









Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to France.
🎧 Elevate your soundtrack with style and stamina — never miss a beat!
The AGPTEK A02 MP3 Player combines cutting-edge Bluetooth 5.3 technology with a compact 1.8-inch screen and a sleek rose gold finish. Featuring 32GB of built-in memory expandable up to 128GB, it supports multiple lossless audio formats and delivers up to 40 hours of continuous playback on a single charge. Designed for active lifestyles, its classic button interface and built-in speaker make it the perfect companion for workouts, travel, and daily commutes.
















| ASIN | B0DCV44BHZ |
| Additional Features | Built-In Speaker |
| Battery Average Life | 40 Hours |
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,085 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #7 in MP3 & MP4 Players |
| Brand | AGPTEK |
| Built-In Media | MP3 Player |
| Color | Rose Gold |
| Compatible Devices | Headphone |
| Component Type | Memory |
| Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 out of 5 stars 6,085 Reviews |
| Display Technology | LCD |
| Manufacturer | AGPTEK |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 32 GB |
| Mfr Part Number | SMPA02 |
| Model Name | A02 |
| Model Number | A02 |
| Screen Size | 1.8 Inches |
| Special Feature | Built-In Speaker |
| Supported Media Type | Micro SD |
| Supported Standards | AAC, APE, FLAC, MP3, OGG, WAV, WMA |
| Warranty Description | 1 year warranty |
C**S
Small, lightweight, improved BT MP3 player.
This is a great inexpensive MP3 player! I was looking for a wireless MP3 player to use with Bluetooth earbuds at the gym to replace my ancient iPod nano and wired headphones. I also own a non-Bluetooth version A02S. This player is labeled A02XT on the back, and appears to be a newer version of the model as it had several additional side buttons which do not show in the pictures on the Amazon webpage nor on AGPTEK's website. There are now Volume Up and Volume down buttons on one side, and a Back button on the other side in addition to the 5 buttons shown on the front. These make changing volume and going back one screen so much easier and intuitive than with the prior A02 player on which you needed to manipulate several buttons on the front to go Back one screen or change volume. Bluetooth setup was very easy and haven't had any random disconnects. Sound quality is excellent. Be aware that the volume maxes out when using Bluetooth at a medium loud level, not super loud. You can copy songs from an iTunes playlist to this player, and have it play in the same order by doing a copy and paste (not drag & drop) of songs in the iTunes playlist into one of the Playlists in the folder on the MP3 player which can be seen in the Finder. If you select that Playlist to play songs on the MP3 player, the songs will play in exactly the same order as in your iTunes playlist with no change in sequence. It does take some time to transfer songs from your computer to the MP3 player especially you try to fill all 32GBs with songs. I did cause the player to freeze up when I erroneously pressed the Back and Vol down buttons together. To unfreeze, hold Play/Pause button about 10 seconds, screen goes off, then powers on, and all is good, no loss of files. I haven't tried any of the other capabilities (voice recordings, photos, etc) but I only purchased the player to play songs, and it does this perfectly.
