CatEye AMPP 800 vs Lezyne Lite Drive 1000XL
Comparison 2026 — Bike Lights
Our verdict
Based on our weighted scoring, the Lezyne Lite Drive 1000XL edges out the CatEye AMPP 800 with an overall score of 82/100 against 74/100. It scores particularly well on brightness (96/100) and battery life (70/100), making it the better all-round pick in Bike Lights.
The CatEye AMPP 800 remains a sensible alternative if price is your main concern — it lands at €44.95 versus €54.95.
Brightness winner
Lezyne Lite Drive 1000XL
10% higher than its rival
Specifications
| Specification | CatEye AMPP 800 | Lezyne Lite Drive 1000XL |
|---|---|---|
| Price | €44.95+22% | €54.95 |
| Rating | ★4.4 (3,620) | ★4.4 (890) |
| Overall | 74/100 | 82/100+11% |
| Lighting | ||
| Brightness | 800 lumen | 1000 lumen+25% |
| Lens | Opti-Cube, met zijvensters | — |
| Modes | 5 + Boost | — |
| Certification | — | CE |
| Battery | ||
| Type | Micro-USB Li-ion | USB-C Li-ion 3350 mAh |
| Runtime | 2 u (hoog) / 9 u (eco)+33% | 1,5 u / 20 u |
| Properties | ||
| Weight | 131 g+15% | 151 g |
| Waterproof rating | IPX4 | IPX7+75% |
| Mount | FlexTight gereedschapsloos | — |
| Material | — | CNC aluminium |
Pros and cons
CatEye AMPP 800
Pros
- 800 lumens with Opti-Cube lens — even beam, no dark spots
- Side windows in the housing make you visible at junctions
- FlexTight bracket clamps tool-free onto any bar diameter
- Boost mode: tap for 10 sec of extra light when obstacles pop up
Cons
- No StVZO approval — beam may dazzle oncoming traffic
- Micro-USB instead of USB-C
Lezyne Lite Drive 1000XL
Pros
- 1000 lumens max output for dark rural roads and trails
- USB-C rechargeable with a 4-LED runtime indicator
- Compact CNC-machined aluminium, robust and stylish
- Eight light modes including daytime running and pulse
Cons
- Not StVZO approved — risks dazzling others without shielding
- Mounting strap can slip under heavy vibration