Short answer
What are these massage chair brand guides? Each guide explains what a brand is generally known for, who it may fit, what to test in a showroom, how to read its reviews, and which warranty, service and delivery questions to ask — before you buy or visit. They are independent and unranked. We do not sell chairs, rate brands, or claim to have tested every model; we give you the same neutral checks to apply to any brand.
Key takeaways
- These are buyer guides, not brand reviews — framed as what to know before buying or trying a brand.
- No brand is “the best” for everyone; the specific model and how it fits your body matter more than the badge.
- Every brand is judged the same way: comfort and fit, models, reviews, warranty, service, delivery and claim honesty.
- We don’t rank, rate, or endorse brands, and we don’t sell chairs.
Browse massage chair brand guides
An alphabetical, unranked index of the brands these guides cover. The order is alphabetical purely to aid recognition — inclusion is not a recommendation or a rating, and not every brand or model has been independently evaluated. Pick a brand to see what to check before buying or trying it.
Bodyfriend
Luxury-tech positioning and unusual features like the Falcon’s Rovo walking — judged on real comfort and fit.
Bodyfriend buyer guideCozzia
Feature-rich value with reviews, pricing and reported problems worth reading as questions, not verdicts.
Cozzia buyer guideD.Core
Japanese craftsmanship and design, where authenticity and authorized buying are the key checks.
D.Core buyer guideFujiiryoki
Long Japanese heritage and premium positioning, with authenticity and “medical-grade” language to verify.
Fujiiryoki buyer guideInfinity
Heavy review volume and model-by-model searching — read ratings critically and weigh price against support.
Infinity buyer guideKoyo
A focused, Japanese-made lineup centered on the 303TS, judged on comfort fit and support clarity.
Koyo buyer guideKyota
Value and deal-driven search across Genki, Nokori and more — compared on total ownership, not price alone.
Kyota buyer guideOgawa
High-interest AI and diagnostic features, separated from the comfort you can actually feel.
Ogawa buyer guideOHCO
Ultra-premium, design-forward chairs where fit, delivery and service matter as much as polish.
OHCO buyer guideOsaki
One of the broadest catalogs — built to help you cut through model confusion and verify the seller.
Osaki buyer guidePanasonic
Premium Japanese engineering (MAN1, MAK1, MAF1) framed around high-ticket risk reduction.
Panasonic buyer guidePositive Posture
Comfort, value and AI-style features across DualTech, Brio and Solara — tested by feel, not marketing.
Positive Posture buyer guideHow these brand guides work
Each guide follows the same shape so you can compare like with like. They are deliberately not brand reviews, rankings, or sales pages. Instead, each one helps you turn a familiar name into a set of practical questions you can answer for yourself.
What each guide covers
- What the brand is known for
- A cautious, hedged overview of how the lineup is generally positioned and what buyers tend to search for — not a verdict.
- Who it may fit
- The kinds of buyers a brand often suits, with the reminder that fit still depends on your body, space and budget.
- What to test in a showroom
- An interactive checklist for judging comfort, fit, pressure, recline, noise and usability in person.
- How to read its reviews
- How to separate product comfort from retailer, delivery and service feedback, and spot vague praise.
- Warranty, service & delivery
- The questions that protect a high-ticket purchase for years after checkout.
For the principles behind all of this, see our editorial standards and review methodology . New to massage chair shopping? Start here .
How to compare any massage chair brand
Whichever brand you’re weighing, use the same criteria so you’re comparing fairly. We don’t rank brands or say one is universally better — we compare each chair on the dimensions that tend to separate a chair you’ll love from one you’ll regret.
| What to compare | What to look for |
|---|---|
| Comfort & body fit | How the rollers and airbags actually feel for your height, shoulder width and leg length — not the spec count. |
| Model fit | Which specific model and revision you’re judging, since a brand’s entry chair and flagship can feel like different products. |
| Warranty | Length and what’s covered (parts, labor, structure), and who actually honors it. |
| Service | Who performs repairs, how fast, and whether a technician comes to you or you ship the chair. |
| Delivery & install | Curbside, threshold, or in-home white-glove setup — and whether the chair fits your doorways and room. |
| Reviews | Consistent, detailed owner feedback over time, separated into product, retailer and service experience. |
| Showroom access | Whether you can sit in the exact model near you before committing. |
| Claim language | Honest, modest wording about comfort and relaxation — not overreaching health promises. |
| Total ownership cost | Purchase price plus delivery, installation, any optional warranty, and service over the years you’ll own it. |
Our companion guide on massage chair brands to know and compare walks this framework in depth, and the massage chair buying checklist turns it into step-by-step questions. For the fine print that varies most between brands, see the warranty, delivery and service guide .
Note
Massage chairs are comfort and relaxation products. They may offer temporary relief of minor muscle tension for some people, but they are not medical devices and should not be presented as diagnosing, treating, curing, or preventing any condition. Reviews and showroom testing can help you evaluate comfort, but they are not medical evidence. If you have a diagnosed health concern, talk with a qualified healthcare professional before using one. See how to evaluate massage chair health claims .
Frequently asked questions
Which massage chair brand is the best?
There isn’t one. The best brand depends on your body, budget, space, and what you need from service and warranty. A chair that fits one person well may not suit another. These guides don’t rank brands; they help you compare specific models on comfort, fit, warranty, service, delivery and review quality, so you judge each chair on its own merits.
Are these brand pages reviews or rankings?
No. They are buyer guides framed as what to know before buying or trying a brand. We don’t rate brands, publish star ratings, or claim to have tested every model. Each guide gives you neutral criteria and practical questions — comfort, fit, reviews, warranty, service and delivery — so you can decide for yourself rather than follow a leaderboard.
How do I choose between two brands I’m considering?
Narrow to the specific models that fit your body and budget, then compare them on the same criteria: comfort and fit, warranty, service, delivery, reviews and total ownership cost. If you can, sit in both in person — a few unhurried minutes usually tells you more than a dozen spec sheets. The brand badge matters far less than the individual chair.
Do you sell or recommend any of these brands?
No. MassageChairsTested.com is editorially independent. We don’t sell chairs, run a showroom, or take payment to rank, rate or feature any brand or retailer. Brand names appear to help you recognize the market and ask better questions, not as endorsements. See our disclosure for how we stay independent.
Should I try a massage chair brand before buying?
If you can, yes. Comfort and fit are personal and physical, and they’re the one thing a listing can’t show you. Sitting in the exact model for a few unhurried minutes reveals pressure, recline and fit far better than specs. If a showroom visit isn’t possible, lean on a strong return policy and detailed, recent reviews instead.
Why aren’t Human Touch and Titan listed here?
This index currently covers the brands with dedicated guides. You’ll still see other names — including ones not listed here — on our broader brands to know and compare page, which explains how to evaluate any brand using the same neutral criteria, whether or not it has its own guide yet.
Before you buy
Judge the chair, not the badge
Pick a brand guide to see what to check, then compare the specific models on what actually matters to you.
Last updated: June 2026 · Editorial standards · Disclosure