D**C
Great mp3 player! (UPDATE)
I totally recommend this portable mp3 player! It’s easy to download songs,has good sound quality, but make sure you have wired headphones because it doesn’t include them. It comes with a really long battery life, and is portable and durable.the Brighness is clear and easy to read . Design is comfortable in my pocket.fits in my pocket very well. The classic buttons are easy to push and sound clear.and the bluethooth reconnects. I recommend this for only $27 UPDATE:this thing really upgraded , it came with a larger speaker on the back , some volume buttons on the side, and a return button.the standby is also very long, forgot about it while it was under the couch,for , like , two months and turned it back on when I found it and it was 60%.totally recommend
J**S
Great mp3 player, terrible interface
I had to struggle a lot before I was able to make up my mind on a rating for this player. I've mostly used Phillips brand players in the past because I refuse to put up with the monstrosity of a piece of software that is iTunes and I think Apple products are ludicrously overpriced, which rules out most of the market. But Phillips isn't really doing the mp3 player market anymore, so I had to look elsewhere. Here's what I wanted out of an mp3 player to replace my aging Phillips 8GB: better battery life, higher song capacity, good audio quality, better playlist functionality. I definitely got the first three and only narrowly missed the last one, which is not a reflection on Phillips having good playlist support so much as AGPtEK somehow managing to make playlist functionality WORSE, which I wasn't aware was possible. This mp3 player has fantastic battery life, is very small and light, can be upgraded if I choose to buy a memory card even though the 16GB capacity is pretty roomy already, and has no problems with audio playback quality that I can find. I was able to use Windows Media Player for the initial import of music, which was nice and simple, but that's where my good experience with this player ended. I knew that in order to use the playlist capability I would need to build the playlist in a separate media program (they suggest Media Go or MediaMonkey- I chose the latter) and then import it if I didn't want to be stuck with only the three basic slots on the player for playlists-on-the-go and add each song individually through the player menus, which I have been stuck doing on my Phillips players and is a terrible way to pick out the 75 songs you want on your running playlist from the 150 albums on the player. Anyway, just take my word that this mp3 player has a horrible user interface. If you access your albums through the "music" function it scrambles the order of songs in the album, regardless of title or listed order. It will display them properly if you access them through "folders" but doing that breaks the repeat function and it will immediately go to the next album in the list when you reach the end of the album. My initial import was sorted alphabetically but albums I've added since then immediately go to the bottom of the list in chronological order. I manually created a folder within the folders for playlists and manually made a folder for each playlist, which works pretty well except that, to my great perplexity, the SECOND playlist I synced to that folder (songs in playlists need to be duplicate songs on the player, which I knew going in and was fine with because the player is roomy enough to handle it) also dragged along duplicate album folders for every song in the playlist and dropped them in roughly chronological order at the bottom of my album listing, so now I have 50 or so junk album folders with one or two songs in them cluttering up the bottom of my actual album list. But hey, at least I got the playlists to work, even though any changes to it need to be made by deleting it, editing it in MediaMonkey, and then re-syncing the whole playlist. In the end, I had the presence of mind to realize that this player is really doing everything that I wanted. The folder-album interface problem is not intuitive, but I understand it and can work around it and it isn't THAT inconvenient. It would be inconvenient if I was trying to walk someone else through the process of finding an album or making a playlist, but since I understand it and I'm the only one who uses the player, that's not a problem for me. As it was, I spent probably a solid forty minutes trying to get the playlists to work and not screw up the rest of the interface and only marginally succeeded at the latter part. But still, it was a low-cost player and like I said, it does everything I want it to do with very little actual inconvenience, which is why I decided it was worth four stars.
A**E
Two models, same brand, same issues on both, overall a complete waste of time and money.
I bought two by this brand the AGPTEK A02 and the AGBPTEK Touch and I returned both because they equally sucked and ended up frying my brand new SD card. I really liked the look of the touch but I also wanted something with physical buttons that I wouldn't have to look at to skip through songs, but they were both just absolutely terrible. They use the same interface and the sound quality on both was abysmal. When I tried the first device in my car it was so awful I was terrified my speakers got blown out or something because when I tried the second device it was the same - the bass was so buzzy you couldn't understand anything - tested with the same song on both - then I tried my phone bluetooth (again, same song) and it was just fine. I tried them on my earbuds, same issue. I tried adjusting the sound style on the devices and it didn't really make a difference, the only way to listen to either one bearably was to basically adjust the bass on my car settings so low it was practically off and at that level what's the point of listening to music. The speakers on both units were also horrid quality, which didn't matter because I wasn't planning on listening to music on the actual device anyway, but if I had wanted to use it as a backup they aren't worth having as a feature. I checked the SD card on my computer and the songs played fine so it wasn't anything to do with the song quality or the SD card, I was in a crunch about to leave for a road trip and decided to take both of them anyway since it's really what I bought it for, but that turned out to be a mistake. About an hour in while trying to change songs from one playlist to another on the external card as it was playing on the device it froze up and restarted. When it booted back up it was back on the same track and it wouldn't let me go forward/back/switch to anything else it just kept freezing and restarting. I tried the SD card on the other device and it said card not found. Ended up just breaking down and paying for ANOTHER month of Spotify just to get through my trip, which is what I was trying to avoid in the first place. When I got home I plugged the SD card into my computer and it said it was corrupted, so somehow the player fried my brand new card that I literally just bought to use with it.
