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🖊️ Elevate your everyday writing — because your pen should work as hard as you do.
The Zebra Pen F-701 is a sleek, professional-grade ballpoint pen featuring a durable stainless steel barrel, a precise 0.8mm fine point, and a silent retractable mechanism. Designed for heavy daily use, it offers a comfortable knurled grip and comes in a convenient 3-pack with 2 refills, making it the ultimate writing tool for professionals who demand reliability and style.


| ASIN | B0D88T1LHW |
| Additional Features | Retractable |
| Age Range (Description) | Adult |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,320 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #59 in Ballpoint Pens |
| Body Shape | Round |
| Brand | Zebra Pen |
| Brand Name | Zebra Pen |
| Color | Black B |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 9,076 Reviews |
| Drill Point | Fine |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 50045888294122 |
| Grip Type | Knurled |
| Hand Orientation | Ambidextrous |
| Included Components | 2 refills |
| Ink Base | Water |
| Ink Color | Black |
| Line Size | 0.8mm |
| Manufacturer | Zebra Pen |
| Material | Stainless Steel |
| Material Type | Stainless Steel |
| Model Number | 29412 |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Writing |
| Unit Count | 3.0 Count |
| Writing Instrument Form | Ballpoint Pen |
J**Y
Everyone's favorite in high school for a reason
You're in high school. Your pencil case is full of the mismatched assortment of pens without caps and mechanical pencils with half a stick of lead each that you've found on those familiar tiled floors. In fact, you can't even remember the last time you actually bought a pack or pens or pencils (besides of course, a week before the first day of school to avoid detention for not having the obligatory 3 red pens, a hilighter, and whatever else was on the syllabus). On your way to third period, daydreaming about that warm sunny schoolyard on the other side of those wide windows, walking on autopilot, you kick something and hear that familiar rolling sound. You look down, snapped out of your daydream state, praying that you happened to kick the pen just right, and not into the opposite lane of hurried kids. Your eye lands on the silver pen, and you quickly squat down to pick up your prize. Upon picking it up, you stuff it into your pocket, and make your way to third period. When you reach the classroom, you take out the newest addition to your collection of adopted writing utensils, and quickly pen your name across the top right of the handout placed on your desk. You feel a twinge of disappointment as the pen leaves nothing but a slight indent on the paper. Your hand moves to the bottom left of the handout, and you scribble a couple circles to see if the pen has any life left whatsoever. Success! A trail of black ink follows the point of your pen, and you pen your name again in the top right, only this time the results of your penmanship stare back at you in jet black. You complete the handout in around 20 minutes, then turn your head to the homework board, and begin to write down the assigned chapters of The Scarlett Letter that you'll read on the bus this afternoon. As you use the instrument again, you notice how it feels in your hand. It's not heavy, but it's not light as a feather either; it's a kind of heft that makes the pen feel like a quality piece of metal. You observe that this pen's clip looks and feels surprisingly strong, and as you pack up your things in preparation for that long awaited bell, you introduce the pen to it's new family of writing utensils in your pencil case. For the rest of the day, you notice that every time you grab a pen, you feel around for the silver pen each time without even thinking. You like that pen; it's strong yet springy clip, it's smooth rolling action, it's easy hold grip, even the way it clicks open and closed is just different from any other pen you can recall using. It feels like a real writing tool, not some cheap black plastic value pack pen. Days go by, and weeks go by. You've forgotten what your old pens felt like, you've grown fully accustomed to the smooth action of your acquisition. One day while writing a couple paragraphs on the ending of The Scarlett Letter, your pen starts to grow a bit faint. Your hand moves once again to the bottom left of your packet, and you scribble a couple circles into the page. Nothing. Another dead pen doesn't mean much, and you were finished with your response anyway, so you tuck the pen back into your pocket and head to your next class. You walk right past the garbage can without thinking, and after realizing this, you simply take the pen out of your pocket and drop it on the ground from whence it came. You arrive at fifth period and unzip your backpack to take a pen from your trusty stash. You pick a simple black plastic pen, placing it on the left side of your desk. After the teacher demonstrates the topic of the day, you are presented with a worksheet to complete by the end of class. You reach for your pen, remove the cap, and place the cap to the left of your worksheet. You write your name, and realize something is wrong. Instead of gliding smoothly on the surface of the paper, your pen poorly etches black lines. You feel that slight resistance, that friction of pen on paper that you haven't felt in weeks. You're back to the same pen everyone else uses, the uniform standard, the unimaginative piece of black plastic that you've used for the last decade of your life. For the rest of the day you feel a bit off, but you don't understand why, and eventually brush it off after you walk off the bus onto your driveway. The next day, and