Theragun PRO 5th Gen percussive massager
The Theragun PRO 5th Gen, the percussive recovery tool we keep coming back to after 3 years of testing.

By The ampainsoc recovery team · Last updated · Buying guide, 3 tools tested across 8+ weeks each

Recovery is what separates athletes who train consistently from athletes who train consistently and stay healthy. Most amateurs underinvest in it. The market has responded with a category of consumer-grade tools that actually work, alongside a much larger category of overpriced gadgets that don’t.

Three tools earn their slot in our recovery rotation. Two of them are expensive enough to make you pause. One isn’t a tool at all. Here’s how to think about all three.

Our three picks

#1 · Best percussive massager

Theragun PRO 5th Gen

Lab score: 9.3/10 · $599

16 mm amplitude reaches the muscle belly through fascia. The right tool for trigger points, calves, glutes, traps, and any chronic tight zone. Heavy at 1.36 kg. Loud at speed 5. Worth $599 if you train consistently.

Read the full Theragun PRO 5th Gen review →

#2 · Best compression therapy

Hyperice Normatec 3

Lab score: 9.0/10 · $899 (often $799)

Patented Pulse compression mimics natural muscle pump. Five overlapping zones. FSA/HSA eligible. Right tool for endurance athletes accumulating leg fatigue across consecutive sessions. Wrong tool for casual recovery.

Read the full Hyperice Normatec 3 review →

#3 · Best daily recovery floor

Athletic Greens AG1

Lab score: 8.4/10 · $79/month subscription

Not a recovery device. A daily nutrient floor. NSF Certified for Sport, 2026 Next Gen formula adds 5 probiotic strains. The most-marketed greens powder on earth, with a real compliance advantage if you’ve stopped taking other stacks.

Read the full Athletic Greens AG1 review →

Why these three (and not others)

Percussive therapy and compression therapy address different recovery mechanisms. The Theragun targets trigger points and superficial tight zones (calves after a long run, traps after a desk day, glutes after squats). The Normatec targets circulation and fluid clearance (legs after a hard tempo session, before bed when you can’t sit still). The overlap is small. If you train consistently, both earn their slot. If you train casually, neither does.

AG1 sits in a different category. It’s not a recovery device. It’s a daily compliance hack for people whose diets have gaps. Most athletes have gaps. Most loose-vitamin protocols fail by week three because nobody takes them. AG1 gets taken because it’s one scoop in the morning and you’re done. That’s the entire pitch.

Hyperice Normatec 3 with Pulse compression technology
Hyperice Normatec 3 leg compression boots, the $799 endurance-athlete pick.

How they compare

SpecTheragun PRONormatec 3 LegsAG1
Lab score9.39.08.4
Price$599$899 ($799 sale)$79/month
FSA/HSA eligibleNoYesNo
Setup timeInstant5 min30 sec/day
Best forTrigger points, tight zonesLeg fatigue, circulationDaily nutrient floor
Clinical evidenceModerate (DOMS, ROM)Moderate (subjective recovery)Weak (greens category)
Worth it if you train> 4 hours/week> 5 hours/week endurance> 3 sessions/week

The honest stack for $1,500

If you have $1,500 to allocate to recovery in 2026, here’s how we’d spend it. The Theragun PRO 5th Gen at $599 is the highest-leverage purchase, because percussive therapy is the recovery tool you’ll actually use most often. The Normatec 3 at $799 (sale) is the high-ticket addition for endurance athletes specifically. The Athletic Greens AG1 annual subscription at $948 is the ongoing commitment, not a one-time spend.

Combined that’s $2,346. The right way to scale down: drop AG1 if you eat well and your bloodwork is normal (saves $948/year), or drop the Normatec if you don’t train endurance specifically (saves $799). Don’t drop the Theragun. The percussive recovery loop is the one most people benefit from regardless of training type.

What we didn’t recommend

The Hyperice Hypervolt 2 Pro is a competent percussive massager at $399 that didn’t make our top pick because the amplitude is 14 mm versus the Theragun’s 16 mm. For most users, the Hypervolt is enough. If you specifically want depth and stall force, the Theragun earns the gap.

The Therabody RecoveryAir Prime at $699 is the closest competitor to the Normatec. It uses sequential compression instead of Pulse, and integrates with the broader Therabody ecosystem. If you already own the Theragun, the RecoveryAir is the cleaner buy. We tested both. The Normatec is more refined; the RecoveryAir is more economical.

Greens powders other than AG1 (Huel Daily Greens, Transparent Labs Greens, Bloom Greens) are competent and cheaper. AG1’s premium buys NSF Sport certification and the highest probiotic load. Whether that’s worth the extra is a personal call.

Bottom line

If you train consistently and want a recovery stack that does what it claims, these three tools cover the high-leverage mechanisms: percussion for trigger points (Theragun), compression for circulation (Normatec), and daily nutrient floor (AG1). Skip any of the three depending on your specific bottleneck.

Pair the recovery stack with sleep. The best percussion device on earth doesn’t compensate for chronic six-hour nights on a sagging mattress. If your bed is the bottleneck, start with the Saatva Classic or the Amerisleep AS3 Hybrid before you spend on Theragun.

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