N**K
Barely Lasted Two Years
It's strange that I'm being asked to rate the device's touch screen when it very clearly does NOT have a touch screen. Anyway, I bought this almost a year and a half ago for work as an inexpensive way to listen to music while at work. I needed something dumb enough to not be constantly connected to the internet for no reason, but smart enough to play music playlists with a no repeat shuffle. Well, I was able to get a device that didn't need the internet to function. Apparently a no repeat shuffle is too much to ask. The song you just listened to has as much of a chance to be played again as any other song on your playlist. It could play again and again...and again. A no repeat shuffle isn't that hard to code, but apparently a difficult thing to ask for. To be honest my expectations were already pretty low when buying this MP3 player. An all too familiar design ripped right from the legal gray areas of old iPod designs, an incredibly poorly coded interface that's agonizingly slow to navigate through, and of course sketchy, overly positive reviews from "other buyers" artifically inflating the review scores with "WOW! This MP3 PLAYER kissed literally changed my life and now I drive a gold jet!" and "Perfect quality in everything! FIVE stars! I wish I could rate it SIX STARS because this is the best thing I've ever bought!". Quite frankly I wouldn't be surprised if this MP3 player posting mysteriously disappeared from the store when the negative reviews finally catch up with it only to be replaced by basically the same identical thing days later to start the whole cycle again. After only almost two years of heavy use, sitting in my pocket and delivering constant tunes for 40 hours a week is apparently too much for the little device. The first point of failure, as is many MP3 players, is the headphone jack where if the headphones aren't plugged in at just the right angle, the contacts can jiggle and cause the sound to phase in and out or not play at all. I'd say I wouldn't recommend buying this cheap thing, but I bought it as an inexpensive music player because I knew it wouldn't last so take that as you will. In this modern era of pricey wireless earbuds that can be easily lost and everything needing to be unnecessarily constantly online and draining your data, you hardly have any choice in the matter. I've been limping these past few years as my choice of dumb, inexpensive devices are steadily getting harder and harder to find.
P**N
This thing is a beast....
I got my son this MP3 because he has started getting more and more into music, but Spotify Kids is a bitch to set up and won't let us add our son to our account. My son is also too young to have a cell phone. So an MP3 was the perfect solution. It's really easy to add music and I can quickly add any songs to it when my son has a new song he really likes. I do have the complaint though that depending on how you have your songs labeled by artist or album etc. It's annoying to change because you can't change it on the MP3 or in the window for the MP3 on your PC when you plugged it in. You have to change on your drive on your pc and then drag it back onto the MP3, unplug the MP3, see if songs sort like you want, and if they don't fix it and check again. The charge however is great!! It holds a charge forever it feels like and charges quickly. Connects to Bluetooth easily. The sound that comes out of the MP3 when you don't have headphones is decent. Navigation is a bit annoying but if my 8 year old can get the hang of it you can too. Now... the sturdiness of this thing... is insane... this thing reminds me of the beast MP3's of my use with how they could survive anything. Why? Cause this thing went through the washer and it still works. Perfectly. Charges, connects to my PC, plays music just like it did before ending up in the washer. Now I can't speak on most features on this thing. I can only talk about using it for music, but in that regard it is well worth the money. It's perfect for kids not just for all the above stuff, but also the size. It's SO small!! But that is perfect for a kid! It fits perfectly in my sons tiny jean pockets!