the day after, you use the same pen, until eventually it too runs dry of ink. You take another black plastic pen from the pile to replace it, and feel no difference from the switch this time. You once again grow used to the friction, the slightly too tight plastic cap, and the lack of any sort of grip that all come standard with every plain black plastic pen. Days go by, weeks go by, years go by. You use pens daily in your work, but you've never thought about stepping outside of that plain, unimaginative uniform standard. One day at work, you roll your chair a bit too far to the side, and roll over your mobile charger. You go on Amazon to buy a new one, and knowing not to buy cheap bulk chargers that charge slow and break quickly, you settle on a $15 charger with $3 shipping. You see that shipping is free if you spend more than $25, and so you think; what is an item that we use daily, but never really think to upgrade? You search for pens on Amazon, below $15, and come across a familiar writing utensil. It's the silver pen! It's been so long that you didn't even remember the brand name, but you could recognize that pen anywhere. You place it in your cart, and both ship to your house within the week. You open the package, slip the pen out of the cardboard back of it's protective plastic bubble, and clip it to your pocket. The next day, you put your lunch in the fridge at work, and grab a post it note to tag it with your name. As you take your pen off your pocket, you click it and feel that perfect amount of resistance. You feel the sturdy grip, the hefty weight in your hand, and begin to pen your name. The pen smoothly glides across the yellow paper square, and you clip the pen to your pocket once more. Yes, it's a $10 pen. Zebra pens are worth it. Absolutely worth it.
R**U
Great pen!!!!
I love this pen. I've bought three. It's heavy and sturdy and feels great when I write. No cramping. And standard ballpoint refills fit it. Even the click is satisfying.
A**R
The Perfect Pen
I purchased this pen about two years ago and I really wish I hopped on the "quality pen" bandwagon a long time ago. Throughout the years, I always thought people with nice metal pens either paid a lot of money for them, or had some strange obsession with writing utensils—but oh boy was I wrong. This specific pen is very inexpensive for what you get in my personal opinion; let me explain why. I have been a long-time fan of the famous Pilot G2 model of disposable pen until I purchased the Zebra F-701 in 2015. While G2s last a long time and feel pleasant to write with, this specific pen tops every single aspect of the G2 and every other plastic pen I have used to this day. - Weight: The feel of metal while being light enough to write with comfortably. - Balance: The center of mass on this pen is just above the finger grip makes for a pleasant feel while writing. - Mechanism: The feel of the mechanism used for retracting and extending the business-end of the pen is very tactile and fluid. The audible click is satisfying but not excessively loud. - Grip: The intricate pattern employed for the grip is very functional and I prefer it very much over the rubber grips of plastic pens which slowly deteriorate over time. - Clip: The metal clip is very flexible and refuses to deform under normal usage. The shiny surface is very attractive and showcases the brand and model recessed into the metal. - Longevity: The pen retains its brushed-metal luster after almost two years of use without showing any signs of wear and tear. The mechanism seems to feel the same way it did when I removed it from its packaging. - Writing: The preinstalled pen refill writes very pleasantly with no ink blotching or streaking issues that I have experienced. The weight, balance, and grip all distill into a writing experience that I would consider writing home about (ha, ha). The Zebra F-701 is a very good value and I would highly recommend it to friends, family, and even strangers.
S**!
Maybe the greatest pen ever, at least for the price?
First off, the pen feels solid. It should I suppose, it's fairly thick steel. If I'm ever really hard up for an ice pick, I hope to have this pen in my pocket. It's got a nice weight to it, and it feels great in your hand. If you hold a pen like you are supposed to, the grip (knurled metal) is fantastic. If you hold a pen like I do (way down right on the tip) then this pen still feels pretty nice, but you lose some of the advantage of the grip. Looks are certainly in the eye of the beholder, but I think this pen looks very nice. There are no markings on brushed steel at all, the only indication of brand and model being a faint stamp on the pocket clip. It's classy. I have used many many pens, and I know all about how annoying it is when you have to "wipe" off the sides of the tip on a ball point to avoid it leaving tiny blobs of ink on the page which you will inevitably smear later with the side of your hand. I have also had many a pen that skipped so badly I needed to go back over half of my notes to "connect the dots". I'm not sure what zebra does to their ink cartridges, but they are doing something right. This pen writes very smoothly, and I have heard the same about the refills. If there is a fault, sometimes after not using it for awhile, it will take a millimeter to start, but that's rare. I'm not sure what else to say really, it is after all only a pen. A pen that I love. I seriously think I will never use another pen. These are cheap enough to be quite cost effective, and sturdy enough that even if they weren't cheap, I'd consider them a good investment. Buy one, try it out. I just ordered two more so I'll have one for school, and one to replace the one my wife says she's taking.
