracy nor comfort.
T**N
Very easy to fit and adjust. Well woth the price.
I am rather pleased with these bands - very inexpensive and perform wonderfully. They are very easy to wear and adjusting them for a snug fit is a breeze. Well worth the price.
M**.
Not impressed! My Band 5 is more accurate.
I received this Amazfit Band 7 yesterday afternoon as a replacement for my previous band 5 which battery was lasting 2.5 days. Size wize, I have a medium sized wrist and the band is a tiny bit loose on the 3rd hole, but too tight on the 2nd hole. With a fitbit, the large band is way too loose, but I have to use the last hole on the small band or it would leave marks from being too tight. Hopefully, this can help those with small wrists judge the size of the Amazfit band. It was very simple to set up because I had had an Amazfit band 5 before. It seemed to work well alerting me to text messages, and reporting the weather, but the two bands disagree slightly on the weather. Strange! Plus, there was a big difference measuring my heart rate between my old band 5 (52 bpm) and the band 7 (61 bpm) and a medical device (51 bpm). Yesterday evening, I fell asleep for at least half an hour, but it doesn't show any napping. Last night, it shows me asleep at 12:44 AM and awake at 4:35, however, I fell back asleep right away. My Band 5 reflects that and shows me waking after 6:30am, but the new Band 7 simply has me being awake at 4:35. The app combines the two readings to show me having over 6 hours of sleep whereas my new Band 7 only records 3 hours and 51 minutes of sleep. The band did alert me to an increase in stress levels where I went from very relaxed (fluxuating from 13-20) to normal relaxation (33) for a second, which occurred at the exact moment I actually woke for the day. My latest complaint is this morning the Amazfit band alerted me that I had been sitting still for an hour and it was time to walk around a bit. What? I've been on my feet for much of that hour doing my morning routine, making tea, feeding the cat, taking a shower (with band attached), brushing teeth, and other similar things. The only time I had a chance to sit was when I used the wheelchair to go between those activities and to take the recycling outside. I've now received 2 more alerts about sitting too long while I've been up and down the entire time. My Band 5 hasn't alerted me once in the morning hours. It seems to notice a difference As far as steps goes, the band 5 shows me doing 360 steps and the band 7 shows 265. The fitbit has me at 672. None of these are accurate as I really cannot walk. What they do measure is arm activity. Having worn the band 5 for a couple of years and put it through a lot of testing, I can guarantee it's pretty accurate. I haven't had time to test the band 7, but I can see it is lagging already. Since I mainly purchased this device to record sleep, naps, heart rate, breathing, stress, and check the weather, it's not much use at this point. I will test it over the next few days to get a better feel for its usability before deciding to return it or not.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
2 weeks ago