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Functional Rig vs Squat Rack vs Power Rack: What to Choose for Your Gym Floor

Functional Rig vs Squat Rack vs Power Rack: What to Choose for Your Gym Floor

One of the most common questions gym owners face when planning their strength zone is this: should I buy a functional rig, a power rack, or a series of squat racks? The answer depends on your floor space, your member demographics, your training philosophy, and your budget — and getting it wrong is an expensive mistake.

This guide breaks down all three options clearly so you can make a confident decision for your facility.

Understanding the Three Options

The Squat Rack (Half Rack)

A squat rack — also called a half rack — is the simplest of the three. It consists of two uprights with adjustable J-hooks, a pull-up bar, and typically safety spotter arms. It's designed primarily for squatting, overhead pressing, and pull-ups in a compact footprint.

Footprint: Approximately 1.2m x 1.5m including safe working clearance
Primary use: Squatting, pressing, pull-ups
User capacity: 1 person per station

The Power Rack (Full Rack)

A power rack — also called a full cage — adds a second pair of uprights to create an enclosed four-column cage. This provides safety catches on all four sides, allowing users to train to failure without a spotter. Power racks typically support a wider range of attachments including lat pulldown, low row, dip handles, and landmine.

Footprint: Approximately 1.5m x 2m including clearance
Primary use: Squatting, bench pressing, deadlifting, Olympic lifting, pull-ups
User capacity: 1–2 people per station

The Functional Rig

A functional rig is a modular, multi-station structure built from a common column and beam system. Rigs can be configured to include multiple squat stations, pull-up bars at different heights, monkey bars, rope attachment points, ring hangers, and functional training attachments — all within a single integrated structure.

Rigs can be freestanding or wall-mounted and can span from 2 bays to 20+ bays depending on your floor space.

Footprint: Highly variable — designed around available space
Primary use: Multi-station strength and functional training
User capacity: Multiple simultaneous users

Functional Rig: Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Multi-user efficiency: A well-configured 6-bay rig can accommodate 6–12 people training simultaneously in the same footprint that 4–5 individual racks would occupy
  • Flexibility: Modular design allows you to reconfigure stations, add attachments, and adapt to changing programming needs without purchasing new equipment
  • Class-friendly: Ideal for functional fitness classes, CrossFit-style programming, and HIIT formats where multiple members need simultaneous access to the same type of station
  • Visual impact: A large rig is one of the most impressive visual elements in a gym and signals quality and programming depth to prospective members
  • Cost per station: When calculated per squat station, a multi-bay rig is often more cost-effective than equivalent individual racks

Cons

  • Requires significant floor space to justify
  • Fixed once installed — structural modifications require professional involvement
  • Individual stations on a rig lack the enclosed safety catch system of a full power rack
  • Not ideal for powerlifting-focused members who need self-spotting capability

Power Rack: Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Safety: The enclosed cage allows members to lift to failure without a spotter — critical for serious strength training
  • Versatility: Compatible with a wide range of attachments (lat pulldown, low row, landmine, dip handles, safety bars)
  • Member confidence: Power racks are trusted by serious lifters and signal that your gym is equipped for real strength training
  • Compact relative to output: A single power rack can host squatting, pressing, pulling, and accessory work in one station

Cons

  • Single-user station — no simultaneous training efficiency
  • Higher cost per station than squat racks
  • Larger footprint than a squat rack
  • Can feel isolating and underutilised at low-traffic times

Squat Rack: Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Compact footprint: More squat stations fit in the same space compared to power racks
  • Cost-effective: Lower per-unit cost allows more stations within the same budget
  • Accessible: The open design is less intimidating for newer members
  • Clean floor plan: A row of squat racks with a shared barbell rack creates a clean, efficient free weights zone

Cons

  • No enclosed safety catch system — users cannot safely train to failure without a spotter
  • Limited attachment compatibility compared to power racks
  • Less versatile for programming variety

Which Is Right for Your Gym?

Choose a Functional Rig if:

  • You run group fitness classes or functional training sessions
  • Your member base includes CrossFit, HYROX, or functional fitness enthusiasts
  • You have significant contiguous floor space (ideally 6m+ linear)
  • Simultaneous multi-user access is a priority
  • You want a visually impressive centrepiece for your gym

View our functional rig and rack range for configurable commercial options.

Choose Power Racks if:

  • Your member base includes serious powerlifters or strength athletes who need self-spotting capability
  • You want maximum versatility with attachments from a single piece of equipment
  • You're fitting out a dedicated strength room or PT studio
  • Individual member programming is prioritised over class-based training

Choose Squat Racks if:

  • You need to maximise the number of strength stations within a limited space
  • Your member demographics skew toward intermediate lifters rather than advanced strength athletes
  • Budget is a constraint and you need to equip more stations for less
  • You have sufficient members who can act as spotters, or your coaching ratio makes self-spotting less critical

The Hybrid Approach (Most Common in Commercial Gyms)

Most well-designed commercial gyms use a combination. A typical configuration might include:

  • 1 large functional rig for class-based training
  • 2–4 power racks for serious strength training
  • 2–4 squat racks for general use and overflow

This provides maximum programming flexibility, accommodates diverse member demographics, and avoids the bottleneck of relying on a single type of station.

Space Planning Considerations

Whichever option you choose, allow adequate working clearance:

  • Behind barbell stations: Minimum 2m clear for deadlift and Olympic lifting movements
  • Between adjacent stations: Minimum 1.5m to prevent collisions and allow safe emergency exits
  • Under rig pull-up bars: Minimum 2.5m ceiling height; 3m+ preferred for rope climbs and kipping movements

Good flooring under all rack and rig stations is non-negotiable. 20–25mm commercial rubber is the minimum recommendation. See our gym flooring range for suitable options.

Pair your rig or racks with functional training equipment — cables, sleds, landmines — to maximise your strength zone's programming versatility.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a functional rig replace all power racks in a commercial gym?

For most commercial gyms, no. Functional rigs don't provide the enclosed safety catch system that self-spotting requires. A hybrid approach — rig for classes, power racks for serious strength work — serves most member bases best.

How many squat stations does a commercial gym need?

A common benchmark is one barbell station per 50–75 active members in a strength-focused gym. For a 400-member gym, aim for 6–10 stations across a mix of rig bays, power racks, and squat racks.

What's the difference between a functional rig and a power cage?

A power cage is a single, self-contained four-column unit. A functional rig is a modular multi-bay structure that can include squat stations but also incorporates other functional training elements (monkey bars, rope points, ring hangers). The rig is a system; the power cage is a single piece of equipment.

Are functional rigs suitable for smaller gyms?

Smaller 2–4 bay rigs are well-suited to boutique studios, PT facilities, and smaller commercial gyms. You don't need a massive floor plan for a rig to make sense — even a 3-bay rig delivers significant multi-user value in a modest space.

Can I customise a functional rig configuration?

Yes — our commercial rig range is fully modular and configurable. We can help you design a rig layout that fits your exact floor dimensions and training requirements. Contact our team to discuss your project.

Build Your Strength Zone Right

Whether you need a single power rack for a PT studio or a 10-bay functional rig for a large commercial gym, Compound Fitness Equipment has the commercial-grade equipment to build it right.

Browse our racks, rigs and cages range or contact our team for expert advice and a tailored quote.

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