Combat Sports Gear Guides

Combat-sports equipment should match the training, the athlete, and the rules of the room. Our guides focus on the choices that affect fit, movement, partner safety, care, installation, and useful life.

Start with the session: choose the guide for what you plan to do, then confirm the final decision with your coach or academy. A product labeled for “MMA” is not automatically suitable for every striking, grappling, or sparring context.

Boxing and Striking Equipment

Boxing Gloves

Compare bag, training, sparring, and competition gloves by use, fit, padding, closure, and gym rules. The guide also explains when separate bag and sparring pairs make sense.

Home Punching Bags

Choose between hanging, freestanding, reflex, and specialty bags after measuring mounting capacity, swing, footwork, noise, and total setup cost.

Focus Mitts and Thai Pads

Match mitts, Thai pads, shields, and body protectors to the intended strikes, then learn the positioning and communication that make pad work useful.

Grappling and Martial Arts Uniforms

BJJ Gi Buying Guide

Choose a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu gi by body measurements, cut, weave, fabric weight, pants, reinforcement, shrinkage, and academy or competition rules.

Karate, Judo, and BJJ Gi Comparison

Understand why uniforms built for striking movement, throwing, and ground grappling are not interchangeable.

Protective Equipment

Groin Protection

Compare athletic cups, compression systems, and boxing protectors by sport, support, movement, cleaning, and rules. Hard cups may be prohibited in some grappling contexts.

Before You Buy

  • Ask the coach which equipment is required and permitted.
  • Use the manufacturer’s measurements rather than relying on generic sizing.
  • Choose for the sessions you attend now, not a hypothetical future need.
  • Include cleaning, drying, storage, installation, and replacement in total cost.
  • Do not treat protective equipment as permission for uncontrolled contact.

How Recommendations Will Work

Our guides currently explain how to choose rather than presenting paid product rankings. When affiliate links are introduced, commercial relationships will be disclosed clearly and will not change the selection criteria.

We will identify whether a conclusion comes from firsthand use, manufacturer documentation, governing rules, or editorial research. We will not say a product was tested when it was not. Read our complete gear research methodology.

Training Comes First

Equipment can support practice, but it cannot replace qualified coaching, agreed intensity, and respect for training partners. If you are new, begin with our beginner MMA training guide and wait for the gym’s requirements before buying a full kit.

The Science of Violence
Logo