The Human Touch Perfect Chair PC-610 is the recliner version of a zero-gravity position: it reclines you into a neutral posture with your feet above your heart, which takes load off the back and spine. It is a power model with independent control of recline angle and leg elevation, priced from $3,299 to $4,499.
Price: $3,299–$4,499 · Verified: 2026-07-10
The Human Touch Perfect Chair PC-610 is the recliner version of a zero-gravity position: it reclines you into a neutral posture with your feet above your heart, which takes load off the back and spine. It is a power model with independent control of recline angle and leg elevation, priced from $3,299 to $4,499.
Human Touch has been building the Perfect Chair line since 1979, and the PC-610 is its flagship. The point of a zero-gravity chair is the geometry: neutral body support that distributes weight evenly and lifts the legs, a position borrowed from how astronauts sit at launch. The Omni-Motion power mechanism drives it with a five-way controller that adjusts recline and leg rest independently, so you are not locked into a few preset stops but can dial in effectively infinite positions.
The build is where the price goes. The base is hand-carved and hand-painted wood, offered in Dark Walnut, Walnut, or Matte Black, made by craftsmen the brand says complete a two-year apprenticeship. Upholstery is Premium Leather in six colors or Black SofHyde, across three trim packages, Comfort, Performance, and Supreme. It holds up to 400 pounds, the chair itself weighs 92 to 101 pounds depending on trim, and the product page shows a seven-year warranty, with three-year and five-year extended plans sold separately.
Where it gives ground: this is furniture for rest and recovery, and we frame it that way. Human Touch's marketing calls the posture doctor-recommended, but we stick to relaxation and recovery language and avoid circulation or treatment claims. Manufacturing origin is not disclosed on the product page beyond the hand-carved base, so we do not call it made-in-USA. The warranty badge is on the page, but the parts-versus-labor split was not published, so confirm coverage details before you buy.
Against a massage chair at three to five times the price, the PC-610 is the quieter choice: no motors kneading your back, just a well-engineered position you actually want to sit in for an hour, in a piece that looks like furniture rather than equipment.
Someone who wants a genuinely comfortable zero-gravity rest chair that reads as living-room furniture, with a hand-finished base and precise power positioning.
You want active massage, heat rollers, or body-scan features, this is a posture recliner, not a massage chair, or you need a disclosed country of manufacture before buying.
Specifications
Where this fits
Human Touch Perfect Chair PC-610 Omni-Motion cross-shops across several editorial surfaces - the full brand catalog, the buyer-intent tags this item carries, the price band it qualifies for, and any execution playbook that uses it, plus the in-depth guides that cover it.
Human Touch Perfect Chair PC-610 Omni-Motion - buyer FAQ
What makes the Perfect Chair PC-610 a zero-gravity chair?
It reclines you into a neutral posture with your feet above your heart, distributing body weight evenly and taking pressure off the back and spine. The Omni-Motion power mechanism adjusts recline angle and leg elevation independently through a five-way controller, so you can hold effectively infinite positions rather than a few presets. Verified from humantouch.com, July 2026.
How much does the PC-610 cost?
It ranges from $3,299 to $4,499 depending on trim, verified via Human Touch Shopify product data in July 2026: the Comfort package in Black SofHyde is $3,299, the Performance package in Premium Leather is $4,199, and the Supreme package tops out at $4,499. It is a one-time purchase; extended warranty plans are sold separately.
Is this a massage chair?
No. The PC-610 is a zero-gravity power recliner built for neutral-posture rest and recovery, not active massage. It has no rollers, kneading, or body-scan features. That is the trade against a massage chair costing three to five times more: you get a precise, comfortable position and furniture-grade build rather than mechanical massage. Verified July 2026.
What is the warranty and weight capacity?
The product page shows a seven-year warranty, though the parts-versus-labor split is not published, so confirm the details before buying; three-year and five-year extended plans are sold separately at $199 and $499. The chair supports up to 400 pounds and weighs 92 to 101 pounds depending on trim. Verified July 2026.
