Shelly
Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2025
Ok.
Charles H
Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2025
Nice and durable. Good for balancing exercises.
Leonard Braun
Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2025
I find this product sturdy and durable.
Norda
Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2025
I need to get on my knees, but mine are replaced and I am not so comfortable when I need to get on my knees for my exercises. This pad is very helpful to my situation. It also seems quite durable and easy to keep clean. I am very pleased with this purchase
Dave Throop
Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2025
High quality
Roberta K
Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2024
My physical therapy office uses these and they work great. It is comfortable and I can sit on it for hours. I can even do my exercises on this. Have to watch one thing, my skin sticks to the pad after a while. Would buy again when needed.
Johnny 0
Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2024
What I like about this exercise pad is that it is just like the pad used by my physical therapist. Therefore there is no difference in the experience between the two. The pad has excellent adhesion to a carpet or wood floor, so there is no chasing the pad around while using it.Good Job. Received before the original delivery date, which, in my opinion is another PLUS!Thanks!
Angela Rosenthal
Reviewed in Germany on December 20, 2024
Kann ich nur empfehlenGerade für Ältere um Gleichgewichtsinn zu stärken
Customer
Reviewed in Australia on July 27, 2020
Great for rehab. Have really enjoyed using it, for personal therapy sessions each day.The product was exactly what I was expecting. Thankyou
Mac
Reviewed in Australia on October 29, 2020
The product surpassed my expectations. Worth everything every cent!
Lindsay Farr
Reviewed in Canada on April 15, 2019
This is a great balance item for rehab/training use. This is the cheapest I have found Airex pads.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on December 4, 2017
Super high quality, doesn’t budge when I put my full weight. I mostly use this pad to cushion between clients and a barbell for hip thrusts. They love it, it has been extremely effective and made the exercise more comfortable. It would be great to see a product made with the same foam into a smaller pad for the neck and shoulders you can strap onto a barbell.
Jerry Larsoni
Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2014
Most of the reviews here are from people with balance problems, or rehabbing serious injuries. I'm not in that category; I do have some joint problems, and have had some PT, but I'm working out again and I see this as a piece of equipment that serious athletes, or anyone, can benefit from, not just patients. I'm using it to work my foot, leg and core muscles, not so much for balance per se, although it certainly benefits that as well.There are a lot of different things you can do with this thing, including using it as a zafu (like a meditation cushion); it's seriously excellent for that. However, the only thing I've used it for much, so far, is standing on it on one foot. When I got it, about a week and a half ago I guess, if my life depended on standing on one foot on this thing for 30 seconds, I'd be dead. Now, I think I'd have an even chance of surviving. I've done a lot of tai chi, and I've been working with Eric Orton's Born to Run system (which I highly recommend), so I was already pretty good at standing on one foot, but now, in this short time, I'm actually much better at standing on one foot, on any surface.When standing on the Airex, I'm making a lot of movements, working all sorts of muscles; everything in the standing leg and foot, and often the core and torso as well, until I finally fall off.Before, if I stood on one foot on the floor, there would be a very tiny version of this going on, continual slight adjustments; I had to concentrate on it. Now, I guess I could say the same; there still must be small adjustments, but they're even much smaller than before, so it feels rock solid. Put it this way: standing on one foot now feels almost like standing on two feet; I could stand that way a while and not be aware I was doing it. That's a pretty amazing improvement for less than two weeks, and I just do it probably a total of ten minutes a day; I just step on the thing every once in a while when I'm home, fall off a couple of times with each foot, and go do something else. I haven't kept track, but my mean-time-to-falling-off has probably gone from 10 seconds to 20 seconds, something like that (and of course, "falling off" just means having to put the other foot down on the floor; there's no danger). Sometimes I do leg swings, lateral leg raises, hydrants, with the free leg, or go down into (very slight) one-legged squats, or "airborne lunges" (kind of the opposite of a pistol squat, free leg out behind, trunk and arms in front); it doesn't seem to make the mere standing much harder. It's like, while I'm standing there, I can do some exercises, until I start to fall off, which is going to happen anyway. In the future, I can imagine being able to stand there until I'm ready to get off of my own volition.It is a bit pricey, of course, but I've found it to be extremely valuable, well worth it. It gives me a type of workout I can't get any other way. I also use Eric Orton's stuff, which I highly recommend, and I do things like ipsilateral bird dogs, so the Airex isn't absolutely unique, but it's unique enough, and complements those other things very well.