Review Tablets Ainmel

Ainmel 707 Tablet - Review and opinions

Ainmel 707
6.8 Overall

Quick recommendation

Value for money 7.2/10
Ease of use 7.0/10
Durability 5.6/10
Customer reviews 7.4/10

Is it worth it?

The Ainmel 707 is aimed squarely at parents who want an affordable first tablet for a child rather than a polished all-round family iPad substitute. Its appeal is easy to understand: a 7-inch size that fits small hands, Android 13, parental controls, pre-installed kids software and expandable storage in a case-ready package. The real trade-off is just as clear: you are buying on value, not consistency, so battery life, speed and long-term reliability are the areas that most affect whether this feels like a bargain or a false economy.

My quick verdict is that this makes sense for light kids use, travel entertainment and basic learning apps if your priority is keeping spend down. It is much less convincing for anyone who needs dependable all-day battery life, fast charging, or the reassurance that the tablet will still be trouble-free after months of rough family use. If you want a cheap child-friendly Android slate and can accept some rough edges, it fits; if reliability matters more than entry price, I would skip it and move up a tier.

Screen size 7 Inches
Resolution 1024 x 600 Pixels
Chipset Quad-core processor
RAM 5 GB
Storage 32 GB
Expandable storage Up to 128 GB

Key features

Child-focused software

The headline feature here is the family route: parental controls, separate child profiles and pre-installed kids software rather than a plain generic tablet with a foam case.

That matters because it reduces setup friction for parents and grandparents who mainly want limits, app control and a safer handover. The practical caveat is that the control layer looks more basic than the tightly managed experience you get from stronger kids ecosystems, so it works best when you want guidance rather than total lockdown.

Compact screen and travel size

A 7-inch display keeps the tablet portable and easy to slip into a bag, and the 16:9 layout is naturally suited to cartoons, simple games and short-form video.

For small children, that size is a genuine advantage over bulkier slates. The compromise is screen sharpness and workspace: 1024 x 600 is fine for child-friendly content, but it is not the kind of panel that makes long reading sessions or detailed schoolwork especially comfortable.

Storage headroom for a budget tablet

With 32 GB built in and support for expansion up to 128 GB, this model gives you a more practical storage path than many ultra-cheap tablets that fill up too quickly.

That changes the buying decision if you want downloaded videos, extra apps or room for photos without immediately deleting things. It does not turn the tablet into a productivity device, but it does make it easier to live with as a shared children’s screen.

Cameras and everyday calls

The rear 2 MP camera and 0.3 MP front camera are functional rather than impressive, and that matches the rest of the tablet’s budget-first approach.

In practice, this is enough for basic video calls and the occasional child photo, but not much more. If camera quality matters to your child’s use, this is one of the easiest areas to accept as a compromise.

User experience

Hand this tablet to a toddler on a sofa or in the back of the car and the basic format makes immediate sense. A 7-inch panel is easy to grip, the 16:9 shape suits cartoons and YouTube-style video, and the 1024 x 600 resolution works out at roughly 170 ppi, which is acceptable for children’s apps and casual streaming at this size. It is not a crisp reading tablet for long text sessions, but for bright, simple visuals and short videos it lands in the right lane.

The setup experience is one of its stronger points for the right household. Android 13, Google-led software and parental controls give it a straightforward route into separate profiles, app limits and screen-time rules, so it is easier to place in a family routine than a bare cheap tablet with no child focus. That said, this is still a budget Android tablet rather than a deeply locked-down kids ecosystem, so it suits parents who want basic control and flexibility more than those who want a heavily curated child mode.

Once a child starts filling it with games, offline videos and photos, the 32 GB internal storage stops feeling generous, so the microSD expansion matters. The 5 GB RAM figure sounds healthy for the class, and for simple app hopping, video playback and light learning games it is enough to keep the tablet in the usable zone. The weak point is that this comfort does not extend evenly to every unit or every workload: if you expect consistently snappy performance for heavier games or lots of background tasks, this is where the low-cost positioning starts to show.

The bigger decision point comes after the first few weeks, because this tablet asks you to accept more risk than the best-known kids tablets. In daily family use, the protective case and compact size make drops easier to live with, and some households have clearly kept theirs going through plenty of knocks. But if your child will use it heavily every day, away from a charger, the mixed battery behaviour and reports of touch or charging faults make this a better fit as a low-cost convenience tablet than as a device you rely on without backup.

Pros

  • Child-friendly size with parental control features built in
  • Expandable storage up to 128 GB is useful at this price level
  • Good value route for light learning, streaming and simple games
  • Protective case concept suits younger children.

Cons

  • Battery life is too inconsistent for long trips or heavy daily use
  • Reliability is a real concern, with reports of touch and charging failures
  • 1024 x 600 resolution is basic by current tablet standards
  • Cameras are only suitable for very simple calls and snapshots.

Community

User reviews

Owner feedback follows a familiar budget-tablet pattern: plenty of people are happy with the value, easy setup and child-friendly size, but the disappointments are concentrated in battery life, speed and units that develop faults too early. The practical lesson is simple: it can be a good cheap kids tablet, but it is not the one to buy if you need dependable long-term hardware.

Miss

I bought it as my first tablet and found it really handy for quick admin, games and watching things without getting the laptop out. The size is ideal and it feels good value, but the main camera is poor and the.

Sharon

It worked well at first, then after about three months the touchscreen started failing even though the screen was not broken. Reboots did not fix it and that was very disappointing.

Oluwafunke

I found it easy to set up, not bulky and simple to carry in a bag for my toddler. The picture quality was nice for what I needed.

User

My son has been rough with it for months and it has kept going despite drops and cracks, with decent speed and good picture quality underneath. The downside is patchy family controls and Wi-Fi that can be fiddly to.

Comparison

Against a Fire Kids tablet, the Ainmel 707 is the more open Android-style choice for families who want Google apps, flexible setup and a lower-cost route into child use. The Fire route is better if you want a more controlled kids environment and a clearer family software experience, while the Ainmel suits households that prefer freedom and can tolerate a rougher edge.

Against an entry-level Samsung Galaxy Tab A-style tablet, the Ainmel makes more sense only when the purchase is primarily for a younger child and the budget is tight. A mainstream Samsung tablet is the better pick for adults, school use and longer ownership, because the Ainmel’s 7-inch 1024 x 600 screen, basic cameras and mixed reliability keep it firmly in the cheap kids-device bracket rather than the broader family-tablet class.

Conclusion and verdict

The Ainmel 707 gets the basics right for a low-cost children’s tablet: manageable size, simple setup, parental controls, Android flexibility and enough storage headroom to avoid feeling cramped too quickly. If your goal is an inexpensive screen for cartoons, learning apps and occasional travel use, it has a credible place in the budget end of the market, especially if the current offer is sharp.

I would avoid it if your purchase depends on strong battery life, dependable charging and the confidence that the tablet will shrug off months of regular use without drama. That combination of mixed performance and uneven reliability stops it from being an easy recommendation beyond the bargain-hunter route, and it is worth paying more if you want a child’s tablet that feels less disposable.

FAQ

Is this tablet mainly for kids or for general family use?

It is best treated as a kids tablet for light learning, video and simple games, not as a full family tablet for demanding daily use.

Is the storage enough for apps and offline videos?

The built-in 32 GB is modest, but support for expansion up to 128 GB makes it more practical if you want to keep extra downloads on the device.

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.