Review Smartwatches Mindrose

Mindrose H80 Smartwatch - Review and opinions

Mindrose H80
7.2 Overall

Quick recommendation

Value for money 7.1/10
Ease of use 7.4/10
Durability 6.8/10
Customer reviews 7.6/10

Is it worth it?

The Mindrose H80 is aimed at the buyer who wants one wrist device to cover the basics of daily wellness, step tracking and phone alerts without stepping into premium smartwatch pricing. Its appeal is easy to understand: a slim 1.47-inch touch display, long claimed battery life, 115 sports modes and a broad set of health readings. The real trade-off is just as clear: it offers plenty of features for casual tracking, but it is not the right watch to treat as a dependable medical tool.

I’d place this as a simple fitness-first smartwatch for people who want notifications, sleep tracking, step counts and general habit support in one lightweight package. It suits Android and iPhone owners who want more than a basic band, but less complexity than an Apple Watch or Samsung Galaxy Watch. Skip it if blood pressure accuracy is the reason you are buying, or if you want serious built-in sports GPS rather than route mapping through your phone.

Screen 1.47 Inches
Battery life 6-7 days heavy use or 10-12 days daily use
Compatibility Android 4.4 / iOS 8.4 or above
Heart-rate tracking 24/7 heart rate monitoring
GPS Uses phone GPS connection in the app
Water resistance IP68

Key features

Daily health and habit tracking

The H80 bundles 24/7 heart rate, blood oxygen, sleep tracking, steps, calories and reminders such as water intake and sedentary prompts.

That makes it more useful as a daily routine watch than a simple pedometer. The strongest fit is for habit-building and general awareness, with blood pressure best treated as an extra wellness feature rather than the headline reason to buy.

Notifications that actually matter

This watch is built to keep your phone in your pocket a little more often. It can show incoming calls, texts and email alerts, display the caller name, mute or reject calls, and read full text messages on the screen.

For many people, that is the real upgrade over a basic tracker. You get everyday convenience without moving into a heavier, app-rich smartwatch platform.

Battery, comfort and water resistance

A slim body, replaceable washable strap and IP68 rating make this easier to wear throughout the day and overnight for sleep tracking. The magnetic charger and multi-day battery claim also suit people who dislike daily charging.

The practical caveat is that this convenience-first design is best for steady everyday use, not for buyers chasing rugged outdoor watch toughness or advanced training hardware.

Phone-linked fitness route

The watch offers more than 115 sports modes and can map outdoor routes through your phone’s GPS connection in the app. That is enough for walks, runs and general exercise logs when your handset is already with you.

It is a useful middle ground between a basic band and a true GPS sports watch. If you want route tracking without carrying a phone, this is the wrong category of watch.

User experience

On a normal workday, the H80 makes the most sense as a glanceable wrist companion rather than a mini phone. The 1.47-inch full-touch screen gives it more room than a very narrow fitness band, so reading caller names, message previews and daily stats is more practical at a glance. That matters if you want quick alerts without constantly pulling out your phone, and the extra convenience is helped by features like call rejection, mute and full text reading on the watch.

When the day shifts into walks, gym sessions or basic home workouts, the watch covers the casual fitness route well. More than 115 sports modes, step counting, calorie tracking and sleep staging give it enough variety to keep routine exercise organised, while the app-based route map adds some value outdoors if you already carry your phone. The trade-off is important: this is fitness support, not a true standalone running watch, because GPS depends on the phone connection rather than the watch itself.

The health side is where the buying decision needs the clearest line. Heart rate, sleep and blood oxygen fit naturally into general wellness tracking, and that is the lane where this watch is easiest to recommend. Blood pressure is different. If you only want trend-style wrist readings as a rough extra data point, it can sit alongside the rest of the package. If you need trustworthy blood pressure monitoring for health decisions, this watch is too compromised a choice and a proper cuff-based device is the better route.

