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Our research-backed review of the Ekrin Bantam mini massage gun. We analyze the 10mm amplitude, 25-lb stall force, 4 included attachments, and whether it outperforms the Theragun mini at half the price.
The Ekrin Bantam enters the mini massage gun market with a positioning that directly challenges established premium brands: specifications that meet or exceed the Theragun mini at roughly half the price, with more attachments included and a higher claimed stall force. Ekrin Athletics, a newer entrant compared to Therabody and Hyperice, has built its brand around this value-forward approach across its full product line.
Our analysis evaluates whether the Bantam's specification advantages translate to genuinely superior real-world performance, or whether the premium brands' build quality, motor refinement, and ecosystem integration justify their higher prices.
Based on published specifications and comparative feature analysis, the Ekrin Bantam offers the best feature-to-price ratio among major-brand mini massage guns. Its 10mm amplitude, 25-lb stall force, four included attachments, and 180-minute battery life exceed the Theragun mini on paper at 40-50% lower cost. The tradeoffs are brand ecosystem (no Therabody app integration), marginally lower amplitude (10mm vs. 12mm), and a shorter market track record. For buyers prioritizing raw specification value, the Bantam is the rational choice. For buyers prioritizing brand reliability history and premium finish, the Theragun mini remains defensible.
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 5.7" L × 3.9" W × 1.8" H |
| Weight | 1.0 lb |
| Amplitude | 10mm |
| Stall force (manufacturer stated) | 25 lbs |
| Speeds | 3 (1800, 2200, 2800 PPM) |
| Battery life | 180 minutes |
| Attachments included | 4 (flat, bullet, fork, ball) |
| Motor | Brushless |
| Charging | USB-C |
| Warranty | Lifetime (limited) |
At 1.0 lb, the Bantam is 30% lighter than the Theragun mini — a meaningful difference for travel use, gym bag carry, and extended single-hand operation. The form factor is a traditional pistol-grip design rather than Theragun's closed loop. This creates different ergonomic tradeoffs: the pistol grip offers intuitive single-hand aiming and natural wrist alignment for most muscle groups, but lacks the multi-angle flexibility of the Theragun triangular frame or loop designs.
Dimensions are comparable to the mini — marginally longer but narrower and thinner. It fits the same use cases: gym bags, carry-ons, desk drawers, vehicle consoles.
The Bantam's 10mm amplitude places it in the upper tier of mini massage guns but 2mm below the Theragun mini's 12mm. Our analysis suggests the perceptible difference between 10mm and 12mm is modest for most users and muscle groups — more noticeable on thick muscle bellies (quadriceps, glutes) and less relevant on thinner areas (forearms, neck, calves).
For context: 10mm still exceeds the majority of budget mini guns (typically 6-8mm) by a meaningful margin. The depth sensation is genuinely therapeutic, not superficial vibration.
The claimed 25-lb stall force exceeds the Theragun mini's 20 lbs. In practical terms, this means the Bantam maintains percussion under higher applied pressure before the motor stops reciprocating. For self-administered massage, 25 lbs is ample — most users cannot apply more than 15-20 lbs of pressure during self-treatment due to leverage limitations. The higher stall force matters most for:
Three speeds at 1800, 2200, and 2800 PPM span a slightly wider range than the Theragun mini, with a notably higher top speed. The 2800 PPM maximum is faster than most users need but provides maximum surface stimulation for pre-workout activation or areas where depth is limited by anatomy.
The Bantam includes four attachments where the Theragun mini includes one (with two sold separately). This is a significant value differentiator:
| Attachment | Function |
|---|---|
| Flat | Large muscle groups, general use |
| Bullet | Deep tissue, trigger points, precise targeting |
| Fork | Neck, spine-adjacent areas, Achilles tendon |
| Ball | General use, versatile, most comfortable |
Four attachments cover the primary percussion applications without requiring additional purchases. The ball and flat handle most general massage needs. The bullet enables precise trigger point work. The fork allows safe treatment adjacent to bony structures (spine, Achilles) without direct contact.
The integrated battery delivers approximately 180 minutes of operation — 30 minutes more than the Theragun mini and substantially more than the Hypervolt Go 2's 120 minutes. For typical use patterns (10-15 minute sessions), this translates to 12-18 sessions between charges.
