Cactus Academy - Book Reviews

Potty Training Watch for Kids V2 Review – Honest Hands-On Verdict

By haunh··4 min read·
4.2
Potty Training Watch for Kids V2 – A Water Resistant Potty Reminder Device for Boys & Girls to Train Your Toddler with Fun/Musical & Vibration Interval Reminder with Potty Training eBook (Sky)

Potty Training Watch for Kids V2 – A Water Resistant Potty Reminder Device for Boys & Girls to Train Your Toddler with Fun/Musical & Vibration Interval Reminder with Potty Training eBook (Sky)

Benny Bradley's

  • POTTY TRAIN YOUR KIDS EASILY WITH A FUN MELODY ALARM - the watch is programmable to play the tune "Wheels on the Bus" to remind your kid to go do their toilet business every 30, 60, 90 mins or 2 hours, and automatically recurs. The watch can switch from music to vibration if needed for school or quiet areas.
  • IMPROVED WATER-RESISTANT AND BATTERY LIFE - No need to remove the watch every time your kids go to the bathroom! They can wash their hands or play with water without fear of damaging the watch. Upgraded V2 watch model only needs charging about once a week.
  • EBOOK INCLUDED - Comes with complementary 18-page picture digital ebook, "Benny Bradley Learns to Potty," a beautifully illustrated children's book, It's fun and educational for potty-training toddlers, Mommies and Daddies! Please note this is meant to be read on a digital reader such as a tablet, phone, kindle, or computer reader device. This watch package does not come with a physical book.
  • EASY TO USE WHILE TAMPER-PROOF - we programmed the watch so that the reminders do not shut down by accidental touches. There's no batteries needed, as it is rechargeable by USB cable.

Quick Verdict

Pros

  • Interval reminders every 30, 60, 90 mins or 2 hours keep potty breaks consistent
  • Water-resistant design means no need to remove it during hand-washing or baths
  • Vibration mode works discreetly for classrooms, daycare, or quiet hours
  • Rechargeable battery lasts up to a week — no fumbling with tiny coin batteries
  • Includes a complementary 18-page digital eBook for story-time reinforcement
  • Secure buckle clasp keeps the watch on even during active play

Cons

  • Requires charging every week or so — easy to forget until the watch goes silent
  • Initial setup took me a few minutes to figure out without the quick-start guide
  • The strap might be too small for chunkier wrists by age 4-5

Quick Verdict

The Benny Bradley's potty training watch V2 is a genuinely useful tool for parents in the trenches of toilet training. It handles the relentless reminding so you don't have to narrate every single bathroom trip. Water resistance, a week-long rechargeable battery, and a bundled eBook make it more polished than most competitors. I docked points for the occasional charging annoyance and a strap that may outgrow chunkier toddlers by age four. Score: 8.3/10.

What Is the Potty Training Watch V2?

Picture this: it's 7:40 AM on a Tuesday. My son is mid-crayon, absolutely zero interest in stopping. Without the watch he'd have had an accident before I even thought to check. But the Potty Training Watch buzzed — a gentle nudge I almost missed — and I caught it in time. That's the whole value proposition: closing the gap between "forgot to remind" and "oops, too late."

Potty Training Watch for Kids V2 – A Water Resistant Potty Reminder Device for Boys & Girls to Train Your Toddler with Fun/Musical & Vibration Interval Reminder with Potty Training eBook (Sky)

The V2 is a wrist-worn reminder device from Benny Bradley's that prompts toddlers to use the potty at set intervals — every 30, 60, 90 minutes, or two hours. It plays a snippet of "Wheels on the Bus" or vibrates silently, depending on your settings. The package also throws in a complementary 18-page digital eBook, "Benny Bradley Learns to Potty," which you can read together on a tablet or phone. No physical book is included, which some buyers have misunderstood — so fair warning upfront.

Key Features

  • Programmable intervals: 30, 60, 90 minutes, or 2-hour cycles with auto-recurrence
  • Dual alert mode: musical tune ("Wheels on the Bus") or vibration-only
  • IPX water-resistant rating — safe for hand-washing and splashes
  • Rechargeable via USB; ~7 days per charge on V2 model
  • Tamper-proof design prevents accidental shut-off by little fingers
  • Secure buckle clasp keeps it on through running, climbing, and play
  • 100% BPA/Latex-free silicone strap, sized for toddlers
  • Includes 18-page digital eBook ("Benny Bradley Learns to Potty")

Hands-On Review

I wore this watch around the house for two weeks straight — not on my wrist (the strap is clearly built for tiny arms), but monitoring it as it sat on my then-27-month-old daughter. The first three days I felt like a lab technician: "Does it buzz? Did she notice?" By day four, she'd started independently touching her wrist when the tune played and saying "potty!"

Potty Training Watch for Kids V2 – A Water Resistant Potty Reminder Device for Boys & Girls to Train Your Toddler with Fun/Musical & Vibration Interval Reminder with Potty Training eBook (Sky)

What surprised me was the vibration mode. I expected her to ignore the tune entirely in favor of the toy shelf, but when I switched to silent vibration during quiet hours, she actually responded better — fewer distractions, same result. For daycare or preschool settings, that flexibility is worth its weight in gold.

The buckle clasp is genuinely secure. I'm talking "bribed my nephew to try to pull it off" secure — he couldn't do it. Compare that to clip-on watches that pop off the second a toddler army-crawls across the kitchen floor. The silicone strap feels soft, not sticky, and there's no chemical smell out of the box.

Charging is the one friction point. The watch communicates low battery by simply going quiet. I learned this the hard way on day six when the silence felt suspiciously peaceful. A blinking charge indicator would be a welcome upgrade. The cable itself is standard micro-USB, which means I can grab any spare cable from the junk drawer — but that's only helpful if I remember to charge it before the silent treatment kicks in.

Who Should Buy It?

  • Parents with persistent forgetters — both the kids and the adults. If you've missed more than three potty windows this week, the watch fills that gap.
  • Daycare and preschool families — the vibration mode respects group settings without sacrificing the reminder.
  • Parents of sensory-sensitive toddlers — the silent vibration option skips auditory overwhelm while keeping the training on track.
  • Multi-child households — one watch per toddler keeps the schedule consistent while you manage the chaos.

Skip this if your toddler is already fully self-initiating bathroom trips with reliable success. The watch is a training tool, not a permanent fixture. And if your child is under 18 months or shows no interest in sitting on the potty yet, save your $30 until the developmental milestone catches up.

Alternatives Worth Considering

  • Potty Watch Pro by PUPUPULA — Similar interval reminder concept but with customizable melodies and a companion app. Slightly bulkier on smaller wrists.
  • Mosion Kids Potty Training Watch — Budget option with basic timer functions. No water resistance and shorter battery life, but easier on the wallet.
  • Chuchik Toddler Potty Chair with Timer — A potty seat with built-in flushing sounds and a small reward chart. Better for families who want a standalone chair-and-timer combo.

FAQ

The V2 model delivers roughly one week of battery life per charge, depending on reminder frequency and whether you use musical or vibration mode.

Final Verdict

After two weeks with the Potty Training Watch V2, I'm keeping it. Not because it's magic — toilet training still requires patience, consistency, and at least three pairs of spare pants — but because it genuinely reduced the "did I just miss a window?" anxiety. The water-resistant build, vibration flexibility, and week-long battery make it feel like a product designed by parents who already dealt with this chaos. It's not perfect, and the charging reminder issue is real, but for $30 it's earned its spot on my toddler's wrist.

Curious whether it fits your specific situation? The FAQ above covers the most common questions I had before testing — and the ones that came up during.