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2,000+ Happy Customers Worldwide

APEX™ Cupping Massager

APEX™ Cupping Massager

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APEX™ Cupping Massager

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Why Not Just Use A Massage Gun Or Roller?

Because pushing harder into an already sore area is not always the answer. Massage guns and foam rollers rely on compression, which can feel good in the moment but often only gives temporary relief. The APEX Cupper takes a different approach by using suction and heat to help lift and loosen tight areas instead of just smashing down on them. For people who are tired of tools that feel aggressive but don’t seem to stick, this offers a more targeted way to unwind recurring tension.

Will The Suction Leave Marks?


Temporary redness, bruising, or cupping marks can happen for some users, especially if you use stronger settings. That can be a normal response to suction-based therapy. The key is to start low, build gradually, and avoid leaving the device in one spot too long. Mild marks can happen, but blistering, burning, broken skin, or severe pain are not normal. If that happens, stop using it straight away. Your current disclaimer also advises starting on the lowest settings, limiting use to about 1–3 minutes per area, checking the skin frequently, and discontinuing use if you feel pain, burning, sharp discomfort, or any adverse reaction.

Can It Help With Recurring Trap, Back & Shoulder Tightness?

That’s one of the main reasons people use it. If you constantly deal with tight traps, upper-back knots, stiff shoulders, or back tension that keeps returning, the APEX Cupper is designed to help you treat those areas at home without needing to book another appointment. It’s especially useful for people who train a few times a week, sit for long hours, or keep finding that their tension comes back no matter how often they stretch, roll, or use a massage gun. The goal is simple: easier movement, less built-up tightness, and relief that fits your routine.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this actually for people like me, or just hardcore athletes?
It’s built for normal active adults who deal with recurring tightness from real life — gym sessions, long desk days, running around, poor posture, or just years of wear and tear. You do not need to be an elite athlete to benefit from having an easy recovery tool at home.


Can it actually help with knots that keep coming back?
That is one of the main reasons people use it. If you keep getting the same tight spots in your traps, upper back, shoulders, lower back, or calves, the APEX Cupper is designed to help you target those areas quickly and consistently at home instead of waiting until they flare up badly enough to book another appointment.


Will it leave marks?
It can leave temporary redness or cupping marks, especially if you use stronger settings or stay on one area too long. That is a normal response for some people with suction-based therapy. The best approach is to start on a lower setting, keep sessions controlled, and build up gradually as your body gets used to it.


How often should I use it?
Most people use it when tightness starts building up — after training, after work, or whenever a problem area starts feeling stiff again. It works best as something you can fit into your routine consistently, rather than a once-in-a-while fix after the tension has already piled up.


Can this really save me from spending money on appointments?
For a lot of people, that is the appeal. The APEX Cupper gives you a way to get relief at home, on your schedule, without always needing to book, travel, and pay for another massage or recovery session. It is about having a practical option ready whenever your body starts tightening up again.

Disclaimer

General Wellness Disclaimer

This product is intended for general wellness and relaxation purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare professional with any questions regarding a medical condition.

Skin, Suction & Heat Safety Warning

Suction-based therapy can cause temporary redness, bruising, or cupping marks, which may be normal for some users. However, blistering, burning, broken skin, or severe pain is not normal and may indicate skin injury.

To reduce the risk of skin irritation, blistering, burns, or other adverse reactions, always follow these safety rules:

Start Low & Build Gradually


  • Begin on the lowest suction intensity and lowest heat setting (or heat off) for first use.

  • Increase settings slowly only if comfortable.

Do Not Leave in One Spot


  • Never leave the device in the same spot for the full cycle.

  • Limit use to 1–3 minutes per area, then reposition to a new spot.

  • When heat is enabled, use shorter intervals and reposition more frequently.

Check Your Skin Frequently


  • Check your skin every 30–60 seconds, especially when using heat.

  • Stop immediately if you feel pain, stinging, burning, sharp discomfort, tingling, numbness, excessive redness, swelling, blistering, or any other adverse reaction.

