Hoto 3.6V Electric Screwdriver Kit Pro Hits $28.49 at Amazon and Walmart, 40% Off for Prime Day
The Hoto 3.6V Electric Screwdriver Kit Pro is selling for $28.49 at both Amazon and Walmart during Prime Day, representing a $21.50 markdown from its $49.99 list price — within $5 of the kit's all-time low. The 25-bit…
The Hoto 3.6V Electric Screwdriver Kit Pro is selling for $28.49 at both Amazon and Walmart during Prime Day, representing a $21.50 markdown from its $49.99 list price — within $5 of the kit's all-time low. The 25-bit package targets the practical gap between a manual screwdriver and a full-size power drill.
What the Kit Delivers
The package ships with 25 interchangeable steel bits and an extension bar, covering a range of common household tasks including furniture assembly, small appliance repairs, and work on bikes and scooters. Three torque settings let the operator dial down force for delicate electronics or increase it for heavier assembly. A built-in LED light addresses the low-visibility scenarios — behind a TV stand, under a desk — where misaligned screws are most likely to occur.
At 3.6 volts, the Hoto sits below the wattage of a contractor-grade drill. The specification is intentional: the unit is sized to fit in a drawer or a car trunk, which places it in a different use category than the corded tools that live in a garage.
Power and Charging Specs
The 1,500mAh rechargeable battery connects via USB-C. Hoto describes the capacity as sufficient to handle dozens of small projects on a single charge, though the exact cycle count varies by torque load and bit type. USB-C standardization means the screwdriver can share a charging cable with most current smartphones and laptops, reducing the accessory footprint for apartment or travel use.
Pricing Context
The $28.49 Prime Day price represents a 40% reduction from the $49.99 list price at Amazon, with Walmart carrying the same unit at $39.99 under the same promotional window. The Amazon price is the lower of the two and is the figure closest to the product's historical floor. Shoppers who missed prior sale cycles are looking at a price point that has rarely appeared since the product launched.
Filed via Newsmv