AcclaFit Smart Watch for Men Women (1.85") with Bluetooth Calls, Fitness & Health Monitoring
Product description
What it is and what you’re buying it for
This AcclaFit smartwatch is aimed at people who want more than basic step counting: it adds Bluetooth call handling (answer/make calls) and “smart” notifications, plus ongoing health tracking with a wrist-based sensor. On paper, it’s pitched as an all-day activity and fitness companion with a large fitness mode count (140+), sleep monitoring, and additional readings such as blood oxygen and blood pressure-style metrics.
If your current watch only tells you steps and time, this kind of device can feel like a proper daily dashboard. You get vibrate alerts for incoming calls/messages and app notifications once it’s paired with a smartphone, and the watch can display/record a lot of that data through the accompanying “H Band” app.
Key features that matter day to day
The biggest practical difference here is call + notification support. Thanks to a built-in microphone and a high-fidelity speaker, the watch can help you handle calls without constantly pulling your phone out. It can also surface text alerts from SMS and a range of SNS apps (including Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, LinkedIn, Messenger and more) when the watch is synced.

For health tracking, there’s a PPG sensor for continuous heart-rate monitoring and sleep monitoring. The description also claims it can store resting heart-rate data for 7 days, and you can view monitoring data in the H Band app. It also measures blood oxygen and blood pressure using a light-based sensor on the wrist.
There’s also the fitness side: 140+ sports modes are listed, including yoga, swimming, HIIT, running, skipping, cycling, badminton and football (among others). Alongside that, the step counter/pedometer tracks steps, active minutes, distance and calorie burn, so you can see trends rather than just a one-off workout result.
A small “real-life” example: imagine you’re out for a quick walk—your phone stays in your pocket. If a call comes in, you feel the vibration, glance at the watch, and choose to answer. Later, you open the H Band app and look at steps and heart-rate trends alongside sleep data.


Tech specs (as provided)
- Display: 1.85-inch
- Water resistance rating: IP68
- Battery capacity: 250 mAh
- Normal usage time: about 7 days
- Standby time: about 30 days
- Charging time: fully charges in about 2 hours
- Compatibility: iOS 10.0 or Android 5.0 and above
- Bluetooth: Bluetooth 5.3 or superior
- Fitness modes: 140+ sports modes
- Data viewing app: H Band

Where it shines (and where it can fall short)
This is the sort of smartwatch that makes sense if you want one device to cover three categories: notifications/calls, everyday fitness tracking, and basic health snapshots. The combination of Bluetooth call handling and app alert support is a strong everyday convenience point, especially if you’re busy, commuting, or walking regularly.
The fitness modes count (140+) and the ability to track steps/active minutes/distance/calories also suggest a “do lots of different things” approach—if you rotate activities (e.g., HIIT some days, running or cycling others), that variety can help keep tracking more relevant.
That said, it’s not perfect. You should keep expectations realistic about the health metrics: the watch measures blood oxygen and blood pressure using a wrist light-based sensor, and those types of readings can be less consistent than medical-grade devices. If you’re expecting clinical-level accuracy for serious monitoring, this probably won’t be the tool to rely on.
Also note the water-resistance advice: it’s IP68 and the description mentions it can handle washing hands, showering, swimming and even diving, but it specifically advises not using it in hot water (including hot showers). So it’s built for everyday water exposure, not carefree use in any temperature.

Compatibility & requirements (important to check first)


This smartwatch is designed to pair with phones using iOS 10.0 or Android 5.0 or later, and it requires Bluetooth 5.3 or newer. It connects to your smartphone via Bluetooth and uses the H Band app to display monitoring data.
Before you buy, it’s worth checking that your mobile meets the stated iOS/Android and Bluetooth requirements—this is one of those things that can make the difference between “works smoothly” and “nothing syncs”.
Care & everyday durability
The listed IP68 rating is the key durability feature, and the description claims it’s been tested against water pressure cycles (200 cycles) for water resistance. In practical terms, that points to a watch that can cope with day-to-day life: washing hands, showering, and active use without babying it.

Still, the hot-water warning matters. If you’re someone who regularly uses very hot showers or steams, you’ll want to follow the guidance and avoid hot water exposure.
Is it worth it?
Worth considering if you want a single smartwatch that handles Bluetooth calls and notifications, tracks your workouts across lots of activities (140+ modes), and monitors heart rate, sleep, and additional health readings using wrist sensors. It’s a solid fit if you’re mainly looking for day-to-day insight—steps, active minutes, sleep trends, and how your heart rate changes through the day.
You may want to skip it if you require medical-grade accuracy for blood pressure-type readings, or if you’re hoping for a smartwatch experience beyond what the H Band app can show you. It might not be a great match if you don’t have a phone that meets the iOS/Android and Bluetooth 5.3 requirements.


Quick FAQ

How do calls and messages work on this watch?
Once synced, the watch can support answering/making calls via the built-in microphone and speaker, and it can alert you to incoming messages (including SMS and supported SNS apps) via vibration.
What health data can it track?
The description lists continuous heart-rate monitoring via a PPG sensor, sleep monitoring, blood oxygen, and wrist-based blood pressure-style readings. Resting heart-rate data can be stored for 7 days and viewed in the H Band app.
Is it waterproof for everyday use?

It’s rated IP68 and the description includes guidance for washing hands, showering, swimming and diving, with a specific warning not to use it in hot water.
Does it work with iPhones and Android phones?
Compatibility is stated for iOS 10.0 and Android 5.0 or later, with Bluetooth 5.3 or higher.
How long does the battery last?
The description estimates around 7 days of normal use and about 30 days standby, with a full charge in around 2 hours.
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