
Digital scales
by MyWeigh
The MyWeigh i2500 scale is a digital tabletop weighing scale with a 2,500-gram capacity, 0.5g resolution, and a built-in counting function that takes the tedium out of inventory work. You can buy the MyWeigh i2500 scale knowing it weighs, tallies, and counts individual pieces — and it does all three without you needing a calculator or a second pair of hands. If you regularly weigh herbs, supplements, cooking ingredients, or small components in batches, this is the workhorse that sits on your counter and just gets on with it.
The MyWeigh i2500 scale is a full-sized tabletop unit with a wide platform, a removable stainless steel weighing bowl, and a backlit LCD display — three things most pocket scales simply cannot offer. Most digital scales in the shop are pocket-sized — great for portability, not so great when you need to weigh larger quantities or work through multiple items in one session. The i2500 feels solid on a countertop. There's a noticeable heft to it — the kind that stops it sliding around when you're loading the bowl.
The net/gross weighing feature is where it earns its keep. You weigh item one, tare, weigh item two, tare, and keep going — up to 50 items in a single session. When you're done, hit the NW/GW button and the display shows your total accumulated weight. No pen and paper, no mental arithmetic. We've had customers tell us they switched from pocket scales to this specifically because they got tired of writing down individual weights and adding them up.
The one honest limitation: 0.5g increments. If you need 0.01g precision for very small quantities, this isn't your scale — you'd want something like the MyWeigh Triton T2 for that. But for kitchen prep, herb blending, supplement portioning, or counting out small components, half-gram steps are more than adequate across that full 2,500g range.
The MyWeigh i2500 scale has a maximum capacity of 2,500 grams with 0.5g readability, battery power, and a counting function that accepts sample sizes of 10, 20, 50, or 100 pieces.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Maximum capacity | 2,500g |
| Readability | 0.5g increments |
| Display | Backlit LCD |
| Weighing modes | Standard, net/gross, counting |
| Cumulative weighing | Up to 50 items per session |
| Sample sizes for counting | 10, 20, 50, or 100 pieces |
| Power | 4 x AAA batteries (included) |
| Auto-off | Yes — activates after inactivity |
| Accessories included | Stainless steel weighing bowl |
| Manufacturer warranty | 30 years |
| SKU | HS0340 |
| Feature | MyWeigh i2500 | Typical pocket scale |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity | 2,500g | 200–1,000g |
| Resolution | 0.5g | 0.01–0.1g |
| Counting function | Yes (10/20/50/100 sample) | Rarely included |
| Net/gross cumulative weighing | Yes, up to 50 items | No |
| Weighing bowl included | Stainless steel bowl | No |
| Warranty | 30 years | 1–10 years typical |
The counting function calculates the average weight of a sample of identical items and then divides the total batch weight by that average to produce an exact piece count. You place a known sample on the platform: either 10, 20, 50, or 100 identical pieces. The MyWeigh i2500 scale determines the average piece weight from that sample. Then you dump your full batch on, and the display tells you exactly how many pieces you've got.
The accuracy of the count depends on how uniform your items are. With machine-made capsules or hardware, it's spot-on. With natural products that vary slightly in weight, a larger sample size (50 or 100 pieces) gives you a tighter average and a more reliable count. That's a practical tip we'd give anyone using this feature for the first time: use the largest sample size you can be bothered to count out by hand. The 30 seconds of extra setup pays off.
From Our Counter: One of our warehouse team members started using the MyWeigh i2500 scale to count out small packets of herbal capsules for stock checks. Before that, they were hand-counting everything — 200 capsules at a time, twice a week. The i2500 cut that job from 20 minutes to about 90 seconds. They've been using the same unit for over four years now, and it still reads dead-on against our calibration weight. That's the kind of daily-driver reliability you want from a tabletop scale.
A tabletop scale handles larger volumes, offers a more stable platform, and typically includes features like cumulative weighing that pocket models lack entirely. Pocket scales are brilliant for what they do, but they've got real limits. Small platforms mean spillage. Tiny displays mean squinting. And most of them top out at 500g or 1,000g — fine for single-item weighing, useless for batch work. The MyWeigh i2500 scale handles up to 2,500 grams, which is enough for serious kitchen sessions or workshop tasks without needing to split your material across multiple weighings.
The backlit display is worth mentioning because anyone who's tried reading a non-backlit scale in a dimly lit kitchen knows the frustration. The i2500's LCD glows clearly enough to read at arm's length, even under the warm lighting most kitchens have. It's a small thing, but it matters when you're using the scale daily.
Battery life is respectable thanks to the auto-off feature — the scale powers down after a period of inactivity, so you won't come back to dead batteries because you forgot to switch it off. Four AAA batteries come in the box, which is a nice touch. No hunting through drawers before your first weigh-in.
And then there's the warranty. 30 years. That's not a typo. MyWeigh backs this scale for three decades, which tells you something about how they build their products. We've been selling MyWeigh scales since the early days of the shop, and the return rate is vanishingly low. They're built like they expect you to actually use them every day — because that's exactly what most customers do. According to the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA), accurate weighing equipment is considered essential for harm reduction in dosing contexts — a principle that applies equally to supplement portioning, herbal preparation, and culinary work.
Setting up the MyWeigh i2500 scale takes under two minutes: insert batteries, power on, place on a flat surface, and tare the bowl before your first measurement.
Complete your weighing setup: get a MyWeigh Triton T2 pocket scale for precision work under 1,000g at 0.1g resolution — a solid companion to the MyWeigh i2500 scale when you need finer measurements on smaller quantities. For kitchen herb preparation, pair the i2500 with a quality grinder from the Azarius grinders category to portion and process in one session. If you're exploring herbal blending, the Azarius herbs and seeds collection has a wide range of botanicals ready for weighing and mixing. For background reading on weighing best practices and harm reduction, the Azarius encyclopedia covers dosing principles in detail.
Yes — the i2500 offers multiple weighing units. You can toggle between grams and other units using the mode button on the front panel. The primary display resolution is 0.5g in gram mode.
For most kitchen tasks — portioning herbs, measuring baking ingredients, weighing spices — 0.5g steps are more than sufficient. You'd only need finer resolution (0.1g or 0.01g) for very small quantities under 10g, where a pocket scale is the better tool.
Weigh your first item, tare to zero, weigh the next, tare again — repeat up to 50 times. The scale tracks the cumulative total in the background. Press NW/GW to switch between the current item's net weight and the running gross total of all items weighed.
No — counting requires identical items. The scale averages the weight of your sample (10, 20, 50, or 100 pieces) and divides the total batch weight by that average. If items vary significantly in weight, the count will be off. Use the largest sample size possible for best accuracy.
MyWeigh's 30-year manufacturer warranty covers defects in materials and workmanship, according to MyWeigh's published warranty terms. Normal wear, battery replacement, and damage from misuse aren't included — but for a scale at this price point, a 30-year commitment from the manufacturer is essentially unheard of. Keep your proof of purchase.
The i2500 runs on 4 AAA batteries, which are included. MyWeigh does produce AC adapters for some models, but the i2500 is designed primarily for battery operation. The auto-off feature keeps battery consumption low — most users get months of regular use from a single set.
The i2500 is a tabletop unit with a platform large enough to hold the included stainless steel bowl comfortably. It's noticeably bigger than a pocket scale — built for counter use, not for carrying around. Expect it to take up roughly the same space as a hardback book.
Last updated: April 2026