T rying to decide between a portable massage/adjustment table and a full stationary unit? This guide breaks down weight capacity, durability, price, and resale so you buy the right table the first time.
If you’re shopping for a chiropractic table for the first time — or the first time with your own money on the line — here’s the short version: a portable table is a folding, lightweight treatment surface you can load into a car and set up anywhere in minutes, while a stationary table is a fixed, heavy-frame unit that lives in one room and usually does a lot more (adjustable height, built-in drop pieces, pelvic sections, and so on). Both treat patients. Neither is universally “better.” The question is which one matches how you actually work — and whether you can answer that question before you spend $400 to $8,000. That’s exactly what this article is designed to help you do. We’ll walk through weight capacity, daily-use durability, transport logistics, total cost of ownership, and resale — then give you a plain decision rule at the end.
The Core Tradeoff: Flexibility vs. Capability
Let’s be blunt: portable tables trade clinical capability for mobility, and stationary tables trade mobility for clinical capability. Every other difference is downstream of that one.
What a portable table gives you:
- Setup in 60–90 seconds, breakdown in the same
- Fits in a hatchback or SUV cargo area
- Entry price as low as $300–$500 for a workable unit
- Acceptable weight capacity for the majority of patients (most quality portables are rated 450–550 lbs static)
- Good enough for Swedish massage, basic soft-tissue work, some diversified adjustments, and home or event visits
What a portable table costs you:
- No drop pieces (drop pieces are spring-loaded segments of the table that “give way” during a thrust, reducing force needed and protecting the practitioner’s wrists — they’re a standard feature on Gonstead and Thompson technique tables)
- No powered height adjustment (a hi-lo table uses a hydraulic or electric motor to raise and lower the entire table, which is critical for practitioner ergonomics and for patients with mobility limitations)
- Lower cycle life under daily clinical volume — more on that in a moment
- Narrower frame, which matters for larger patients and lateral work
The most common pattern in early-career practice is purchasing a portable table for what turns out to be a fixed-location setting, or over-buying a flagship stationary table before patient volume justifies it. Both mistakes are avoidable with a clear decision framework — which the rest of this article provides.
Weight Capacity and Daily Volume: Where the Specs Lie
Manufacturer weight ratings look clean on a spec sheet. They are not always honest.
Most portable tables advertise a static load rating — that’s the weight the table holds when a patient is lying still. That number can be 550 lbs or even higher. What manufacturers rarely publish is the dynamic load rating, which accounts for the downward thrust forces generated during adjustments. A high-velocity, low-amplitude (HVLA) thrust — the classic “crack” move in Diversified technique — can transiently apply forces well above a patient’s resting body weight to a localized point on the table surface. Peer-reviewed studies on spinal manipulation mechanics indexed on the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) document this force transmission pattern in detail; search PubMed for “spinal manipulation force” or “HVLA thrust biomechanics” to review current literature directly. That research is worth your time if you practice HVLA at volume, because static weight ratings alone will not tell you how a table performs under repeated thrust loading.
For a portable aluminum-frame table doing 5–8 patients a day, that’s manageable. For a busy clinic doing 30–50 patient visits daily, the portable frame fatigue clock starts ticking fast. Hinge hardware, cable tensioners, and foam compression all degrade faster than the static weight rating implies.
By the numbers:
| Table type | Typical static rating | Estimated daily visit ceiling | Average frame lifespan (heavy use) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quality portable | 450–550 lbs | 8–12 visits/day | 3–6 years |
| Entry stationary | 500–600 lbs | 20–30 visits/day | 8–12 years |
| Full-featured hi-lo | 600–750 lbs | 40+ visits/day | 12–20 years |
These are working estimates synthesized from manufacturer documentation and practitioner reports — not controlled studies. Your mileage will vary by technique, patient population, and maintenance habits.
OSHA’s ergonomics guidance at osha.gov/ergonomics is worth a careful read here: table height adjustability isn’t just a convenience feature — it’s a practitioner injury prevention tool. If you’re spending eight hours a day bent over a table that’s fixed at the wrong height, you are shortening your career. OSHA’s manual material handling standards apply directly to repetitive clinical positioning, and regulators have increasingly applied that framework to healthcare settings.
Price, Total Cost of Ownership, and the Section 179 Angle
Here’s the math that changes how most people think about this decision.
A quality portable like the Earthlite Harmony DX runs around $500–$600 new. A mid-tier stationary like a Lloyd Galaxy or Hill Interprobe starts around $3,000–$4,500. A fully electric hi-lo from Zenith or similar will run $6,000–$9,000 or more.
But those are purchase prices, not ownership costs. Factor in:
- Upholstery replacement: Portable vinyl upholstery on a high-volume table may need replacement in 2–3 years (~$150–$300 DIY, $400–$600 professional). Stationary table upholstery is more robust but also more expensive to replace per linear foot.
- Frame repair: Portable hinges and cables are field-replaceable and cheap. Stationary hydraulic cylinders or electric actuators are not — a failed lift mechanism can run $800–$1,500 in parts and labor.
- Section 179 deduction: Under current IRS Section 179 rules (verify with your accountant for the applicable tax year), you can deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment in the year of purchase rather than depreciating it over years. For a profitable solo practice in a 28% effective tax bracket, an $8,000 table becomes a roughly $5,760 after-tax cost. That changes the stationary math considerably.
