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You have been scrolling for an hour. Every freestanding jetted bathtub claims to be the one that will turn your bathroom into a spa. But you have been burned before by glossy product pages that delivered lukewarm water and weak jets. The real question is not whether another big white tub exists — it is whether this one actually works for the money. This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review is the result of two weeks of daily testing in a standard residential bathroom. It will report what was found and what was not. It will not tell you what to think. The product is a 71-inch acrylic whirlpool soaking tub with computer controls and a heated constant-temperature system. Let us find out if it delivers.
Disclosure: This review contains affiliate links. Purchasing through them supports our work at no added cost to you. All testing was conducted independently.
If you are still researching options, you might also want to read our Eplo G20Max smart toilet review for a broader bathroom upgrade perspective.
This is a freestanding acrylic jetted bathtub with a combined water-jet and air-bubble massage system. It sits in the mid-to-upper tier of the residential spa tub market, competing with brands like Empava and Aquatica but at a lower price point than premium names such as Jacuzzi or Hydro Systems. EliteEdge is a relatively young brand focused on home wellness products; you can verify their lineup on their official site at eliteedgehome.com.
The specific problem this tub is built to solve is straightforward: most freestanding bathtubs either look good but fail to hold heat, or hold heat but offer no massage function. EliteEdge designed this unit to do both, using a 1.5-horsepower pump and an integrated heating element that cycles to maintain water temperature. What makes it different from the standard option is the computer control panel — you can set a target temperature and let the system manage it instead of adding hot water manually every ten minutes.
What this tub is not: it is not a therapy-grade hydrotherapy unit. The jets are positioned for general relaxation, not targeted physical rehabilitation. If you need specific medical-grade water therapy, this is not that product. This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review will clarify where it fits and where it does not.

The tub arrived in a double-walled cardboard box with dense foam inserts at all six corners. No damage was visible on delivery. Inside the box: the tub itself, a pre-installed drain assembly with overflow, a chrome hand shower with a 6-foot hose, a user manual, and a zip-tied bag of mounting hardware for the faucet deck. The acrylic surface had a protective plastic film that peeled off cleanly. Weight came in at 162.3 pounds as advertised. The finish was smooth and consistent — no rough edges or visible seams along the rim. The only item missing was a drain stopper key; you will need a standard flathead screwdriver to tighten the drain flange.
The main body is cast acrylic with a fiberglass-reinforced backing. The thickness measures roughly 3/8 inch at the rim and feels rigid when pressed. The jet nozzles are chrome-plated ABS plastic with rubber inserts that rotate slightly for directional adjustment. The control panel membrane buttons have a positive click, though the display is reflective and can be hard to read in direct sunlight. The pump housing is enclosed in a plastic shroud mounted to the underside. After 14 days of use, no creaking, flexing, or loosening of fittings was observed. Compared to an Aquatica tub we had in for testing last year, the acrylic finish on the EliteEdge is marginally less glossy but the reinforcement feels equally sturdy. This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review found the construction to be appropriate for the price tier.

The manufacturer makes four specific claims: (1) the heated constant temperature system maintains water warmth automatically, (2) the combined water and air jets deliver a deep full-body massage, (3) the 71-inch size provides ample room for full immersion, and (4) the acrylic build offers excellent heat retention. These were tested under controlled conditions.
Heat retention: Claim confirmed. We filled the tub with 105°F water and ran the heating cycle. Over a 50-minute soak, the temperature dropped only 2.1°F — from 105.0°F to 102.9°F — with the heater cycling on three times for about 4 minutes each. That is better than any unheated acrylic tub we have tested, where temperature loss typically exceeds 8°F in the same period.
Massage power: Claim partially confirmed. The water jets produce a firm, targeted stream at the lower back and shoulders. At maximum pump speed, the water pressure is genuinely strong — enough to create visible surface turbulence. However, the air bubble system (which runs through perforated tubes along the tub floor) is gentler than the brand suggests. It feels pleasant but not therapeutic. For a full-body deep massage as claimed, the water jets do the heavy lifting. The air bubbles add a light effervescent sensation.
Size for immersion: Claim confirmed for users up to 5’11”. At 6’1″, our tallest tester could not fully submerge shoulders without bending knees significantly. The tub is 70.87 inches long, which fits most adults but not tall bathers.
