Kid's Fire Tablet or I-Pad? It's an easy answer.
In this day and age, it’s almost inevitable that you will buy an electronic device for your child. But what is the best option?
For my first daughter, now 11 years old but age 8 at the time, I splurged and bought her an iPad mini after growing tired of loaning her my own. I happily welcomed back my iPad, now free of sticky finger prints and botched control settings, but I had misgivings about her now owning a device that could be easily broken and provided open access to its settings and the internet. In short, the iPad was parent intensive. Between loading appropriate content, monitoring screen time, and limiting what she could see and access, it required a lot of my time.
Fast forward to my second daughter, now 7. For her, I purchased an Amazon’s Fire Kid’s Edition Tablet. Hands down, the Amazon Fire Tablet Kid’s Edition is so much more parent-friendly and equally kid-friendly without sacrificing anything. Here’s why I like it so much.
Curated Age-Appropriate Content
After setting the age of your child, the Kids Fire Tablet will use Amazon FreeTime Unlimited to automatically compile age-appropriate content (in partnership with Common Sense Media) from a collection of over 15,000 books, movies, TV shows, educational apps, and games. It also includes educational content from PBS Kids, Nickelodeon, Disney, and more. I still review the content, because I find at times that I disagree with what they consider appropriate even with the age restriction. You can easily remove anything that has been added at any time.
It’s a relief to be able to hand my daughter the tablet and not worry about inappropriate content or unlimited access to the internet or social media. Simply select which functionality you would like her to access. For example, I blocked access to the Web Browser and email but allowed access to Amazon video, Apps and Games, and Photos.
When you purchase a Fire Kids Tablet, it includes one year of Amazon FreeTime Unlimited at no additional cost. After one year, it costs $2.99 a month for one child or $6.99 a month for up to 4 children to continue to receive the curated age-specific content.
Parental Controls
I love this feature. I can choose what content my daughter will watch, and most importantly for me, how much time she spends on the screen. It is super easy to monitor and limit screen time on the Kid’s Fire. I configured its settings to provide 2 hours daily of unlimited screen time, but you can also specify how much time to allot to each activity. For instance, unlimited book time but limited game and video time.
You can also dictate when the content is available on the tablet. I’ve specified that my daughter can use it from 7am-7pm. That way, when my daughter is (or should be) asleep she does not have access and won’t even be tempted by it.
Two Year Warranty
The Amazon Fire Table Kid’s Edition comes with a nice durable case available in 3 colors (blue, pink, and yellow). It also comes with a 2 year warranty, no questions asked. How you can beat that? If it’s broken, it will be replaced for free during this time. If a kid decides to see if the Kindle is waterproof by dropping it in a toilet, Amazon will replace it. It is basically a parent's dream warranty.
My daughter’s Fire Tablet has indeed gone the distance after several drops (those are just the ones I’ve seen). The case has done its job, and we have yet to have any problems even with some rough handling.
Price Point
Regularly priced at $99 and often less with an Amazon price deal (today it was $69.99 for Amazon Prime members), the Kid’s Edition Fire Tablet is much less expensive than the Apple Ipad-mini currently priced around $390. The low price combined with the no questions asked 2 year warranty seems like a no brainer here.
I considered buying a regular (adult) Amazon Fire Tablet for her because it is less expensive than the kid's edition, but there were just too many benefits in the kid's edition that I couldn’t pass up. I have no regrets in that department.
Apps
You can find most of the big name apps for the Kid's Fire including Minecraft which would have been a deal breaker.
Parent Mode
The Kids Fire Tablet has a Child mode and a Parent Mode. In the Parent mode, you enter your password to manage your child’s account, change settings, download videos from Amazon Prime, download additional games like Minecraft, etc. In this mode, it functions just like the Fire Tablet with access to adult apps like Facebook, Netflix, books, movies, etc.
Perfect for Traveling
The Kid’s Fire Tablet runs primarily with Wi-Fi, but you have the ability to download videos, apps, books, etc. for those times when you don’t have access. Before a trip, I simply download a favorite TV series or fun movies. Simply tap and hold the episode/movie you would like and select download. When an Internet connection is unavailable, your child will automatically see available content that has been downloaded to their profile.
The battery life is good and typically lasts 6-8 hours for us.
Expandable Storage
You can download a fair amount of material, but I often have to delete previous downloads to make room for more. It has 16 GB internal storage, and you can even add a microSD card for up to 256 GB of expandable storage. That's a lot of movies folks. The option of additional storage is a huge benefit of the Fire Tablet.
Built-in Camera
What child doesn’t love to take photos? On Kids Fire, they can take pictures or videos and even edit them by adding stickers, drawings, etc. It's another good source of entertainment and creativity while on vacation.
Summary
So, for our family, the Kid's Fire Tablet is the easy winner over the Apple i-Pad. With its ease of adding appropriate content, ability to set limits on screen time, fantastic price-point, durability and 2-year warranty, Amazon Kids’ Fire Tablet will be a great gift for your child and for you!