AirVida Portable Lying Hyperbaric Chamber
The transparent-priced, direct-to-consumer way into mild home HBOT - soft-shell, adjustable 1.2 to 1.5 ATA, far below the established US brands.
AirVida is the transparent-priced, direct-to-consumer entry into mild home hyperbaric: a soft-shell chamber that starts around $6,799, a fraction of what the established US brands charge for the same 1.3-class soft tier.
Most home hyperbaric brands hide pricing behind a quote form. AirVida does the opposite: it lists every model and price on the site, sells direct, and ships free from Kansas. The Portable Lying chamber is the volume model, a soft, inflatable cabin with an adjustable valve that runs 1.2 to 1.5 ATA, 89 inches long, in a 32-inch (five windows) or 36-inch (seven windows) diameter. The base configuration is chamber plus air pump; the all-in-one variants bundle the compressor, an air cooler, and an oxygen concentrator.
The reason it costs so much less than an OxyHealth or Summit to Sea is worth understanding before you buy. AirVida is a US-based reseller (Lenexa, Kansas, with a Las Vegas showroom) of chambers built by overseas manufacturing partners, not a long-tenured US manufacturer with its own factory and a hundred-dealer service network. That is how the soft line lands near $6,799 instead of $18,000 and up. The trade is brand pedigree, a smaller service footprint, and an OEM that is not named on the site.
Be clear-eyed about what a soft chamber delivers. At 1.2 to 1.5 ATA with an oxygen concentrator (not the roughly 100% medical oxygen used in clinical HBOT), this is mild hyperbaric, the same tier as the soft OxyHealth and Summit to Sea chambers, not the 2.0 to 2.8 ATA hard-shell clinical HBOT used in the studies people cite. AirVida's own disclaimer states the chambers are not FDA approved, that home use requires a prescription, and that any pressure above 1.4 ATA is medical-grade and needs physician supervision. The CE, ISO, and SGS badges on the homepage are not substantiated on the product pages, so treat them as marketing until verified.
Where AirVida genuinely stands out: transparent pricing, an unusually broad line (lying, sitting Pro90, wheelchair-accessible Chair Pro, hard-shell Ultra and Elite, and a multiplace unit), US warehousing, fast free shipping, and financing. For a budget-conscious buyer who wants daily mild-HBOT access and is comfortable buying direct from a reseller, it is the lowest-cost, lowest-friction way in.
Budget-conscious home buyers who want transparent-priced, daily mild-HBOT access and are comfortable buying direct from a reseller, or who want sitting, wheelchair, and vertical formats the established brands do not offer.
You want a long-tenured US manufacturer with a large parts-and-service network (OxyHealth or Summit to Sea), you need true clinical pressure and roughly 100% oxygen (a hard-shell 2.0+ ATA chamber), or you are not comfortable with an unnamed overseas OEM and a not-FDA-approved status.
Specifications
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Where this fits
AirVida Chambers Portable Lying (1.2-1.5 ATA) 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.
AirVida Chambers Portable Lying (1.2-1.5 ATA) - buyer FAQ
Why is AirVida so much cheaper than OxyHealth or Summit to Sea?
AirVida is a US-based reseller (Lenexa, Kansas) of soft and hard-shell chambers made by overseas manufacturing partners, and it sells direct with transparent listed pricing. OxyHealth and Summit to Sea are long-tenured US manufacturers with their own builds and large dealer networks, which is part of why their soft chambers run $18,000 and up. AirVida's soft Portable Lying starts near $6,799. The trade for the lower price is brand pedigree, a smaller service footprint, and an OEM that is not named on the site.
Is the AirVida a true HBOT chamber?
It is a mild hyperbaric (mHBOT) chamber. The Portable Lying runs an adjustable 1.2 to 1.5 ATA with an oxygen concentrator, not the roughly 100% medical oxygen at 2.0 to 2.8 ATA used in clinical hard-shell HBOT. That is the same mild tier as the soft OxyHealth and Summit to Sea chambers. It is the dose most home longevity protocols use, but it is not clinical HBOT, and the marketing should not be read to imply otherwise.
Is AirVida FDA approved?
No. AirVida's own disclaimer states the chambers are not currently FDA approved, that home use requires a prescription, and that any use above 1.4 ATA is medical-grade and requires physician supervision. The CE, ISO, and SGS badges shown on the homepage are not substantiated on the product pages, so treat them as marketing claims until the company provides documentation.
What does the all-in-one option include?
The base Portable Lying configuration (from $6,799) is the chamber plus an air pump only. The all-in-one variants (up to $9,799 for the 36-inch) bundle the compressor, an air cooler, and an oxygen concentrator into one package, which is the setup most buyers actually want for daily use. If you buy the base configuration, budget separately for a concentrator.
AirVida vs OxyHealth and Summit to Sea, which should I buy?
Choose AirVida if you want the lowest-cost, transparent-priced way into daily mild HBOT, or you want sitting, wheelchair, or vertical formats, and you are comfortable buying direct from a reseller. Choose OxyHealth or Summit to Sea if you want an established US manufacturer with a long track record and a large parts-and-service network, and you are willing to pay roughly $18,000 and up for that pedigree. All three are soft 1.3-class chambers at the same mild-HBOT dose.
AirVida Portable Lying Hyperbaric Chamber
$6,799–$9,799 · Verified 2026-06-22
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