Hyperice Memorial Day deals cut recovery tech up to 40% off
Hyperice’s Memorial Day markdowns hit 40% off open-box recovery gear, with the best value in boots, massage guns and contrast devices.

The smartest recovery gifts are in Hyperice’s outlet right now
Hyperice’s Memorial Day pricing is the rare self-care sale that actually feels practical: no active coupon codes, but up to 40% off select open-box devices, 10% off for email subscribers, and free shipping on orders over $49. That makes the brand’s recovery tech, founded in 2011 and now used in more than 60 countries, a particularly good gift for the person who trains hard, travels often, or just lives in a body that needs regular maintenance.
Best gift matches by recipient
For the traveler who wants relief that fits in a carry-on
If you are buying for the person who goes from airport seat to meeting to hotel gym, the cleanest pick is the Hypervolt Go 3 at $149. It is lightweight, TSA-friendly, comes with a carry case, and gives you five speeds of percussion, which is enough punch for tight hips, calves, and shoulders without taking up half a suitcase. If you want something even more portable and a little gentler, the Hypersphere Go is $109 and is built for precise vibration work on the spots that get angry after long flights.
The best outlet buy for a traveler is the Open Box Venom Go at $79, down from $129, because it gives you heat and vibration in a tiny wearable format. That is the kind of thing a frequent flyer will actually use on a plane, at a desk, or in a rental car lot, and Hyperice’s outlet model makes the tradeoff clear: tested, repackaged, final sale, and meaningfully cheaper than buying new.
For the runner, cyclist, or lifter with tired legs
If your gift recipient lives in compression boots, the Normatec line is the place to spend. The regular Normatec Go is $379 and the Open Box version is $299, which is a smart entry point if they want calf-focused dynamic air compression without going all the way up the ladder. For someone who is on their feet all day or puts in serious mileage, the Normatec 3 Legs are $899 new and $699 open-box, while the Open Box Normatec Elite lands at $849, down from $1,099.

What makes these worth gifting is the difference in use case. Normatec Go is the portable option, Normatec 3 Legs is the full recovery workhorse, and Normatec Elite is the premium, hose-free answer for someone who wants the cleanest setup at home. If you are shopping with pretax health dollars, Hyperice says the Normatec line is FSA and HSA eligible in the U.S., which makes a big-ticket recovery gift easier to justify.
For the person who wants a real deep-tissue tool, not a toy
Hypervolt is still the gift category I reach for when I want something that feels serious but not absurdly expensive. The Hypervolt 3 Pro is $349 and is built with six speeds and five head attachments, while the Hypervolt 2 is $229 and the Hypervolt Go 3 gives you a lighter, travel-first version at $149. If the recipient already owns a massage gun or wants a smaller backup, the Open Box Hypervolt 2 Pro is one of the strongest outlet values at $199, down from $329.
This is the category to buy for the person who says, after every workout, that they are “fine” and then immediately reaches for a foam roller. The percussion devices are better for targeted knots than the broad, full-body feel of compression boots, and the Hypervolt 2 Pro especially makes sense if you want pro-level power without paying full price. Hyperice also offers a standard Hypervolt 3 at $249, which is a good middle ground if the 3 Pro feels too much like a performance gift and not enough like a present.
For the shoulder, knee, or desk-athlete gift recipient
The Hyperice X 2 devices are the most compelling gift for anyone who carries tension in one stubborn joint. The Hyperice X 2 Shoulder and Hyperice X 2 Knee are both $449 new, and each one uses heat, cold, contrast, and air compression in a fully electronic format. Open-box pricing brings the shoulder version to $279 from $399 and the knee version to $279 from $399, which is a very real saving on a device that feels much closer to clinic-grade recovery gear than a casual wellness gadget.
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