Recovery tools, end to end.
Heated massagers, percussion guns, foam rollers, trigger point therapy. Clinician-designed for the people who actually use them — without the clinic-tier markup.
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Not sure which tool? Three questions.
Most people overthink this. Here's how to pick the right recovery tool in under a minute.
What kind of pain?
Acute soreness after training → percussion gun. Tight muscles + chronic stiffness → foam roller or heated massager. Sharp localized knots → trigger point ball.
How often will you use it?
Daily: invest in a percussion gun (best ROI per minute). 2–3x weekly: foam roller covers more muscle area faster. Spot-treatment only: trigger ball is cheapest.
Where will you use it?
At home, no neighbors above: any tool works. Apartment / shared space: pick a sub-50dB percussion gun or silent rollers. Travel: trigger balls fit in a backpack.
Match the tool to the problem.
A snapshot of which recovery tools work best for the most common issues. Not a substitute for medical advice — a starting point.
Recovery questions, honest answers.
What is the best recovery tool for muscle soreness?
For acute soreness, percussion massage guns deliver fastest relief — most users report 60–80% reduction in next-day soreness. For ongoing maintenance, vibrating foam rollers cover larger muscle groups efficiently. For trigger points and knots, trigger balls reach deeper than rollers can.
How often should I use recovery tools?
Most physical therapists recommend 5–10 minutes per major muscle group, 3–5 times per week. Use immediately after training for best soreness reduction, or before bed for relaxation. Daily use is fine for most people; let pain (not soreness) be your stop signal.
Are heated massage guns better than regular ones?
Heated percussion combines mechanical pressure with thermal therapy, increasing blood flow more than percussion alone. Best for chronic tightness and stiff joints. Regular percussion guns are better for acute soreness and pre-workout activation, where heat can actually slow you down.
Will recovery tools replace seeing a physical therapist?
No. Recovery tools complement professional care — they're for maintenance and minor soreness, not injury treatment. If pain persists more than two weeks, or worsens with use, see a PT or physician.
How does shipping and returns work?
Free U.S. shipping on every order, no minimum. Most orders ship within 1–2 business days. 30-day returns on every product, and we cover return shipping for defective items. No restocking fees.
20% off your first subscription.
Magnesium, electrolyte mix, joint support — the supplements that actually move the needle on recovery. Skip a month, change anytime, cancel whenever.