The Logitech M575 (Latin America) is the regional sales variant of Logitech’s popular Ergo M575 wireless trackball, sold through Logitech’s Latin America distribution and identifiable by its regional packaging and SKU. The hardware itself is the same M575 — a thumb-operated wireless trackball with Bluetooth, USB receiver and AA-battery power. This Logitech M575 review covers ergonomics, cursor precision, programmable buttons, battery and value at around $45.

Logitech M575 - Latin America




























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Logitech M575 (Latin America) at a Glance
| Component | Specification |
|---|---|
| Ball position | Thumb-operated, right-hand |
| Ball size | 34mm removable ruby-red sphere |
| DPI / tracking | 400-2000 DPI (adjustable in Logi Options+) |
| Sensor type | Optical |
| Wireless / wired | Wireless: 2.4GHz USB receiver + Bluetooth Low Energy |
| Battery type | 1x AA alkaline (up to 24 months stated) |
| Programmable buttons | 5 buttons (2 main, scroll click, 2 thumb forward/back) — all customisable in Logi Options+ |
| Tilt scroll | No — standard up/down scroll wheel only |
| Approx price | around $44.99 |
Ergonomics & Wrist Strain Relief
The Latin America variant of the M575 is the same hardware as the Ergo M575 sold globally, so the ergonomic experience is identical. The body is a sculpted dome — palm rests on top, fingers fall onto the main click buttons, thumb rolls the 34mm ball. The gentle angle of the dome makes the M575 one of the most approachable trackballs in the category — it does not demand the steep learning curve of a fully vertical mouse, and most users adapt to it within a few days. The wrist sweeping motion of a conventional mouse is eliminated entirely, which is the principal ergonomic benefit. For office workers, students and programmers seeking relief from wrist strain at a budget below $50, this regional M575 delivers exactly the same benefit as the Ergo M575.
Cursor Precision & Sensor
The optical sensor offers a 400-2000 DPI range, adjustable in the Logi Options+ software. The range covers everyday use, browsing, document work and light creative work; competitive shooter players will find it insufficient for flick aiming and should look elsewhere. The thumb is a less precise digit than the fingers, so for sub-pixel work (detailed photo retouching, CAD, vector illustration) a finger-operated trackball will be more accurate — the Kensington Orbit or Expert remain better choices for that work. For typical office and home use the M575’s precision is fine, and the Logitech Ergo lineage (M570 → M575) has a long track record of dependable everyday tracking. Ball cleaning every few weeks is essential maintenance — pop the ball out from below, wipe the support bearings, and the cursor stays smooth.
Programmable Buttons & Software
Five buttons: two main clicks, a clickable scroll wheel and two thumb-side forward/back buttons. All five remap in Logi Options+, with per-application profiles, keyboard-shortcut binding, macros and Logitech Flow for moving between two computers. The Logi Options+ software ecosystem is one of the genuine reasons to choose Logitech over budget rivals — it is well maintained, runs on Windows and macOS, and the customisation depth lifts the M575 well above its five-button hardware count. Logitech Flow lets you copy text from one machine and paste it on another via the trackball alone, which is a meaningful productivity advantage for multi-machine workflows.
Battery / Wireless Performance
The M575 runs on a single AA alkaline battery rated for up to 24 months — a figure that holds up well in real use. Connectivity is dual-mode: the included 2.4GHz USB receiver, or Bluetooth Low Energy directly. Bluetooth removes the need for a USB-A port on modern laptops, and switching between paired devices via Bluetooth and receiver-pairing is straightforward. There is no rechargeable internal cell — when the battery dies (every 1-2 years), you swap it. Some buyers prefer the convenience of rechargeable USB-C trackballs (Nulea M501, TECKNET Pro); others prefer the swap-and-forget simplicity of AA, which means the trackball is never out of action waiting for a charge.
Use Cases — CAD / Streaming / Photo Editing
The M575 is a generalist office and home trackball. For everyday office work, browsing, document editing, email and meetings it is excellent; for streaming and content consumption it is well suited; for light photo editing it is adequate. For CAD the thumb-operated design is the limiting factor — finger-operated trackballs are more accurate. For casual gaming (strategy, simulation, turn-based) it is comfortable; for competitive first-person shooters a conventional gaming mouse is the right tool. For users in Latin America buying this regional variant, the practical experience is identical to the global Ergo M575 — the colour scheme and packaging are the visible differences. As with all trackballs, ball cleaning every few weeks is essential maintenance to keep the cursor smooth and responsive — pop the ball out from below by pressing through the opening, wipe the three support bearings with a microfibre cloth, and re-seat the ball.
Verdict
At around $45 the Logitech M575 (Latin America) variant delivers the same value proposition as the global Ergo M575 — a comfortable thumb-operated wireless trackball with strong software, dual wireless connectivity and excellent battery life. For buyers in regions where this SKU is the priced option, it is exactly the same recommendation: the safest first trackball for almost anyone, the easiest ergonomic upgrade from a conventional mouse, and a sensible long-term peripheral. The compromises — thumb-operated precision limits and no Bluetooth-rechargeable convenience — are honest and well chosen at the price. Buyers who want USB-C rechargeable should consider the Nulea M501; buyers who want finger-operated precision should look at the Kensington Orbit.
It is also worth knowing that this regional variant typically ships with the same one-year limited warranty as the global Ergo M575, and Logitech’s customer support honours the warranty on the regional SKU across the region. For buyers outside Latin America considering this variant for price reasons, the warranty geography is something to confirm with the seller before purchase — Logitech support is generally helpful but the regional structure of the company means warranty coverage tracks the region of sale, not the region of use.
From a practical user perspective the experience is exactly the same as the global M575: same Logi Options+ customisation, same Logi Bolt receiver compatibility (so a single receiver can pair multiple Logitech peripherals), same dual-mode Bluetooth, same swappable AA battery. For users investing in the Logitech ecosystem at the lowest available price for this hardware, the regional variant is a sensible buy where stocked.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Logitech M575 Latin America different from the Ergo M575?
The hardware is the same — same body, same ball, same buttons, same sensor, same dual wireless. The differences are the packaging, the regional SKU and the colourway used in some markets. Functionally they are identical.
Does this M575 work outside Latin America?
Yes. The hardware is identical to the global Ergo M575 and works with the same Logi Options+ software on Windows and macOS in any region. Buying the regional variant is mainly about price and availability.
How long does the AA battery last?
Logitech rates the M575 at up to 24 months from a single AA alkaline battery, and that figure holds up in normal use. Heavy daily users may see 12-18 months.
Can the M575 connect to multiple devices?
Yes, in a limited way. It pairs with one device over the 2.4GHz receiver and one over Bluetooth, and you can switch between them. For multi-device pairing across three or more devices, the Nulea M501 is the stronger choice.
More Trackball Reviews
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- Kensington Expert Trackball K64325 Wired Review (2026)
- Kensington Orbit Trackball with Touch Scroll Ring K72352US Review (2026)
- Logitech Ergo M575 Wireless Trackball Review (2026)
- Nulea M501 Wireless Trackball Mouse Review (2026)
- Logitech Trackman Marble Wired USB Trackball Review (2026)
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