The Tribe Resistance Bands Set is a travel-ready stackable tube kit that earns strong reviews for its accessory mix and portability, scoring 9.6/10 at BestViewsReviews. Its metal multi-clip system stacks from about 5 lbs to 105 lbs, and the set ships with cushioned handles, ankle straps, a door anchor, and a water-resistant carry bag built for packing. It is beginner-friendly and easy to assemble anywhere. It is not a heavy-duty gym replacement and lacks an anti-snap cord, but as a complete, packable kit for varied on-the-road training, it is a reliable mid-priced pick.

Full review
Why It Works for Travel
The Tribe set is built with portability in mind, shipping with what OfficialTop5Review described as "everything you need for the workout you want, wherever you want it, all in a handy waterproof nylon carry-bag." The water-resistant bag is a real asset for travel, keeping the tubes, handles, straps, and anchor contained and protected in luggage, and the whole kit is light enough to forget it is in your bag.
BestViewsReviews, which scored the set 9.6/10, highlighted that the "metal multi-clip system allows for almost any combination of intensity from 5 lb to 105 lbs." That range covers light warm-ups and mobility through to moderately heavy strength work, all from a compact, packable kit, which is exactly the versatility a traveler wants from a single bag.
The light 5-lb entry point is genuinely useful for travel, where you might be doing rehab, mobility, or warm-up work in a hotel room rather than maximal lifting, while the ability to stack toward 105 lbs means the set still has headroom for real strength work. That breadth from one packable kit is the Tribe's core travel appeal, and it is why reviewers frame it as a do-everything starter system you can take anywhere.
Real-World Performance
FitnessVolt rated the Tribe 7.9/10, calling it a "portable kit with a good accessory mix and beginner-friendly setup." In use, the metal multi-clip system makes it quick to stack bands and reconfigure resistance between exercises, and the color-coded tubes help you find the right level fast. The door anchor opens up cable-style movements wherever there is a sturdy door.
The set leans beginner-friendly, with an included instructional eBook to guide new users through exercises and proper form. For travelers building or maintaining a routine on the road, that guidance plus the broad resistance range makes the Tribe an approachable, capable kit that does not demand prior experience to use effectively.
OfficialTop5Review captured the all-in-one appeal, noting the Tribe packs "everything you need for the workout you want, wherever you want it, all in a handy waterproof nylon carry-bag." In day-to-day travel use that translates to a kit you can pull out, anchor to a door, and run a full session with in minutes, then pack away just as quickly, which is exactly the friction-free experience that keeps people actually training while away from home.
Build and Accessories
The Tribe includes cushioned soft-grip handles, two soft ankle straps, a door-safe anchor, and the water-resistant carry bag, a complete complement that lets it substitute for a range of gym equipment. The metal multi-clip hardware is a step up from plastic connectors and makes stacking secure and quick, and the soft-grip handles stay comfortable through higher-rep sets where thinner handles would dig into the palms.
As BestViewsReviews detailed, the kit "includes 2 cushioned soft-grip handles, 1 door-safe anchor, 2 soft ankle straps, and a water-resistant carrying bag." That mix is what turns the Tribe from a simple band into a portable training system suitable for full-body sessions away from home.
The cushioned handles are comfortable enough that higher-rep sets do not chew up your palms, and the door-safe anchor is designed to protect both the door and the band at the contact point. The metal clips inspire more confidence than the plastic connectors on some cheaper kits, snapping securely onto the handles so bands do not pop loose mid-rep. For a mid-priced set, the hardware feels a notch above the bargain tier.
Portability and Versatility
Like the other tube kits here, the Tribe trades a little extra bulk versus a flat loop set for far greater exercise variety. The water-resistant bag is sized to pack into a carry-on or backpack, and the components nest together neatly. For a traveler who wants to do presses, rows, curls, and lower-body work rather than just band activation drills, that versatility justifies the modest space it takes.
The 5-to-105-lb range is slightly lower at the top end than the WHATAFIT's or Bodylastics' ceilings, but it is ample for the vast majority of travel workouts and rehab use, and the lighter increments make it easy to fine-tune resistance for different movements.
Set-up and tear-down speed is an underrated travel virtue, and the Tribe handles both well: clip the bands you need, anchor the door if required, and you are training; afterward everything folds back into the water-resistant bag in under a minute. That low-friction routine is what keeps a travel kit in regular use rather than abandoned at the bottom of a suitcase, and it is a big part of why the Tribe earns such consistently positive aggregate scores from the owners who actually travel with it.
