SkyBound vs JUMPZYLLA

SkyBound logo
JUMPZYLLA logo

SkyBound and Jumpzylla overlap almost completely on price. Both sell family-size round trampolines in the $200–$700 range, both sell primarily online, and both lean on safety features in their marketing. That overlap makes the choice feel arbitrary — but the two brands make different trade-offs, and they show up clearly once you look past the listings.

Jumpzylla keeps its range simple: curved-pole round trampolines from 8 ft to 16 ft, with the enclosure poles arcing away from the jumping area so jumpers are less likely to hit them. Its listed single-jumper limits scale with size, from 265 lb on the 8 ft up to 450 lb on the 14 ft and larger. The standard warranty is 2 years across frame and parts.

SkyBound offers a broader and more varied range. It began in 2009 as a replacement-parts supplier before launching its own trampolines, and today it sells coil rounds across several lines, rectangles, and a springless line using bungee cords and fiberglass rods — a design Jumpzylla does not make. SkyBound's frame warranty runs 5 years on nearly every line.

Below we compare the two on warranty coverage, weight limits by size, the springless question, and range breadth.

Full Spec Comparison

Spec table key takeaways

  • SkyBound covers frames for 5 years (10 on the AltitudeX) against 2 years on every Jumpzylla model.
  • Jumpzylla's larger sizes list higher single-jumper limits - 400 lb at 12 ft and 450 lb at 14 ft and up - versus SkyBound's 220-330 lb.
  • Jumpzylla sells one round design in six sizes ($200-$700); SkyBound's table spans rounds, rectangles, squares, and springless models ($149-$1,300).
  • Jumpzylla's warranty is a flat 2 years on every component, so there is no fine print to check - SkyBound's coverage varies by line.

Key differences to think about

  • Frame warranty: SkyBound covers frames for 5 years on nearly every line against Jumpzylla's 2-year standard warranty, which is the clearest paper difference between the two.
  • Weight limits by size: Jumpzylla's larger rounds list higher single-jumper limits (400 lb at 12 ft, 450 lb at 14 ft and up) than SkyBound's mainstream 264–330 lb ratings.
  • Springless option: SkyBound offers a springless line with bungee cords and fiberglass rods, while Jumpzylla's entire range uses coil springs.
  • Range breadth: Jumpzylla sells one design in six sizes, while SkyBound spreads across multiple coil lines, rectangles, and the springless series — simpler to choose from Jumpzylla, more options at SkyBound.
  • Pole design: Jumpzylla's curved enclosure poles angle away from the jumping surface, a feature SkyBound matches only on its SkyLift line.

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