Review Tablets Amazon

Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Pro (newest gen) Tablet - Review and opinions

Currently out of stock
Review updated on
7.0 Overall

Score

Screen and format 5.9/10
Daily fluidity 5.7/10
Battery and charging 7.0/10
Productivity and shared use 7.0/10
Customer reviews 8.7/10

Screen size

8 in Screen size
14% above average

Is it worth it?

The Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Pro is aimed squarely at families who want a proper tablet for children aged 6 to 12 rather than a simplified toy. Its appeal is easy to see: an 8-inch HD screen, 3 GB of RAM, a slim child-friendly case, a year of Amazon Kids+, strong parental controls and a two-year replacement guarantee all point to a device built for everyday family use. The trade-off is just as clear: this is excellent for entertainment, reading and controlled app use, but it is not the right buy if you want a more open app ecosystem or a tablet that doubles as a serious study machine.

I’d buy this for a child who mainly wants games, videos, books and safe web access, and for a parent who values remote controls more than raw power. I’d skip it if Google Play access, stylus work or laptop-style school use are central, because this tablet is strongest when it stays in its lane as a managed family device. The package makes the most sense when the included case, Kids+ year and warranty matter as much as the hardware itself.

Screen size 8 inches
Resolution HD
Chipset Hexa-core processor
RAM 3 GB
Storage 32 GB
Battery life Up to 13 hours

Parental controls that actually shape daily use

The strongest feature here is not the screen or the processor but the control system around them. You can review activity, approve downloads, block sites, set goals and manage time limits remotely.

That matters because it turns the tablet into a family device rather than just a cheap screen. If safety, routine and content control are high on your list, this is one of the clearest reasons to choose it over a standard tablet.

Built for the knocks of normal family life

Amazon pairs the tablet with a slim Kid-Friendly Case, strengthened glass and a two-year replacement guarantee. That combination changes the ownership experience more than a spec bump ever could.

In practice, it means the tablet is easier to hand over without constant worry about every drop, scrape or sofa launch. It is still electronics, not magic, but the protection story is stronger than on most ordinary budget tablets.

Entertainment first, with room to grow

The package includes a year of Amazon Kids+ with advert-free books, games and videos, and the tablet has 32 GB of storage with microSD expansion up to 1 TB. There is also Wi-Fi calling support to approved contacts through Alexa.

For a child aged 6 to 12, that gives the device a ready-made purpose from day one. The caveat is that the software experience is best if you are happy inside Amazon’s ecosystem rather than chasing every app available on a general Android tablet.

Use case Fit Why
Letting a child (6–12) use games, videos and books with strong parental controls Great fit It’s built for everyday family use with excellent parental controls and remote management.
Family travel and day-to-day entertainment where battery life matters Good fit It offers up to 13 hours of battery life for travel and everyday entertainment.
A parent who wants a managed kids tablet with a durable package and replacement cover Good fit The included case and two-year replacement guarantee are designed for worry-free family use.
Kids’ media use where you may download lots of content and want storage to last OK with caveats The 32 GB base storage can feel tight if you download lots of games and videos.
Using it as a more open Android tablet with Google Play access for a wider app ecosystem Skip Amazon’s app ecosystem is more limited than a standard Android tablet with Google Play.
Serious study or productivity work that needs a sharper screen and more capable tablet use Skip The HD screen is fine for kids’ media but not a standout for sharper study or productivity work.

Use evaluation

Hand this to a seven- or eight-year-old on a car journey or a sofa afternoon and the fit is immediately obvious. The 8-inch display is large enough for reading comics, watching programmes and tapping through games without becoming awkwardly bulky, and the HD resolution suits that relaxed use well. This is not a giant screen for split-screen schoolwork, but for one app at a time it lands in the comfortable zone for children.

The first hour matters most with kids’ tech, and this tablet looks well judged there. Setup is built around parental controls, download approvals and screen-time limits, so the device can be shaped around the child rather than handed over as a blank slate. That changes the buying decision more than the processor does: if you want a tablet that a parent can manage from a phone and a child can navigate without fuss, this route is much easier than adapting a standard adult tablet.