Where It Falls Short
The Tribe is honest about its niche. FitnessVolt noted it is "not a heavy-duty gym replacement" and that "tube durability varies by use," so users who push it hard daily may see faster wear than with a premium set. It also lacks the anti-snap inner cord that makes the Bodylastics Resistance Bands Set safer if a tube fails, and its top-end resistance is a bit lower than some competing kits.
For its intended audience, travelers and beginners who want a complete, versatile, packable kit, these limitations rarely bite. But serious heavy lifters or anyone who wants maximum durability and safety will be better served by a higher-end option, which is why the Tribe sits in the solid middle of this ranking rather than at the top. The lower 105-lb ceiling is the most concrete limitation to weigh: it is plenty for most travel and rehab use, but a strong lifter doing heavy presses or rows may occasionally wish for more, which the higher-capacity WHATAFIT or Bodylastics sets provide. For the traveler doing maintenance, mobility, and moderate strength work, though, the ceiling is rarely a practical constraint, and the lighter increments are arguably better suited to the controlled, varied work most travel sessions involve.
How It Compares to Alternatives
The Tribe Resistance Bands Set, WHATAFIT Resistance Bands Set, and TheFitLife Resistance Bands are all complete tube kits with similar accessory mixes; the Tribe's standout is its water-resistant travel bag and high BestViewsReviews score, though the WHATAFIT typically costs less. Against the Bodylastics Resistance Bands Set it lacks the anti-snap cord and lifetime guarantee. And unlike the loop-only Fit Simplify Resistance Loop Exercise Bands, it includes handles, straps, and an anchor for full-body work, at the cost of a slightly larger packed size.
Who It's Best For
The Tribe Resistance Bands Set suits travelers and beginners who want a well-equipped, packable tube kit with a dedicated water-resistant travel bag and don't need the heaviest resistance or a premium safety system. The included eBook makes it especially friendly for those new to band training. Heavy lifters and durability-focused buyers should consider the Bodylastics, ultralight packers the Fit Simplify, and the most budget-conscious the WHATAFIT, but as an approachable, travel-ready all-rounder the Tribe is a dependable mid-priced choice.
It is a particularly good fit for someone buying their first travel kit who wants guidance and a complete set of accessories out of the box, rather than piecing together bands and attachments separately. The water-resistant bag and beginner eBook lower the barrier to actually using it on trips, which is half the battle with travel fitness gear, and the strong aggregate review scores suggest most buyers end up satisfied with the choice.
Strengths
- +Complete travel kit with a water-resistant carry bag designed for packing
- +Metal multi-clip system stacks resistance from roughly 5 lbs to 105 lbs
- +Includes cushioned handles, two ankle straps, and a door anchor
- +Beginner-friendly with a strong accessory mix and instructional eBook
- +Lightweight and easy to assemble for workouts anywhere
Watch-outs
- −Not a heavy-duty replacement for a full gym
- −Tube durability varies with heavy, frequent use
- −No anti-snap safety cord like premium sets
- −Top-end resistance lower than some competing kits
How it compares
The Tribe Resistance Bands Set matches the complete-tube-kit format of the WHATAFIT Resistance Bands Set and TheFitLife Resistance Bands, with a water-resistant travel bag like the WHATAFIT's; it lacks the anti-snap cord of the Bodylastics Resistance Bands Set and offers more accessories and versatility than the loop-only Fit Simplify Resistance Loop Exercise Bands.
Who this is for
At a glance: Travelers and beginners who want a well-equipped, packable tube kit with a dedicated travel bag.
Why you’d buy the Tribe Resistance Bands Set
- Complete travel kit with a water-resistant carry bag designed for packing.
- Metal multi-clip system stacks resistance from roughly 5 lbs to 105 lbs.
- Includes cushioned handles, two ankle straps, and a door anchor.
Why you’d skip it
- Not a heavy-duty replacement for a full gym.
- Tube durability varies with heavy, frequent use.
- No anti-snap safety cord like premium sets.
Rating sources
“Metal multi-clip system allows for almost any combination of intensity from 5 lb to 105 lbs.”
“Portable kit with a good accessory mix and beginner-friendly setup”
“Everything you need for the workout you want, wherever you want it, all in a handy waterproof nylon carry-bag.”
Our 4.3 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