D**M
The Definitive Budget Device for Portable Music
I use mp3-players extensively (communiting order town on the bike trails, at work, while running, when traveling, etc.). Consequently, my devices take a lot of abuse, and I end up having to replace them fairly frequently, which has given me an opportunity to test out a variety of inexpensive mp3-players. Out of those I've tried, this is by far the best. Basics: This device is cheaper than comparable mp3-players on the market from competitors, but performs better in most respects. The device charges very quickly and retains an impressively long battery life; despite almost always using it, I really only stop to charge it concurrently with adding new music to it. It's durable, in that I've dropped it many times, sat on it with it in my pocket, carried it through the rain, and subjected it to other stressors, and it still looks and performs like new. The design is OK; it's not obvious from the picture, but it has a pleasant, almost rubbery texture. Design: At first I didn't like the big screen and would prefer something smaller, but I've come not to mind it. Displaying album art after picking a track seems unneccessary to me, but it doesn't seem to impair the battery life. I liked some of the smaller blockier mp3-players I've used, but the dimensions are adequate for slipping into and out of a pocket. It would be a major improvement if there was some mechanism to clip the device to a belt, and I've wondered why so few mp3-players do this. Controls: I like that the on/off switch is a physical switch, rather than a button that must be held to power on or off; this allows for turning it on and off more quickly. The buttons for navigation are OK, but it does take some getting used to for navigating the menus, as the way to transition between settings and folders isn't intuitive. One of my major gripes is the volume control; volume is changed by holding down the volume button, which brings up a new screen through which one can alter the volume by pushing or holding the up or down button (the latter also serves as the volume button) before pressing the right button to exit this screen. This causes problems when I want to rapidly change the volume, which occurs often when I need to hear things going on around me or adjust the sound level when transitioning into a new track, and this becomes especially complicated since the volume button will have a different function depending on the context of the screen. Some other mp3-players I've used have dedicated, easily accessible buttons, which is greatly appreciated. I occasionally have issues with the buttons getting pressed while in my pocket, but the device does have a mechanism to lock the buttons, though that creates additional inconvenience when one wants to quickly change a track. Interface: This is where this device shines. Most mp3-players I've used either read mp3 tags and sort the files automatically, or have no tag-reading capacity and display unarranged folders, often in the order they were created on the device. This device allows navigation through a variety of methods, so I can use tags to easily find select songs, while still retaining the ability to sort the music in a folder structure that is meaningful for me. This is a major selling point of this device for me. One observation that is puzzling though, is that when navigating through song titles, often the titles will be too long to fit in the screen, and thus the text scrolls on the selected song, but for reasons unknown gets cut off after a short scrolling distance (e.g. "Frank Sinatra - Fly Me to the Moon" may initially appear as "Frank Sinatra - Fl", then scroll to display "Frank Sinatra - Fly Me to th", but no more). Other Features: The device has a lot of other features on it, including capability for viewing videos or pictures, listening to radio, recording, storing a calendar, acting as an alarm/stopwatch, handling e-books. I've never tested any of these features, and can't imagine anyone would care about these when buying an mp3-player in the age of smart phones, but they're there. Honestly, if this device breaks on me, I plan to stop the continual wandering from device to device, searching for the best mp3-player. I will simply buy another one of these.
J**N
So this is a pretty good mp3 player for the price
So this is a pretty good mp3 player for the price, and the fact it also has expandable memory. It's got an equalizer which I don't usually see on cheaper mp3 players, head phone jack is in a good place for people who put this in pants pocket, on and off switch doesn't mean wearing out any buttons on the faceplate (I was beginning to kill the buttons on my last one just from frequent use and having to hold the buttons to turn the thing off). I'm literally only using this for mp3s so I don't care about any other features like playlists, podcasts, radio etc. So that said one of my problems is the fact you have to hold the face plate buttons to access volume control, instead of just having dedicated buttons for it on the front or sides. I usually just end up going back to the song selection, since you first have to 'wake up' the device to light the screen from clicking any button, THEN click/hold the button to get to the function you want. I've kinda gotten used to it but volume control I feel like should be dedicated to its own button. My biggest issue though, is that it lists all the mp3s on one singular