Avoid High-Risk Areas / Use With Care


  • Do not use on the front/side of the neck (throat area), on the face, over the spine, or on bony prominences.

  • Use extra caution on thin-skinned or sensitive areas.

Do Not Use If Any of the Following Apply

Do not use the device on:


  • Broken, irritated, sunburnt, inflamed, infected, or sensitive skin

  • Areas with reduced sensation, poor circulation, numbness, or nerve impairment

  • Areas with recent wounds, rashes, or unexplained skin changes

    If you have a medical condition, are pregnant, have a bleeding disorder, take blood thinners, or have concerns about suitability, consult a qualified healthcare professional before use.

After Use


  • Mild redness/marks may occur. If you develop blistering, burns, broken skin, severe pain, or symptoms that worsen, discontinue use and seek medical advice promptly.

Final Safety Note

Discontinue use immediately if you experience any pain, discomfort, or adverse reaction.

View full details

2K+ Happy Customers Worldwide

Real Relief, Without the Ongoing Appointment Costs

91%

said the APEX Cupper helped ease stubborn tension and muscle discomfort.

85%

reported better mobility in commonly tight areas like the neck, traps, back, and legs.

80%

said they relied less on expensive massage or physio sessions for day-to-day relief.

Real Relief, Without the Ongoing Appointment Costs

Release Stubborn Trap Knots

Target recurring tension in your traps, shoulders, and upper back after long desk days or gym sessions. APEX Cupper helps loosen built-up tightness so you can feel lighter and move easier.

Pull Tension Out — Don’t Just Push On It

Massage guns and foam rollers press down on muscles that already feel sore. APEX Cupper uses decompression-style suction and heat to help loosen deep tightness in a way that feels more targeted and effective.

Get Relief On Your Schedule

No booking. No travel time. No paying for another appointment just to feel normal again. Use APEX Cupper after work, after training, or whenever your back starts tightening up.

Hear It From Them, Not Us

M

Mark T.


I sit at a desk for 9 hours, then try to squeeze in a gym session three or four times a week. My traps have been basically rock solid for about two years. I'd use a massage gun on them, feel better for maybe 20 minutes, then wake up the next morning with the same knot sitting right between my shoulder blade and my spine like it never left. First session with this I turned it up to level 4 with the heat on and genuinely couldn't believe what I was feeling — it's pulling the muscle up, not just hammering the surface. Woke up the next day and the knot was noticeably looser. That hadn't happened in two years. Three weeks in and I use it every second night after dinner. My wife thinks I'm addicted. She's not wrong.

S

Sarah R.

By 2pm every day I'd have this burning tightness through my upper back that made it hard to even focus on the screen. I'd been spending about $180 a month on massage appointments — good massages — but I'd feel great for two days and then we'd be back to square one. I started using the APEX Cupper on my lunch break. 10 minutes on my traps and shoulders, heat on medium, suction cranked up. It actually gives real relief I can feel for the rest of the afternoon. I've cut my appointments down to once a month now. That's money I'm keeping in my pocket and I'm honestly feeling better than I was going weekly.

J

James W.

I own a Theragun. Compression boots. A foam roller I trip over every morning. I am the guy who buys recovery gear and then quietly admits it doesn't really do much. I had a stubborn knot in my right lat that had been there since a heavy deadlift session six weeks earlier — nothing touched it. First session with this, suction on high, heat on, I could feel it getting into the muscle in a way none of my other gear ever has. Like deep tissue work without someone digging their elbow into me. After three sessions across a week the knot was gone. Actually gone. I took all my other gadgets and put them in a box.

L

Lisa V.

I run four times a week and my calves have been chronically tight for years. I'd roll them out, use the gun, stretch until I was blue in the face. I even commented on a thread once saying cupping seemed like placebo. Then I tried this. The heat and suction combo on my calves is a completely different feeling to anything I'd used before — it's pulling the tension out, that's the only way I can describe it. After two weeks of using it consistently post-run I noticed an actual change in my dorsiflexion. I went back and deleted my sceptical comment.

A

Andrew M.