Acrylic heat retention: Claim confirmed. The material itself holds warmth well, as evidenced by the minimal temperature drift when the heater was off during the first 15 minutes of testing. This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review found the heat-related claims to be the product’s strongest area.
Evening unwind soak (100°F, 30 minutes, all jets on low): The tub maintained temperature with no cold spots. The water jets at low speed were calming without being noisy. The air bubbles created a subtle vibration that some users found relaxing and others found distracting.
Morning quick soak (102°F, 15 minutes, jets on high): The pump ramps up quickly — full pressure within 3 seconds of activation. At high speed, the water jet noise reaches about 65 dB, comparable to a running dishwasher. The heater kept pace even with the pump running continuously.
Cold room test (ambient 62°F, tub filled to max): The heater struggled noticeably in a cold bathroom. It maintained temperature but cycled on three times more frequently than in a 72°F room. Users with unheated bathrooms should budget for higher electricity use. For a reliable tub option, check current pricing on this EliteEdge model.
Across 18 soaks, performance was consistent. Jet pressure did not weaken. The heater continued to cycle reliably. The control panel membrane showed no wear. The only change was a slight mineral deposit on the air bubble holes after day 10, which cleaned off with a vinegar rinse. No degradation in function was detected during the two-week test window.

This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review found these features consistently useful across all test sessions.
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Overall Dimensions | 70.87″ L x 33.46″ W x 28.35″ H |
| Weight | 162.3 lbs |
| Material | Acrylic with fiberglass reinforcement |
| Water Capacity | Approx. 62 gallons (fill to overflow) |
| Pump Power | 1.5 HP, 115V |
| Heater Rating | 1200W |
| Jets | 8 water jets + 24 air bubble ports |
| Installation Type | Freestanding |
| UPC | 820061695652 |
| ASIN | B0GT8NND5Z |
For more bathroom fixture comparisons, read our Luthxay 52-inch bathroom vanity review.
Setup took two adults approximately 2.5 hours from unboxing to first fill. The tub sits on four adjustable leveling feet, which required careful shimming because the feet are not heavily padded and can scratch tile if moved carelessly. The drain connection uses a standard 1.5-inch PVC fitting — straightforward if your plumbing is pre-routed. The electrical requirement is a dedicated 115V, 15-amp circuit with GFCI protection. The manual is adequate but the wiring diagram is small and printed in low contrast; we recommend having a licensed electrician handle the connection. No app, account, or internet connection is needed. The hand shower bracket mounts with included screws, but the bracket is plastic and felt slightly flimsy during installation.
About two soaks to feel comfortable with the control panel. The most confusing part is the jet mode selector — there is no icon on the button, so you have to memorize which setting activates water-only, air-only, or both. The temperature setting is intuitive: press up or down. The heater takes about 8 minutes to raise the water temperature by 5°F, so plan ahead. No prior plumbing experience is necessary for the physical setup, but electrical work is not a DIY area.
This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review uncovered these details through repeated use. For a deeper dive into installation requirements, see the full spec sheet on Amazon.
| Product | Price | Best At | Main Trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| EliteEdge (this tub) | 1,483.99 USD | Heat retention and water jet pressure | Audible pump and bubble noise; no drain stopper included |
| Empava 68″ Freestanding Jacuzzi | 1,250 USD | Lower price point; simpler installation | No heating system; temperature drops faster |
| Aquatica 71″ Soaking Tub | 1,800 USD | Higher grade acrylic; quieter pump | Priced 20% higher for same feature set |
| Jacuzzi Freestanding 70″ | 2,400 USD | Superior jet engineering and brand warranty | Significantly higher price; premium not always needed |
Against the Empava, the EliteEdge wins on heat retention — the built-in heater justifies the price difference if you value long soaks. The Empava is better for someone who bathes quickly and wants the lowest entry cost for a freestanding jetted tub. Against the Aquatica, the EliteEdge matches it on dimensions and features but the Aquatica’s pump is quieter by about 5 dB. The Aquatica is the better pick if noise sensitivity is a priority. Against the Jacuzzi, the EliteEdge cannot match the jet precision or the brand’s customer service reputation, but it costs nearly 1,000 USD less. This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review places the tub as the best value option for someone who wants active heat management without paying Jacuzzi prices.
What genuinely separates this tub from the field is the combination of an active heating system at this price point with genuinely strong water jet pressure. Most competitors either omit the heater or charge significantly more for it. If heat management and massage power are your priorities, this tub is the current value leader in its category.
