The Buy Order That Makes Sense
Don't buy everything at once. Start with the gear that gives you the most exercises per dollar, then build up as your training progresses. Here's the order we recommend:
- Mat first — protects your floor and gives you a training space from day one. You can do bodyweight exercises on a mat alone.
- Resistance bands second — for $29 you get five resistance levels covering dozens of exercises. Best bang-for-buck in fitness.
- Dumbbells third — once you've built a base with bodyweight and bands, dumbbells let you progressively overload. Start with one pair that challenges you.
- Everything else — recovery tools, accessories, and heavier weights come as your training demands them.
Tier 1: The Essentials — $187
Everything you need to start training at home today. These three items cover strength, cardio, flexibility, and floor protection. Most people train with just this for 3-6 months before wanting more.
PeterMat Zero
Floor protection + training surface
$7910kg Dumbbell Pair
Our best-selling weight for home gyms
$79Resistance Bands (5-Pack)
5 levels — light to extra heavy
$29Running total: $187. The PeterMat Zero protects your floor from dumbbell drops and gives you a non-slip surface for push-ups, planks, and stretching. The 10kg dumbbells handle goblet squats, rows, presses, lunges, and deadlifts. The resistance bands add dozens more exercises — lateral walks, pull-aparts, assisted stretching — for the price of a pub lunch. Free shipping on this order.
Tier 2: The Complete Setup — $450
Add Tier 1 plus these items and you have a gym that handles any workout program you'll find online. This is the sweet spot for most home trainers.
5kg Dumbbell Pair
Lighter weight for upper body isolation
$49Foam Roller
Post-workout recovery essential
$39Pull-Up Bar
Doorframe mount, no drilling
$55Ab Roller
Core training — simple but brutal
$29Premium Yoga Mat
For stretching, yoga, and floor work
$59Water Bottle
Insulated, keeps water cold for hours
$35Running total: $453. The 5kg dumbbells give you a lighter option for lateral raises, tricep work, and shoulder exercises where 10kg is too heavy. The foam roller is the single best recovery tool for your money — five minutes of rolling after a workout makes a genuine difference to soreness. The pull-up bar turns any doorframe into a back and bicep station. And the yoga mat gives you a dedicated stretching surface separate from your weight area.
Tier 3: The Premium Gym — $800+
The full setup. Add Tier 1 and 2 plus these items and you have a home gym that rivals a commercial facility for everything except heavy barbell work.
15kg Dumbbell Pair
Heavy pressing and rowing
$10920kg Dumbbell Pair
Serious lower body loading
$139Massage Gun
Percussion therapy, 4 speeds, 6 heads
$119PeterMat Round
1.2m circular mat for functional training
$89Fabric Loop Bands
Hip & glute activation
$35Knee Sleeves
Joint support for heavy lifts
$38Yoga Blocks (Pair)
Flexibility and balance support
$25Running total: $1,007. At this level, you have four dumbbell pairs (5, 10, 15, 20kg), two types of resistance bands, a full recovery kit, two training surfaces, and all the accessories. The 15kg and 20kg dumbbells open up heavy goblet squats, loaded carries, and serious pressing. The massage gun is a luxury that quickly becomes a necessity when you're training five days a week. The fabric bands are specifically designed for hip and glute work — they don't roll or snap like latex bands.
What NOT to Buy
We sell fitness equipment, but we're not going to pretend everything is worth your money. Avoid these common mistakes:
- Adjustable dumbbells with plastic parts: The dial mechanisms look clever but they break. Moving parts fail under load. Fixed rubber hex dumbbells last forever because there's nothing to break.
- Ultra-cheap resistance bands (under $15 for a set): They snap. Sometimes mid-exercise, right at your face. Our bands are latex-free and tested to 150% of rated resistance.
- Thin yoga mats for weight training: A 4mm yoga mat won't protect your floor from a dropped dumbbell. It'll punch a hole straight through. See our gym mat vs yoga mat guide for the full breakdown.
- All-in-one home gym machines: They take up the space of a small car, cost $500-2000, and limit you to fixed movement patterns. Free weights are more versatile, take up less space, and cost less.
Related Guides
- Home Gym Setup Guide — how to plan the space, flooring, ventilation
- Best Gym Equipment Under $100 — our top picks on a tight budget
- Home Gym on a Budget — spending strategies that work
- Resistance Bands vs Dumbbells — which to buy first
- Best Dumbbells for Home Gym — every weight compared
Ready to Build Your Gym?
Free shipping on all orders over $75. Start with Tier 1 and add as you grow.
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