Once games, books and videos start piling up, the 3 GB of RAM and hexa-core processor give it enough headroom for smooth everyday use, and the move from the older 2 GB setup is a meaningful upgrade for this class. The 32 GB storage is fine for a starter library, while the microSD expansion route up to 1 TB keeps the tablet usable for longer. The catch is that this remains a kids-first media tablet, so anyone expecting heavy multitasking or a more open app catalogue will run into the platform limits before they hit the storage limit.

Daily durability is where this model earns its keep. The strengthened aluminosilicate glass, included slim case and two-year worry-free guarantee make it easier to live with in a real home, where drops matter more than benchmark scores. Battery life is rated at up to 13 hours, and the recurring pattern here is that charging does not dominate the day, which is exactly what you want from a family tablet. If your child is rough on devices, this package is easier to justify than a more fragile mainstream tablet with no child-focused backup plan.

Pros

  • Excellent family-focused parental controls with remote management
  • Good battery life for travel, sofa use and everyday entertainment
  • Durable package with case included and a two-year worry-free guarantee
  • Expandable storage helps the 32 GB base model last longer.

Cons

  • Amazon’s app ecosystem is more limited than a standard Android tablet with Google Play
  • HD screen is fine for kids’ media use but not a standout for sharper study or productivity work
  • 32 GB internal storage can feel tight if you download lots of games and videos before adding a microSD card.

Community

User reviews

The recurring picture is of a tablet that gets the basics right for family life: easy setup, strong battery life, useful parental controls and a build that copes well with being handled by children. The practical lesson is that its value comes from the whole package, not just the hardware.

Amazon

Fantastic product for my 6 year old. I found it easy to navigate as both parent and child, the battery life is great and the parent dashboard keeps the right restrictions in place.

Amazon

I think this is perfect for kids and much cheaper than an iPad. It has the apps and games my child wants, and I can control content and time limits from the dashboard.

Shaun

I bought it for my grandson and he absolutely loves it. It was easy to set up and it feels solid, which matters because it is bound to get dropped.

Vicky

My son has used it heavily, the charge is brilliant and even after being thrown around for months it still has no cracks or scratches.

Comparison

Attribute Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Pro Current Amazon Fire 7 Kids Amazon Fire HD 10 Kids Pro Ainmel 707
Price Out of stock Out of stock £216.98 £39.99
Screen size 8 inches 7" 10.1" 7 Inches
Resolution HD - 1920 x 1200 1024 x 600 Pixels
RAM 3 GB 2 GB 3 GB 5 GB
Storage 32 GB 32 GB 32 GB 32 GB
Battery life Up to 13 hours up to 10 hours of mixed use Up to 13 hours -
Chipset Hexa-core processor quad-core processor - Quad-core processor
Editorial score 7.0/10 6.8/10 7.2/10 6.4/10

Against a standard iPad route, this Fire HD 8 Kids Pro wins on child-focused value rather than outright polish. You get the case, the content subscription, the parental dashboard and the replacement cover in one package, which makes it far easier to justify for younger children. The iPad route makes more sense if you want broader app access, stronger school use and a tablet that grows into teen or adult productivity.

Against cheap generic Android tablets, Amazon’s advantage is not just the 8-inch hardware but the complete family setup around it. Many low-cost tablets can match the basic media role, yet few combine strong parental controls, a curated kids service, expandable storage and a two-year breakage policy in the same way. Choose this Amazon if family management and durability matter most; choose a generic Android option only if open app access matters more than the child-specific extras.

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Is the Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Pro (newest gen) tablet worth it?

The skip case is straightforward. If you want a more open app ecosystem, sharper productivity ambitions or a tablet that is meant to replace a school device as your child gets older, this is too tightly focused on managed entertainment. For its intended job, though, it looks like one of the safer and smarter buys in the kids tablet category.

FAQ

Is this mainly a kids’ entertainment tablet or a study tablet?

It is mainly a kids’ entertainment and family-use tablet, with enough smoothness for reading, videos, games and light learning apps rather than serious note-taking or laptop-style schoolwork.

Does the 32 GB storage limit matter?

It can if you plan to keep lots of downloaded games and videos on the device, but the microSD expansion option makes that much easier to manage over time.

Editorial team

DigitalCritic editorial team

The DigitalCritic editorial team reviews product specs, prices, availability, visible customer feedback, and buying signals to keep reviews useful and up to date.