B**G
Great EDC w/o fluff or high price
Everything I need in my EDC pen. No fluff no exotic metals. Works when I need it to. Isnt that the point. Most of us will never need or use the features on the next tactical pen available. I just need it to write when I have to write something. It feels great in the hand and has a quality feel.
B**D
Great but give'er this mod if you must.
Do you want to make this into a "REAL PEN" ? Do you ? . . . then read on . . . Hyperbole ? You bet . . . but I am so frustrated with the vendor I am attempting to buy a bold enough refill from that I took the matter by the horns, and time by the forelock. They went with the cheapest shipping possible AND made the classic fatal rookie error of using the USPS. That means they ship my package all over the USA back and forth to take artificially long and make all concerned wish they had used the next shipping rate up. I have received many orders AFTER I placed that one including my pen. OK The problem is this nice pen comes with a fine/"medium" ink point which is not too bad but for some reason on the whacky (cheep) printer paper we use at work for the forms it turns out writing scratchy and like a very fine point. Too wimpy for those of us who like to "live LARGE". So . . . out of pure frustration I took the pen that I have that actually writes well and smooth on this clown paper, a BIC Velocity Bold Ball Pen, 1.6mm, Black, 12ct (VLGB11-Blk) . . . and removed the cartridge (nose cone unscrews) and got it to fit in the Zebra pen by trimming some off the end of the ink cartridge. You need to leave it a little longer than the Zebra which is fatter than the one from the Velocity. I just started cutting off 1/8" bits until it fit just in case a bit longer than the Zebra cartridge was better (and because I feared runing into the area of the tube that had ink in it. I didn't cut it so short ink came out. Wheeeyuou ! The Velocity pens are great and you may want to just write with them. Super cheep and write super smooth and all. It's just that I am into this knurled pen thing right now and prefer it to the fatter rubber grip on the Velocity. Also the rubber grip has the slightest triangulation to it which makes me stop and reposition my fingers so they fit right and that bugs me. I would rather have the rubber part just round though when I look at it it is round with this three area pattern but it doesn't feel round and so it goes. In addition, as recommended by others here, I bought the cheeper F401 to take apart to get the metal clip/top but have not been able to get it apart yet. I have not really focused on that yet because the black plastic end and clicker with it feels and works just fine. Time will tell. For now though , and on the paper I am forced to write on at work the original Zebra refill and the larger 1.0mm one that I ordered with it (still waiting on the Zebra Gel larger one) feels dry and scratchy. On real paper, even basic old envelopes sent to me by junk mail, the Zebra is pretty nice and the line is wide enough. These Velocity ball points ARE what they say they are . . . very smooth and free wheeling. Time will tell if I regret cutting the end off and time will tell if I ever get my gel refills in the bold point from the land of the lost. Hey . . . Dr. Rick Marshall . . . have you seen my refill package ? Er . . . no thanks . . . I'll pass on the Dinosaur camouflage but you go right ahead. Say hi to grumpy : )
A**R
Great Personal Safety Item
Very good pen with rugged body, this is a great personal safety item for self defense and is able to be carried anywhere. Unlike some of the beefier tactical pens, you can carry this when flying and I always have it clipped in my pocket or polo.
T**S
Awesome pen
I'm in love with this pen, pretty cheap and comfortable with the diamond pattern. The weight makes it easier to use. For travel, I prefer to use the Zebra Pen F-301 Compact, which uses the same refill but less space (it also weights less).
E**Z
Excelente desempeño a buen precio.
Excelente producto, durable y confiable. Buen precio por el paquete y una marca en la que siempre puedes confiar.
L**G
Value for money
Well constructed pen. Writes well and I like the all metal design
C**R
Excellent pen
Excellent little pen. Writes well and feels great in the hand. My favourite ballpoint pen in a collection that consists of over 100+ pens
M**M
Mejor bolígrafo economico
Este bolígrafo no solo tiene una apariencia muy lograda siendo todo acero, sino que es increiblemente funcional y cómodo de usar con un buen peso y agarre. Sin duda el Mejor bolígrafo en este rango de precio. (Aclaración es ballpoint)
P**H
Quality
Super, value for money
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 weeks ago