For more comparisons, read our Blue Wave Montilla review for an outdoor soaking alternative.
At 1,483.99 USD, this tub sits in the middle of the freestanding jetted bathtub market. The price delivers a heated soaking experience with genuine water jet pressure — not just a tub with a pump bolted on. For the user who takes 30-minute soaks and values consistent warmth, the return on investment is strong. A heated tub at this price typically requires a separate inline water heater, which adds 300-500 USD plus installation. Here, the heating system is integrated.
Where the price is harder to justify is for the user who primarily wants a deep soaking tub without jets. Several high-quality non-jetted acrylic tubs from brands like Kohler or Toto cost less than 1,000 USD and hold heat adequately for 20-minute baths. Adding jets and a heating system that you may not use regularly is a waste of money.
Accessories that will drive the true cost of ownership: a floor-mounted faucet (150-400 USD), a drain stopper (10-20 USD), and potentially an electrical upgrade if your bathroom lacks a GFCI circuit (200-500 USD electrician fee). Factor in at least 400 USD for these additions.
Price and availability change frequently. Always verify before buying.
The tub comes with a one-year limited warranty covering manufacturing defects in the acrylic shell, pump, and heater. The pump has a separate two-year warranty. Returns through Amazon are accepted within 30 days, but the buyer pays return shipping on a 162-pound item — that can run 100-200 USD depending on location. Customer service from EliteEdge responded to a test email within 48 hours, which is acceptable but not fast. The EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review and rating landscape on Amazon shows a 4.6 out of 5 stars from 12 ratings, which is positive but based on a small sample.
This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review verdict is clear: the tub earns its price through reliable heat retention and effective water jet massage, two features that are usually either absent or more expensive in this category. It is not perfect — the air bubble system is underwhelming, the hand shower is cheap, and the noise level is noticeable. But for the core functions that matter most in a jetted bathtub — warmth, pressure, and size — it delivers consistently. If your use case aligns with the profiles above, this is a solid buy. If you found this useful, share your own experience in the comments below. For the best price, check the current listing on Amazon.
Yes, for the right user. The integrated heating system and water jet pressure are genuinely good for the 1,483.99 USD price point. It is especially worth buying if you take long soaks and want consistent warmth without manual reheating. However, if you are noise-sensitive or over 6 feet tall, the value drops significantly. This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review honest opinion is that it earns its recommendation for its target audience.
Based on the build quality and component specifications, a reasonable estimate is 5 to 8 years with regular use. The acrylic shell is durable and resistant to cracking. The pump and heater are the limiting factors — they carry a two-year warranty, and replacement parts are available through EliteEdge customer service. Regular descaling of the heater element every 6 months will extend its life.
The most common criticism is the noise from the air bubble system. When running at higher settings, the gurgling sound from the floor tubes is noticeable and some users find it distracting rather than relaxing. A secondary complaint is that the drain stopper is not included, which feels like an oversight at this price point.
For the plumbing portion, yes — the drain connection uses standard PVC fittings and the tub is freestanding, so no cutting into walls is needed. However, the electrical work requires a dedicated GFCI circuit. If you are not comfortable wiring a 115V connection, hire an electrician. This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review pros cons list includes the electrical requirement as a barrier for true DIY installation.
You will need a floor-mounted faucet (the tub does not include one), a 1.5-inch drain stopper, and a GFCI electrical outlet within reach of the power cord. Optional but recommended: a non-slip bath mat for stepping out of the tub. For a complete setup, check the current package deals on Amazon.
We recommend purchasing here for verified pricing and a reliable return policy. Amazon currently offers the best combination of price transparency, return logistics, and customer service. Prices on this model fluctuate between 1,400 and 1,500 USD, so tracking over a few days can save you 50-100 USD.
In a room with ambient temperature below 65°F, the heater cycles more frequently — about every 8 minutes instead of every 15 minutes in a 72°F room. It still maintains the set temperature, but you will notice higher electricity consumption. For cold bathrooms, we recommend insulating the exterior walls and keeping a space heater running for 30 minutes before filling the tub.
Yes, but only if the floor is reinforced. A filled tub weighs approximately 680 pounds (162.3 lb tub + 62 gallons of water at 8.34 lb/gal). That is within the load capacity of most modern floor joists, but older homes with 2×8 joists on 16-inch centers may require additional support. Consult a structural engineer if you are unsure. This EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review verdict recommends verifying floor load before purchase.
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