By Kate Milsom

Published: Wednesday, 16 February 2022 at 12:00 am


Therabody has today launched its second iteration of the RecoveryAir pneumatic compression boots, which are designed to use cyclical compression to speed up blood flow to sore muscles.

Increased circulation is said to in turn help speed up the recovery of sore and tires muscles. This is the main idea behind the boots, with the second-generation design also offering fully wireless capability.

What are recovery boots?

Recovery boots are a pair of leg sleeves that you can zip yourself into and, when attached to a device, can offer pneumatic compression via ‘internal overlapping chambers’ within the sleeves.

The ultimate form of passive recovery, athletes can sit on the sofa and watch TV while the boots are working their magic. The pneumatic compression is a form of sports massage that uses varying pressure on the muscles, with the inner chambers inflating and deflating in a cyclical pattern over a ’60-second compression cycle’.

Therabody says that the process ‘flushes out fluids containing metabolic waste and ushers in fresh, nutrient-rich blood to the limbs’.

The new RecoveryAir range

The new range offers three designs, each offering a different price bracket and key focus, depending on what you’re after:

The most affordable and simple version in the range is the Prime recovery boots, priced at £599. These offer basic pneumatic compression performed through Therabody’s ‘proven recovery technologies’.

Next up are the JetBoots (£779), which are designed to be portable and convenient to use on the go. This means that they’re fully wireless and the pump integrated into the bottom of the boot rather than being external.

Then you have the top of the range recovery boots in the form of the wireless Pro boots, which are the newly redesigned model (£1,129). They’re designed to allow the user far more room to personalise sessions and target specific sore spots, as well as following ‘fully guided treatments’.

What makes Therabody recovery boots different?

Therabody says that the brand’s boots are the only device to offer ‘a consistent pressure gradient’, which they claim is the most efficient process for recovery. Features include:

Therabody also says that for each pair of JetBoots sold, the brand will donate a system to a hospital break room (up to 300 units).

Find out more about Therabody here.

Top image credit: Therabody