list if you're accessing all songs, instead of listing them alpha numerically in their own lists (meaning, all songs start with A in their own column, and you can scroll through column A, B, C etc, individually instead of having to scroll through every song that starts with an A to get to songs that start with B...to get to songs that start with C...etc). I like to shuffle but sometimes I want to listen to a particular song, so I have to scroll through 200 songs to get to it, if I just want to listen to that one and let it shuffle through all songs again after. It's easy enough to access them by album or author, but you'll only shuffle through that list afterward and it won't move onto another album/author after that, it'll just play through that list only. I didn't think that having individual alpha numeric columns would be such a non-existent feature for mp3 players but after melting my walkman and trying to save some money tried two different mp3 players (lost the first replacement lol) it's become obvious how frustrating that is. Maybe I just need to figure the thing out more but scrolling through 200+ songs largely in foreign characters that aren't even listed alphanumerically in the master list is like its own circle of hell (I can't figure out if the thing is sorting by file name or the file information as I have songs that start with numbers, letters, and japanese characters peppered one after the other when I know they shouldn't be according to their file info) But hey, if literally all you want is to shuffle, this mp3 player is totally a steal for what you get, and sound quality is more than I would have expected. edit: After having this for awhile, I'm really unhappy with the shuffle function. It 'randomly' gives me the exact same list of songs (even if slightly out of order, but very often in the exact same order) when it shuffles from the song is starts on, which since it becomes locked just from being in my pants pocket, is always the same song so it's always the same list. Trying to find a song on one large master list is still a circle of hell, and I honest to god don't know how the Mp3 player orders things. Like it's picking some as files names, and some as title names, but I still have a master list that looks something like: 1 - a song 2 - another song apple apples 05 - zebras initial d 06 - [foreign character song name] bears I never thought this would be so annoying. Because like I said in the old review, while you can look under artist/album, aside that it clearly doesn't list that information correctly, the device will shuffle ONLY from that album/artist after you pick it from that list...which doesn't work when you have 2 songs from one album, so it will only shuffle those 2 songs until you go back to your master list. I can't believe how much I hate this device for this reason alone, not to mention the joke of a shuffle. Also, this thing has the slowest fast forward/rewind ever. Just imagine only the tiniest bit faster than real time. Anyway, the thing still works with heavy use and holds a really long charge, not sure it's 70 hour playback but even half of that is pretty dang good
M**L
Bueno, bonito, barato y rapido en ll
Buen reproductor a buen precio. Buena capacidad y ampliable con micro sd. Radio, video, fotos, grabadora.... Pequeño y muy ligero. Muchas horas de autonomia. Lo pedi un sabado y el martes ya lo tenia por envio normal gratuito. Tiene buen sonido y varias ecualizaciones a elegir. Su punto debil pueden ser los auriculares, son normalitos, a mi se me caen de las orejas al ir caminando y le he puesto otros mas comodos y que ademas realzan los graves, lo de los cascos seria cuestion de gustos de cada uno y del tipo de musica que escuches.
P**A
Buen producto
Está bastante bien el mp3, la verdad si me sorprendió. El sonido se escucha muy bien con los audífonos, ya sin ellos la calidad si no es la mejor, pero es aceptable. Pensé que sería un poco más grande, pero está perfecto de ese tamaño. Si lo recomiendo si no quieres gastar en productos tan caros como los de Sony :v, además de si solamente quieres escuchar música sin tener que pagar nada. Eso si, no he probado el bluetooth porque la verdad no me interesa ya que prefiero audífonos de cable.
C**N
Ottimo prodotto
Il prodotto si presenta con una confezione curata e completa. Una volta aperta troviamo il lettore con una consistenza robusta e bella da vedere. Dotato di un vasto assortimento di funzionalità e in ognuna di queste appare molto fluido. Come comandi risulta abbastanza intuitivo e dopo pochi minuti ci si muove già agilmente tra le varie funzioni disponibili. Semplice anche il caricamento di file sul dispositivo, con un'ampia disponibilità di spazio di archiviazione, con anche la possibilità di aggiungere eventualmente una memoria aggiuntiva. Il suono è nitido e di discreta qualità anche con le cuffie in dotazione. Ottimo rapporto qualità prezzo. Consiglio il prodotto a chi desidera un dispositivo economico per ascoltare la propria musica o la radio in libertà, senza rinunciare alla qualità.
R**9
My 9 year old loves it
Bit small but my 9 year old loves it, ear phones aren’t any good for kids , recommend to buying headphones. Easy to handle, good products and fast delivery
A**ー
てるとら46
超超いいです。大容量SDカード対応で無限とも思えるほど曲入ります。本体も16Gあるのでさらに便利。とても小さく、操作はちょっとクセありますがレスポンスよくノンストレス。音はクセなくフラットな感じ、どんな楽曲もそれなりに聴けます。価格も安く絶対に買いです!!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 week ago