I'd been seeing the same remedial massage therapist for three years. $120 a session, sometimes twice a week. I started doing the maths and realised a big chunk of that was funding a nice room with dim lighting and essential oils, not the actual relief. I've now had the APEX Cupper for six weeks. I use it every night on my lower back and upper traps and the relief is comparable to what I was paying $120 to achieve. I still see my therapist once a month instead of weekly. I've saved several hundred dollars already. The maths are pretty clear.

S

Steph R.

My problem with physio and massage isn't the cost — it's the scheduling. I travel constantly, my week changes, and booking a 60-minute appointment and actually making it there is a logistical exercise I can never seem to win. So the tightness in my neck and upper back just got worse. I use this in hotels, on the couch Sunday morning, for 15 minutes while I read briefs. The suction and heat on my neck after a long-haul flight is the best thing I've discovered this year. Treating myself when I actually need it instead of when a gap in someone's diary allows — that's the thing I didn't know I needed.

M

Mark T.


I sit at a desk for 9 hours, then try to squeeze in a gym session three or four times a week. My traps have been basically rock solid for about two years. I'd use a massage gun on them, feel better for maybe 20 minutes, then wake up the next morning with the same knot sitting right between my shoulder blade and my spine like it never left. First session with this I turned it up to level 4 with the heat on and genuinely couldn't believe what I was feeling — it's pulling the muscle up, not just hammering the surface. Woke up the next day and the knot was noticeably looser. That hadn't happened in two years. Three weeks in and I use it every second night after dinner. My wife thinks I'm addicted. She's not wrong.

S

Sarah R.

By 2pm every day I'd have this burning tightness through my upper back that made it hard to even focus on the screen. I'd been spending about $180 a month on massage appointments — good massages — but I'd feel great for two days and then we'd be back to square one. I started using the APEX Cupper on my lunch break. 10 minutes on my traps and shoulders, heat on medium, suction cranked up. It actually gives real relief I can feel for the rest of the afternoon. I've cut my appointments down to once a month now. That's money I'm keeping in my pocket and I'm honestly feeling better than I was going weekly.

J

James W.

I own a Theragun. Compression boots. A foam roller I trip over every morning. I am the guy who buys recovery gear and then quietly admits it doesn't really do much. I had a stubborn knot in my right lat that had been there since a heavy deadlift session six weeks earlier — nothing touched it. First session with this, suction on high, heat on, I could feel it getting into the muscle in a way none of my other gear ever has. Like deep tissue work without someone digging their elbow into me. After three sessions across a week the knot was gone. Actually gone. I took all my other gadgets and put them in a box.

L

Lisa V.

I run four times a week and my calves have been chronically tight for years. I'd roll them out, use the gun, stretch until I was blue in the face. I even commented on a thread once saying cupping seemed like placebo. Then I tried this. The heat and suction combo on my calves is a completely different feeling to anything I'd used before — it's pulling the tension out, that's the only way I can describe it. After two weeks of using it consistently post-run I noticed an actual change in my dorsiflexion. I went back and deleted my sceptical comment.

A

Andrew M.

I'd been seeing the same remedial massage therapist for three years. $120 a session, sometimes twice a week. I started doing the maths and realised a big chunk of that was funding a nice room with dim lighting and essential oils, not the actual relief. I've now had the APEX Cupper for six weeks. I use it every night on my lower back and upper traps and the relief is comparable to what I was paying $120 to achieve. I still see my therapist once a month instead of weekly. I've saved several hundred dollars already. The maths are pretty clear.

S

Steph R.

My problem with physio and massage isn't the cost — it's the scheduling. I travel constantly, my week changes, and booking a 60-minute appointment and actually making it there is a logistical exercise I can never seem to win. So the tightness in my neck and upper back just got worse. I use this in hotels, on the couch Sunday morning, for 15 minutes while I read briefs. The suction and heat on my neck after a long-haul flight is the best thing I've discovered this year. Treating myself when I actually need it instead of when a gap in someone's diary allows — that's the thing I didn't know I needed.