The battery is not swappable, which is standard for mini massage guns (the Theragun Pro's hot-swap system remains the exception). Long-term battery degradation after 2-3 years of regular use is expected and will eventually reduce runtime.
Universal USB-C charging eliminates proprietary adapter dependence — the same practical advantage as the Theragun mini. Full charge from depleted takes approximately 90 minutes based on battery capacity and standard USB-C charging rates.
The Bantam's housing uses a matte-finish composite material comparable to the Theragun mini in feel and quality. Grip texture is effective without being aggressive. Button placement is intuitive — power and speed controls fall naturally under the thumb during operation.
Our analysis of user feedback across retail platforms indicates satisfaction with build quality at rates comparable to the mini. The most common long-term concern is grip rubber deterioration after 12-18 months of heavy use — a wear pattern common to all rubberized fitness equipment grips.
Ekrin offers a limited lifetime warranty — the most comprehensive in the mini massage gun category. This is a meaningful differentiator versus Theragun's 1-year warranty on the mini. The warranty terms should be reviewed for specific coverage limitations (battery, attachments, and commercial use are typically excluded or limited), but the gesture signals confidence in product longevity.
| Criterion | Rating | Analysis |
|---|---|---|
| Percussion Depth | 8.0/10 | 10mm amplitude is strong for the mini category. Slightly below the Theragun mini's 12mm but above most competitors. Difference is modest in practice. |
| Portability | 9.5/10 | At 1.0 lb, it is among the lightest mini massage guns with legitimate amplitude. Form factor is compact and genuinely pocketable. |
| Stall Force | 8.5/10 | 25-lb stall force exceeds the Theragun mini and is sufficient for all self-administered and most partner-applied percussion. |
| Value | 9.0/10 | Four attachments, 180-minute battery, 25-lb stall force at $99-$129 represents the best specification-per-dollar ratio among major-brand mini guns. |
| Attachment Versatility | 9.0/10 | Four included attachments cover primary applications without additional purchase. No proprietary lock-in. |
| Build Quality | 8.0/10 | Materials and construction are very good for the price point. Marginally below Theragun mini in premium feel but functionally equivalent. |
| Battery Life | 8.5/10 | 180 minutes exceeds direct competitors. USB-C charging is convenient. Non-swappable (standard for category). |
| Noise Level | 8.0/10 | Brushless motor operates quietly. Slightly louder than the Theragun mini at maximum speed but appropriate for all intended environments. |
Overall Score: 8.6/10
| Feature | Ekrin Bantam | Theragun mini | Hypervolt Go 2 | Bob and Brad Q2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price Range | $99-$129 | $179-$199 | $129-$149 | $59-$79 |
| Amplitude | 10mm | 12mm | 10mm | 8mm |
| Stall Force | 25 lbs | 20 lbs | 15 lbs | 20 lbs |
| Weight | 1.0 lb | 1.43 lbs | 1.5 lbs | 1.0 lb |
| Speeds | 3 | 3 | 3 | 5 |
| Battery | 180 min | 150 min | 120 min | 120 min |
| Attachments | 4 | 1 (+2 optional) | 2 | 5 |
| Warranty | Lifetime | 1 year | 1 year | 1 year |
The Bantam wins on specification-per-dollar across nearly every category. The Theragun mini retains advantages in amplitude (12mm vs. 10mm), build refinement, and brand ecosystem. The Hypervolt Go 2 offers comparable amplitude with lower stall force at similar or higher pricing. The Bob and Brad Q2 competes aggressively on price with lower amplitude.
The Ekrin Bantam is the rational choice for most buyers entering the mini massage gun market. It offers a combination of amplitude, stall force, attachment inclusion, battery life, and warranty coverage that no competitor matches at its price point. The 2mm amplitude gap versus the Theragun mini is real but small in practical impact. The value gap is large and unmistakable.
For buyers who have already committed to the Therabody ecosystem, who prioritize every millimeter of amplitude, or who value the intangible premium feel of established brand leadership, the Theragun mini remains defensible. For everyone else — particularly first-time buyers, budget-conscious athletes, and travel-focused users — the Bantam delivers more capability for less investment.
It is not a Theragun killer. It is a value alternative that makes the premium mini massage gun category look overpriced by comparison.
Last updated: January 2025. Specifications based on Ekrin Athletics published data. Comparative analysis uses manufacturer-stated specifications; independent verification was not performed.