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Yes4All Powder Coated Kettlebell vs Amazon Basics Cast Iron Kettlebell (Enamel)
Quick verdict
Winner on Gym Score: Yes4All Powder Coated Kettlebell (95)
Yes4All powder-coated is the better kettlebell for serious training — matte powder coat takes chalk perfectly, the handle window is sized for gripping, and the 18,000+ review base proves the design. Amazon Basics enamel is the cheaper option that works for casual swings and goblet squats — glossy enamel is slick when sweaty, but the cast iron core is identical quality. Both score 95 because both do their basic job well; pick based on whether you'll do high-rep snatches or get-ups.
Choose the Yes4All if you'll do high-rep snatches, get-ups, or any work where sweaty hands meet the bell — powder coat takes chalk and grips reliably. Available in 5-80 lb.
Read the full review →Choose the Amazon Basics enamel if you'll do swings, goblet squats, and basic Russian-style kettlebell work — the gloss finish is fine for these movements and the price is meaningfully lower.
Read the full review →
- · 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

- · 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
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
- +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
- −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)
- +Cheapest reliable kettlebell from a known brand
- +Solid cast iron, no welds
- +Accurate labeled weight
- +Prime delivery on most weights
- −Glossy enamel grip is slick when sweaty
- −Handle window slightly narrow on heavier bells
- −Enamel chips if dropped on concrete repeatedly
The real tradeoff
Coating is the deciding factor. Powder coat (Yes4All) has a matte texture that grips chalk and adheres to sweaty palms. Enamel (Amazon Basics) is glossier and slicker — fine for unweighted grip work, problematic for high-rep snatches. Weight range also differs: Yes4All goes 5-80 lb; Amazon Basics caps at 50 lb. For most users buying their first bell, either works. For users planning to progress past 50 lb, only Yes4All scales.
Skip both if you want competition-style sizing (uniform body diameter across all weights). The CAP Competition kettlebell at /product/cap-competition-kettlebell has standardized dimensions.
Buyer questions
Why are both kettlebells rated 95?
Both do their basic job well — cast iron core, accurate labeled weight, durable construction. The score reflects fitness for purpose. The differences (coating texture, weight range) are usage-specific, not quality-related.
Will enamel chip if I drop the Amazon Basics?
On concrete, yes — repeated drops will chip the enamel coating over time. Drop on a mat or rubber floor and the coating lasts indefinitely. Powder coat (Yes4All) is more chip-resistant but not invincible.
Do the handles really feel different?
Yes — Yes4All's powder coat is slightly textured, providing more grip. Amazon Basics' enamel is smooth and glossy, which feels slicker especially when sweaty. For unweighted grip work, neither matters; for sweaty high-rep work, the difference is real.