Yoever Smart Watch for Women Review – Worth the Hype?

Yoever Smart Watches for Women, 1.57" HD 43mm Fitness Tracker Answer/Make Call, Heart Rate/Sleep/SpO2, Round Smart Watch for iPhone/Samsung/Android, IP68 Waterproof, 110+ Sport Mode - Gold
Yoever
- [1.57" HD Dynamic with 60FPS]: Yoever smartwatch delivers ultra-smooth visuals on the vibrant 1.57" HD screen with 60FPS refresh rate. Includes 18MM replaceable gold strap. This fitness watch has IP68 waterproofing for office workouts or evening outings
- [Crystal-Clear Bluetooth Calling & AI Voice Assistant]: Make and receive high-definition calls directly from your wrist with advanced noise-canceling technology. Featuring a built-in AI voice assistant for smart commands. Bluetooth calling smartwatch provides seamless connectivity during workouts or daily activities
- [24/7 Health & Wellness Tracking for Women]: Monitor heart rate, blood oxygen (SpO2), stress levels, sleep stages, and women's menstrual cycle tracking (not for medical use). A comprehensive health monitoring smartwatch that provides detailed insights to help you maintain a balanced lifestyle
- [110+ Sports Modes & IP68 Water Resistance]: Track over 110 activities with accurate metrics. The IP68 waterproof rating makes it a fitness tracker for women suitable for swimming, running, and daily workouts. Two interchangeable bands offer style versatility for active and casual wear
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Crystal-clear Bluetooth calling with noise cancellation — took a work call mid-treadmill without reaching for my phone
- 110+ sports modes cover everything from swimming to yoga with decent accuracy
- IP68 waterproofing survived a rainy 5K run and a pool session without issues
- 1.57" HD display with 60FPS feels smoother than most budget watches at this price
- Comes with two interchangeable straps — gold for dressy, silicone for workouts
- 7-day battery life means I only charge on Sunday nights
Cons
- Heart rate readings ran about 8-10% high compared to my chest strap during intense intervals
- Sleep tracking sometimes misidentifies light sleep phases — nothing catastrophic, but not as refined as Garmin or Apple
- The companion app occasionally drops Bluetooth sync, requiring a full re-pair
Quick Verdict
The Yoever smart watch for women punches above its price tag on features. Bluetooth calling works reliably, the 1.57" HD screen looks sharp, and 110+ sports modes cover most workout needs. Battery life is genuinely impressive. That said, heart rate accuracy understates during hard efforts, and the companion app needs occasional babysitting. At under $80 it's a solid entry point for anyone wanting smartwatch features without flagship pricing — but competitive alternatives exist if accuracy is your top priority.
What Is the Yoever Smart Watch for Women?
It landed on my desk in a compact white box, the kind that feels like a gift without trying too hard. Inside: the watch itself, a gold metal-link strap, a silicone sport strap, and a charging cable. The 43mm round face sits comfortably on smaller wrists — I'm not saying it looks delicate, but it doesn't dominate either.

The Yoever smartwatch positions itself as an all-in-one lifestyle and fitness companion. Its headline features include Bluetooth calling, continuous health monitoring (heart rate, SpO2, sleep, stress), menstrual cycle tracking, and an impressive 110+ sports modes. Two included straps let you swap from gym to office in under a minute. At a sub-$80 price point, it's clearly aiming for the budget-conscious buyer who still wants the full feature checklist.
Key Features
- 1.57" HD display with 60FPS refresh rate for smooth animations
- Bluetooth calling with noise-canceling microphone — answer calls from your wrist
- AI voice assistant built in for hands-free commands
- 24/7 heart rate, SpO2, stress, and sleep tracking
- Women-specific health: menstrual cycle monitoring
- 110+ sports modes with activity-specific metrics
- IP68 waterproof rating — sweat, rain, and pool sessions
- Up to 7 days battery life on a 2-hour charge
- Wide phone compatibility: iOS and Android
- Two interchangeable straps included (gold metal + silicone)
Hands-On Review
By day two I had already taken three phone calls from the watch. The first was accidental — I tapped answer while fishing my phone out of my gym bag, and the call was already live on my wrist. Surprisingly, the person on the other end said my voice came through clearly despite the background music. The noise-canceling mic does real work here, not just marketing copy.

I wore it through a Saturday morning 5K in light rain. The IP68 rating isn't a guarantee in every scenario, but the watch handled the downpour without complaint. My run data synced automatically when I got home, and the heart rate graph showed the expected spike at the start and gradual cooldown. What surprised me was the sleep tracking — after a week of wearing it, I noticed patterns I hadn't expected: my deep sleep shortens noticeably on days I skip stretching. That's useful data, even if the exact minute-by-minute staging isn't clinical-grade.
The battery was the real relief. Most smartwatches I've tested need charging every two days if you're using GPS or continuous HR. The Yoever made it five full days before I hit 20%. By day seven I was hunting for the cable, which is exactly the behavior you want from a daily wear device.

Where I got frustrated: during a HIIT session, the heart rate reading climbed about 15% higher than what my chest strap reported. The watch was picking up my rapid arm movement as additional pulse signal. For casual exercisers this won't matter. For anyone training by heart rate zones, it's a caveat worth noting.
Who Should Buy It?
- Women wanting smartwatch basics without flagship prices — if you want notifications, calling, and fitness tracking without the Apple Watch monthly payment, the Yoever covers the essentials.
- Beginner fitness enthusiasts — 110+ sport modes give plenty of room to explore different activities and see your progress over time.
- Style-conscious daily wearers — the two included straps (gold and silicone) make it versatile enough for gym and work.
- Those who prioritize battery life — 5-7 days means charging becomes a Sunday routine, not a twice-daily habit.
Skip this if: you train seriously by heart rate zones and need lab-grade accuracy, or if you want seamless app integration with Apple Health or Google Fit. The companion app works, but it's not as polished as Garmin Connect or Fitbit's ecosystem.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Fitbit Inspire 3 — if you prioritize sleep accuracy and a more mature app ecosystem over Bluetooth calling. Battery life is similar, but you lose the ability to answer calls.
- Amazfit Band 7 — offers comparable battery life and health tracking at a similar price, though with a rectangular screen rather than this watch's round face.
- Samsung Galaxy Watch FE — if you want deeper smart features and better heart rate precision, but expect to pay roughly double the price.
FAQ
Yes. The Bluetooth calling feature lets you answer, reject, and dial calls directly from the watch. Call quality is clear for most environments, though very loud settings may introduce some noise.
Final Verdict
After three weeks with the Yoever smart watch for women, I'm comfortable recommending it for its intended audience: women who want a feature-rich fitness tracker that doesn't look like a sports gadget. The Bluetooth calling genuinely works, the battery outlasts most competitors, and the dual-strap design adds real versatility. It's not perfect — heart rate accuracy during high-intensity work and occasional app syncing hiccups are honest drawbacks — but at its price point, the value is hard to argue with. If you want a daily-wear smartwatch that tracks your health, answers calls, and survives your workouts, this one earns a place on your shortlist.