Yes4All Powder Coated Kettlebell vs Amazon Basics Cast Iron Kettlebell (Enamel)
Quick verdict
Winner on Gym Score: Yes4All Powder Coated Kettlebell (100)
Amazon Basics Cast Iron Kettlebell (Enamel) still wins for some buyers — see the fit cards below.

Best for
- · Anyone buying their first or second kettlebell for general training
- · Lifters in the 26 to 53 lb range running Simple and Sinister or Enter the Kettlebell programs
- · Budget-conscious buyers who want a real cast iron bell with good chalk-holding texture
$45 (31 lb)Buy on Amazon

Best for
- · Absolute beginners testing whether kettlebells fit their training before committing
- · Light bells (10 to 20 lb) used for warm-up halos, mobility work, and Turkish get-up practice
- · Budget hotel-room style home setups where the bell will see light use
$39 (25 lb)Buy on Amazon
Spec-by-spec
| Spec | Yes4All Powder Coated Kettlebell | Amazon Basics Cast Iron Kettlebell (Enamel) |
|---|---|---|
| Material | Single-piece cast iron | Solid cast iron |
| Coating | Matte powder coat | Enamel (gloss) |
| Handle Diameter | 32-38mm (varies with weight) | 30-34mm |
| Available Weights | 5-80 lb | 10-50 lb |
| Bottom | Flat | Flat |
Yes4All Powder Coated Kettlebell
Strengths
- +Single-piece cast iron, no welds
- +Matte powder coat takes chalk perfectly
- +Flat bottom enables push-ups and rows
- +True weight verified by owner scale tests
Weaknesses
- −Handle window can have small casting burrs (file in 30 sec)
- −Black coating shows chalk marks
- −Heavier weights (62+ lb) ship on Prime but are slow
Amazon Basics Cast Iron Kettlebell (Enamel)
Strengths
- +Cheapest reliable kettlebell from a known brand
- +Solid cast iron, no welds
- +Accurate labeled weight
- +Prime delivery on most weights
Weaknesses
- −Glossy enamel grip is slick when sweaty
- −Handle window slightly narrow on heavier bells
- −Enamel chips if dropped on concrete repeatedly