Away from the charger, the H80 fits a low-maintenance routine better than many full smartwatches. Magnetic charging and a claimed 1.5 to 2 hour top-up are straightforward, and the stated 6 to 7 days of heavy use or 10 to 12 days of daily use puts it in the wear-it-all-weekend category rather than the nightly-charge category. Add IP68 water resistance and an adjustable strap range from 5.0 to 9.05 inches, and the result is a watch that is easier to leave on through showers, rain, sleep and ordinary daily wear.

Pros

  • Slim 1.47-inch touch display is better for notifications than a very basic fitness band
  • Strong everyday feature set with heart rate, sleep, SpO2, steps, reminders and 115 sports modes
  • Multi-day battery claim and magnetic charging suit low-maintenance wear
  • IP68 water resistance and broad Android/iPhone compatibility improve daily practicality.

Cons

  • Blood pressure readings are not strong enough to be the main reason to buy
  • Outdoor route tracking depends on your phone GPS rather than built-in watch GPS
  • 3.8-star average shows a more mixed ownership experience than stronger category leaders.

Community

User reviews

Feedback around this watch follows a familiar pattern for affordable smartwatches: people like the easy setup, broad feature list and comfortable everyday use, but the health readings do not inspire equal confidence across every sensor. The practical lesson is simple: it works best as a convenience and wellness watch, not as a substitute for dedicated medical equipment.

User

This is my first smart watch and I found it very easy to use. I wanted BP, heart rate, oxygen, steps and water intake in one place, and this fit that need well.

Shirley

The watch itself worked fine, but I bought it mainly for blood pressure and that reading was nowhere near correct for me, so I returned it.

Murf

I have bought several fitness watches before and this one was a pleasant surprise. The health data felt accurate and responsive, and the other functions were excellent too.

Bary

I replaced an older watch because I wanted something that would connect and stay connected to the app. Sleep, oxygen and BP tracking were the main reasons, and that part suited me much better.

Comparison

Against an Apple Watch or Samsung Galaxy Watch, the Mindrose H80 takes a much simpler route. You buy it for notifications, sleep, steps and basic wellness rather than deep app ecosystems, polished voice features or advanced smartwatch integration. If you want a low-fuss tracker with fewer charging interruptions, the H80 has a clearer case. If you want richer apps, tighter phone integration and more mature health platforms, the mainstream lifestyle watches are the better fit.

Compared with a Fitbit Inspire-style tracker, the H80 gives you a more watch-like presentation with a 1.47-inch screen, message reading and a broader feature spread that includes blood pressure and more sports modes. The Fitbit-style route still makes more sense if you care most about a cleaner fitness ecosystem and a more established health-tracking reputation. The Mindrose is the better match for someone who wants lots of functions in one affordable-looking package and accepts that not every metric carries the same weight.

Conclusion and verdict

The Mindrose H80 makes sense for buyers who want a slim, feature-packed smartwatch for everyday convenience, casual fitness and general wellness habits. Its strongest points are the readable 1.47-inch screen, broad notification support, sleep and heart-rate tracking, phone compatibility and a battery routine that is easier to live with than many full smartwatches. If the current offer is sensible, it can be a practical step up from a basic activity band.

The reason to pass is straightforward: this is not the watch to buy around blood pressure monitoring or serious standalone sports tracking. The mixed overall rating and the clearest complaint both point to the same conclusion. Choose it as a budget-friendly daily companion with extra health features, not as a medical or training-grade device.

FAQ

Does the Mindrose H80 work with Android and iPhone?

Yes. It is stated as compatible with Android 4.4 and iOS 8.4 or above, so it covers a wide range of phones.

Does it have built-in GPS for runs?

No. Route mapping comes from connecting the watch to your phone GPS in the app, so you need your phone with you for mapped outdoor tracking.

Alexandre Lefèvre

About the author

Alexandre Lefèvre

Tech enthusiast focused on testing and reviewing the latest devices. I share honest insights to help you choose the right products with confidence.