Srjornth hip thrust belt Weight Belt Review
Our verdict
The Srjornth hip thrust belt costs $18.99, the lowest price of any belt in this comparison, and carries a 4.8-star rating across 35 reviews with 100 or more units bought last month. For a low-cost, purpose-built hip thrust accessory, the rating and price combination looks strong.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Home gym users who do barbell hip thrusts and want a cheap, dedicated pad for the movement rather than a general-purpose lifting belt. At $18.99 it's the least expensive option tracked in this category.
Skip if
Skip it if you need a torso-bracing belt for squats or deadlifts, since this is built specifically for hip thrusts. Also worth noting for buyers who want a rating backed by hundreds of reviews rather than 35.
- Material Polyester
- Size One Size
- Color Black
- Priced 42% below the category median ($32.99 across 88 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.8/5
4.8 average across 35 owner ratings
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Popularity0.2/5
35 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
Hip thrust belts exist to solve one specific problem: cushioning the hip crease against a loaded barbell during the hip thrust movement, rather than bracing the torso the way a traditional weight belt does. The Srjornth hip thrust belt is built from polyester, sold in one size, in black, for $18.99.
That price makes it the cheapest item in this comparison by a wide margin, undercutting the Harbinger 28900's $35.25 by nearly half, and coming in well below the Harbinger 360982's $49.99 and the Schiek SCH1014's $59.95. Its 4.8-star rating is also the highest of the group, edging out the Harbinger 28900's 4.7 stars and clearing the Schiek SCH1014's 4.6 and the Harbinger 360982's 4.4.
The tradeoff is review volume: 35 reviews is a small sample next to the 1,300 to 2,900 reviews behind the three comparison belts. With 100 or more bought last month, though, current demand looks active. For a low-cost accessory aimed specifically at hip thrusts rather than general lifting support, the combination of top rating and bottom price is notable even with a shorter review history.
Pros
- Priced at $18.99, the cheapest weight belt in this comparison by a significant margin
- 4.8-star rating, the highest average of any belt tracked here
- 100 or more units bought in the past month, showing active current demand
- Polyester build suited to a lightweight, purpose-built accessory rather than heavy structural bracing
- One size design simplifies the buying decision
- Currently in stock and available to order
Cons
- Only 35 reviews, the smallest sample among the belts compared, versus 1,300 to 2,900 for its rivals
- Built specifically for hip thrusts, not a substitute for a torso-support lifting belt
- One size only, with no alternate sizing listed
- Polyester is a lighter-duty material than the leather or heavier nylon used in premium alternatives
Specifications
| Material | Polyester |
|---|---|
| Size | One Size |
| Color | Black |
Performance notes
Polyester is a lightweight, low-cost material choice, which fits both the $18.99 price and the belt's narrower job description as a hip-thrust pad rather than a full torso-bracing belt. Unlike the Schiek SCH1014's nylon or the leather builds of the Harbinger 360982 and MANUEKLEAR ML0117, polyester generally isn't chosen for rigidity under heavy compressive load, since a hip thrust belt's job is cushioning against a bar rather than stabilizing the spine. The one-size approach keeps the design simple and the manufacturing cost low, both of which likely contribute to its position as the cheapest belt in this set. At 35 reviews, the sample is thin, but a 4.8-star average across that group is a strong showing for a budget accessory.
What buyers say
A 4.8-star rating across 35 reviews is the highest average in this comparison, though the sample is also the smallest, making it more sensitive to a handful of additional reviews swinging the number than the 1,300-plus review totals behind the pricier alternatives. Still, with 100 or more units bought in the past month, the pattern suggests a product that's both selling steadily and satisfying the buyers leaving feedback. There's no indication of a split reputation here, just a newer or lower-volume listing whose early numbers look favorable.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the Srjornth hip thrust belt used for?
It's designed to cushion the hip crease against a loaded barbell during barbell hip thrusts, a different job than a torso-bracing lifting belt like the Schiek SCH1014 or Harbinger belts. It's built from polyester and sold in one size.
Is the Srjornth hip thrust belt the cheapest option in this category?
Yes, at $18.99 it's well below the Harbinger 28900 ($35.25), Harbinger 360982 ($49.99), and Schiek SCH1014 ($59.95), while carrying the highest rating in the comparison at 4.8 stars across 35 reviews.
How reliable is the 4.8-star rating given the review count?
The rating is based on 35 reviews, a smaller sample than the thousands behind the comparison belts, so it carries more uncertainty. It's still a strong pattern, and 100 or more units bought last month suggests it continues to sell and satisfy new buyers.