EXREIZST Spreader Bar Set, Expandable Bar, Adjustable Exercise Training Tools Review
Our verdict
At $24.99, the EXREIZST Spreader Bar Set is the cheapest option in this comparison and still manages a 4.3-star average across 107 reviews, matching the rating of the far more established Marcy SDC10.1. With 100-plus units bought last month, it shows real, current demand for a low-cost, portable training tool.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Buyers who want a lightweight, portable training bar for stretching, mobility work, or light resistance exercises rather than heavy loaded lifts. The aluminum and polyurethane build and $24.99 price make it an easy add-on rather than a primary barbell.
Skip if
Skip it if you are after a true loadable barbell for squats, presses, or deadlifts, since this is an expandable, adjustable training tool built from aluminum and polyurethane rather than a weight-bearing steel bar like the alloy steel alternatives here.
- Material Aluminum, Polyurethane
- Priced 64% below the category median ($69.99 across 90 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.3/5
4.3 average across 107 owner ratings
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Popularity0.8/5
107 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other home gym and fitness equipment we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
Think of someone shopping for a compact training tool that fits in a bag rather than a permanent rack fixture. That is the niche the EXREIZST Spreader Bar Set occupies. At $24.99 it undercuts every alloy steel barbell in this comparison, and its aluminum and polyurethane construction signals a lightweight, adjustable design rather than a heavy-load bar.
The review numbers are modest but not thin. A 4.3-star average across 107 reviews puts it on par with the Marcy SDC10.1's 4.3 stars, though that bar has 6,077 reviews behind it, a far larger sample. Still, 100-plus units bought last month is a real signal of ongoing purchases for a low-cost accessory, ahead of the Body Sport Weighted Bar's 0-plus recent buys.
Against alloy steel bars like the Sunny OB-TRAP at $94.99, the EXREIZST is a different category of product entirely, built for portability and adjustability rather than load capacity. Judged on its own terms, a matching rating to a much larger competitor and steady recent sales make it a reasonable low-cost pick.
Pros
- Lowest price in this comparison at $24.99
- 4.3-star average across 107 reviews, matching the rating of the 6,077-review Marcy SDC10.1
- 100-plus units bought last month, more recent purchase activity than the Body Sport or Total-brand bars
- Aluminum and polyurethane build keeps it lightweight and portable compared to alloy steel bars
- Currently in stock and priced as an accessible entry point into resistance-bar training
Cons
- Only 107 reviews total, a smaller sample than the Marcy SDC10.1's 6,077
- Not a loadable steel barbell, so it does not compete directly with the alloy steel options for strength training
- No weight or capacity spec listed beyond the aluminum and polyurethane materials
- 4.3-star average is on the lower end among the barbells in this comparison, tied only with Marcy's entry bar
Specifications
| Material | Aluminum, Polyurethane |
|---|
Performance notes
Aluminum and polyurethane construction points to a lightweight, flexible training tool rather than a rigid, heavy-load bar. Where the alloy steel options in this comparison, like the 22-pound Sunny OB-TRAP or 30-pound Marcy HTB-6976, are built to hold plates and absorb repeated loading, the EXREIZST's materials suggest it is designed for stretching, mobility drills, or light resistance-band work where flexibility and low weight matter more than rigidity. At $24.99, the price supports that read, it is priced closer to an accessory than a piece of loadable strength equipment. The expandable and adjustable language in the product name also implies a bar that changes length or configuration, a feature with no equivalent among the fixed-length steel bars in this set. For buyers who already own a squat rack or barbell, this reads as a complementary tool rather than a replacement.
What buyers say
A 4.3-star average across 107 reviews is a modest but workable sample, enough to indicate a consistent pattern rather than a handful of outlier opinions. It matches the Marcy SDC10.1's 4.3 stars, though that comparison comes from a much larger pool of 6,077 reviews, so the EXREIZST's rating carries less statistical weight. What stands out is the 100-plus units bought last month, a stronger recent-demand figure than the Body Sport Weighted Bar's 0-plus or the Total-brand bar's 50-plus. For a $24.99 accessory, steady current purchases alongside a mid-4-star rating suggests buyers are getting roughly what they expect, without the polarized reactions that drag down an average.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the EXREIZST Spreader Bar Set made of?
It is built from aluminum and polyurethane, materials suited to a lightweight, adjustable training tool rather than a heavy-load steel barbell. That construction lines up with its $24.99 price, well below the alloy steel bars in this comparison.
Is the EXREIZST Spreader Bar Set a real barbell replacement?
Not for loaded lifting. Its aluminum and polyurethane build and expandable, adjustable design point to stretching and light resistance work rather than squats or presses. For loadable strength training, the alloy steel bars in this comparison are a better fit.
How does its rating compare to other barbells here?
Its 4.3-star average across 107 reviews ties the Marcy SDC10.1's rating, though Marcy's comes from 6,077 reviews versus 107. Its 100-plus units bought last month is stronger recent demand than the Body Sport or Total-brand bars in this same comparison.