- Resale value: Quality stationary tables from Lloyd, Hill, and Zenith hold 40–60% of purchase value on the used market if well-maintained. Portables depreciate faster and sell for 20–35% of new price. The used and refurbished stationary market is genuinely underused — you can buy a refurbished Lloyd or Hill for $1,500–$2,500 that would cost $4,000+ new.
The American Chiropractic Association (acatoday.org) publishes practice management resources and clinical guidelines that are worth bookmarking as you build out your treatment space — not just for table selection, but for understanding how equipment choices connect to documentation standards and clinical outcomes.
Specific Products Worth Knowing
Portable Tables
Earthlite Harmony DX Massage Table The Harmony DX is the workhorse portable that shows up in more new-grad bags than anything else. Solid aircraft-grade aluminum frame, 600-lb static rating (one of the highest in class), and a comfortable 3-inch foam pad. It’s a massage table first, but it handles light chiropractic soft-tissue work and home visits without embarrassing you.
- Key specs: 600 lb static capacity, 30 lbs table weight, 73” x 29” work surface
- One-line verdict: Best balance of durability and portability for a mobile or hybrid practice
- View on Amazon
Master Massage Montclair Portable Massage Table A budget-accessible option that doesn’t feel budget. Good for students and practitioners who need a second table for outreach events or who aren’t yet sure how much portable work they’ll be doing.
- Key specs: 450 lb static capacity, 29 lbs, aluminum frame
- One-line verdict: Honest entry-level value; not for high-volume daily clinical use
- View on Amazon
Oakworks One Portable Massage Table Oakworks builds some of the most ergonomically sophisticated tables in the industry, and their portable line reflects that. The One is heavier than competitors but rewards you with a more stable platform and better foam longevity.
- Key specs: 550 lb static capacity, 33 lbs, hardwood/aircraft aluminum hybrid frame
- One-line verdict: Best portable for practitioners who prioritize patient comfort and longer foam life over minimum carry weight
- View on Amazon
Stationary Tables
For stationary tables, Amazon is not the right buying channel — these units ship freight, require installation, and are often sold through authorized dealer networks. Here’s what to know by brand:
Lloyd Galaxy / Lloyd HealthStar Lloyd (lloydtable.com) has been making chiropractic tables in Lisbon, Iowa since 1946. Their Galaxy and HealthStar lines are among the most specified tables in mid-volume Diversified and Gonstead practices. Expect $3,500–$5,500 new, $1,800–$2,800 refurbished. Drop pieces are standard on most configurations. Lead time is 6–10 weeks for custom builds.
Hill Interprobe / Hill Air-Drop Hill Laboratories produces some of the most technique-specific tables available, particularly for Cox Flexion-Distraction — a technique that uses a specialized table with a moving lower section to decompress lumbar discs. If you practice Cox or plan to, Hill is a near-mandatory conversation. New pricing runs $4,000–$7,000 depending on configuration. Contact Hill directly or check their authorized dealer network for current specifications.
Zenith 230 / Zenith Hylo Zenith (zenithcm.com) is the brand most commonly associated with electric hi-lo tables in high-volume practices. The Zenith Hylo series offers programmable height memory, which reduces practitioner fatigue over a full day. Expect $6,500–$9,500 new. Built-in drop pieces and pelvic sections are standard on upper configurations. Resale is strong — these tables are actively sought on the used market.
The Decision Flowchart
Use this to pressure-test where you actually land:
-
Will you treat patients in more than one physical location?
- Yes → Portable is necessary. The question becomes whether it’s your only table.
- No → Skip to step 2.
-
Will you see more than 15 patients per day within 12 months?
- Yes → A stationary table is the right investment. A portable will cost you more in wear and practitioner fatigue than the price difference saves.
- No → A quality portable can legitimately carry you through your first 1–2 years, especially if you’re building volume.
-
Does your primary technique require drop pieces, a pelvic section, or flexion-distraction capability?
- Yes (Thompson, Gonstead, Cox) → Stationary is not optional. You cannot retrofit a portable.
- No (soft tissue, Activator, home care) → Portable remains viable.
-
Is Section 179 deductibility available to you this tax year?
- Yes → Run the after-tax cost on a stationary before you assume you can’t afford it. The gap between a $600 portable and a $4,000 stationary shrinks to roughly $2,400 after-tax at a 28% effective rate. That math changes decisions.
If X, then Y — the short version:
- Mobile practice, variable locations, technique is soft-tissue or Activator dominant → Buy the Earthlite Harmony DX or Oakworks One. Budget the upholstery replacement at year 3.
- Single location, building toward 20+ visits/day, Diversified or Gonstead technique → Buy a used Lloyd or Zenith, not a new portable. The refurbished market will get you a better table for the same money.
- Cox Flexion-Distraction is your thing → Go straight to Hill. Nothing else is built for that protocol.
- Genuinely uncertain about practice location or technique emphasis → Buy a mid-tier portable, use it for 12 months, and let your actual patient volume and technique tell you what you need. Don’t let anyone — including this article — talk you into an $8,000 table when you have 10 patients on your books.
Affiliate disclosure: ChiropractorTable.com earns a commission on purchases made through Amazon links in this article. This does not affect our recommendations — we link to products we’d recommend to a colleague regardless of affiliate status. Prices and availability were verified as of May 2026; check current listings before purchasing.
Citations
- American Chiropractic Association — Clinical Practice Guidelines
- OSHA — Ergonomics
- National Center for Biotechnology Information — spinal manipulation force studies (plain text citation, no direct URL)