The Ultimate Off-Ice Skate Spinner Showdown

The Ultimate Off-Ice Skate Spinner Showdown

Erika Venza |

Gear Showdown

The Ultimate Off-Ice Spinner Showdown

Platform vs board vs disk — every off-ice spinner type compared, with real skater feedback and a quick-pick guide by level.

Whether you're squeezing in practice in a tiny apartment or prepping for your next test, off-ice spinners are one of the most effective at-home training tools a figure skater can own. They're not a substitute for ice time — nothing is — but they let you drill rotation, centering, posture, and core stability on your own schedule, in your own space, for zero ice fees.

The problem: there are a lot of options, and they're not all built for the same thing. This guide breaks down every major spinner type, compares them head-to-head on spin realism, durability, and portability, and gives you a clear recommendation based on your level.

Why Off-Ice Spinners Matter

Ice time is expensive and limited. Most adult skaters get 2–4 hours per week, and a chunk of that goes to warm-up, lesson structure, and shared ice. Spinners let you do the repetition work — the boring, essential stuff that builds muscle memory — without paying rink rates.

🔄
Muscle Memory
Reps
Thousands of revolutions, safely, at home
🧘
Core Stability
Engage
Abs, hips, and back without the ice
⚖️
Edge Awareness
Feel
Blade tilt and rocker sensation
🧍
Upper Body
Stillness
Train posture without fear of falling

The key insight: different spinner types train different things. Platform spinners build speed and posture. Board spinners build edge feel and balance. The best off-ice practice uses both.

Jerry's Metal Spinner (Platform Style)

Jerry's Metal Spinner

Platform / Fixed ~$40–60 All Levels

A heavyweight, dual-plate metal platform — think lazy Susan for skaters. It locks your foot in place while the platform rotates beneath you, letting you focus purely on rotation speed, posture, and arm positions.

✓ Strengths
  • All-metal build — lasts for years
  • High-quality bearings, silky-smooth rotation
  • Works on any surface: hardwood, carpet, tile
  • Supreme stability for high-speed, multi-rep drills
  • Non-slip surface
✗ Limitations
  • Heavy (~2 lb) — not the most portable
  • Flat feel with no rocker — unrealistic edge dynamics
  • Spins can feel too easy and fast
  • Doesn't train travel or on-ice lean
Helps drill muscle memory — just step off if you slip.
Great for posture and upper-body stillness, but doesn't mimic on-ice lean.
Fits in my Zuca bag, but it's not fun lugging it around all day.

For skaters who want a stable base to crank out RPM and drill posture, Jerry's is the go-to. But don't rely on it alone — pair it with a board-style spinner for realistic edge feel and travel training.

Shop Jerry's Metal Spinner

The platform spinner most skaters start with — and keep using at every level.

Board-Style Spinners (Spinboard & EDEA)

Board-style spinners mimic actual blade movement by letting your foot travel slightly during spins — the way real on-ice spins work. This makes them the closest thing to ice feel you'll get in your living room.

Spinboard (Plastic Disk)

Board / Free-Moving ~$15–30 Beginner-Friendly

A curved plastic disk with a foam top. Lightweight, inexpensive, and portable — the entry-level board spinner most skaters try first.

✓ Strengths
  • Inexpensive — low barrier to try
  • Lightweight and portable
  • Won't damage floors
  • Great for learning to center your weight
✗ Limitations
  • Rolls away — needs clear floor space
  • Minimal rocker depth
  • Static entry only

EDEA Spinner (Nylon Board)

Board / Free-Moving ~$30–50 Beginner to Intermediate

A flat nylon board shaped like a blade profile, with a wider surface and gentle rocker that feels closer to ice than a basic spinboard. The step-up choice for skaters who want better edge simulation.

✓ Strengths
  • Wider surface for easier balance
  • Gentle rocker — close to on-ice feel
  • Clips to bag for transport
  • Excellent for edge control drills
✗ Limitations
  • Slides on hardwood — needs traction
  • Pricier than a generic spinboard
  • Edges can scratch floors over time
All the high-performance skaters at my rink use EDEA — it really helps with spins.
If you travel on ice, you'll travel on these — just watch out for furniture!

Foot-Mounted & Mini Disk Spinners

Ultra-compact options for one-foot drills and skaters who need something truly portable.

Metal Foot Spinner Disk

Disk / Foot-Mounted ~$10–25 Intermediate

A 3–6 inch diameter aluminum disk that fits under one foot. Pocket-sized, bi-directional, and rated up to 300 lb — but the tiny surface is challenging for beginners.

✓ Strengths
  • Pocket-sized — truly portable
  • Durable metal alloy
  • Bi-directional spin
  • Forces precision and centering
✗ Limitations
  • Tiny surface — challenging balance
  • One-foot practice only
  • Not for complete beginners

Dance-Style Turn Boards (Larger)

Disk / Board ~$15–30 Intermediate

Wood or rigid plastic, roughly 11 inches in diameter. Allows two-foot spins with a stable stance, but designed more for dance than skating — no casing means feet can slip.

✓ Strengths
  • Allows two-foot spins
  • Stable, wider stance
  • Affordable
✗ Limitations
  • No casing — feet can slip off
  • Scuffs floors
  • Foam top wears out

Foot disks and turn boards are great intermediate tools once you've mastered basic balance on a Spinboard or platform. They force precision and centering in a way that larger spinners don't — but they're not recommended as your first spinner.

Elite & Specialty Spinners

High-end boards built for competitive skaters chasing marginal gains.

Elite & Pro-Range Spinners

Specialty / Competitive $500–700 Advanced / Competitive

Ultra-thin composite construction for maximum RPM. Available in left and right models with custom curvature to mimic blade rocker. Engineered for jumps, twizzles, and precision drills. Used by Olympians.

✓ Strengths
  • Targeted precision engineering
  • Ultra-light and responsive
  • Custom rocker curvature
  • Left/right models available
✗ Limitations
  • Exorbitant cost
  • Still not perfect ice simulation
  • Not beginner-friendly at all
  • Diminishing returns for recreational skaters

Unless you're competing at a high level or your coach specifically recommends one, elite spinners are a "nice to have" rather than a need. The performance gap between a $50 Jerry's + EDEA combo and a $600 elite spinner is much smaller than the price suggests for most adult skaters.

Spin Realism & Blade Feel Compared

True on-ice spins travel and tilt — your body shifts over the blade rocker as you rotate. How well does each spinner replicate that?

Spinner Type Travel Edge / Rocker Feel Best For
Jerry's Metal (Platform) None — fixed Flat — no tilt Speed, posture, endurance drills
Spinboard (Plastic) Free-moving Minimal rocker Centering, weight placement
EDEA (Nylon Board) Free-moving Gentle rocker — closest to ice Edge control, realistic balance
Foot Disk (Metal) Minimal None Precision centering, one-foot drills
Elite (Composite) Variable Custom rocker — high realism Competitive precision, advanced drills

Coaches generally agree: free-moving spinners (Spinboard/EDEA) best mimic real on-ice spin sensation. Fixed platforms (Jerry's/Elite) excel at pure speed and posture training, but they skew edge dynamics by removing travel. The takeaway: use both types for the most complete training.

Durability vs Portability

Spinner Durability Portability Surface Compatibility
Jerry's Metal Decades — oil bearings periodically Heavy; bulky Any surface including carpet
Spinboard Plastic wears over time Light; bag-friendly Smooth hard surfaces only
EDEA Resilient nylon Clips to bag; moderate weight Smooth surfaces (slides on hardwood)
Foot Disk Metal alloy — very long-lasting Pocket-sized Any hard surface
Elite Composite — durable Thin but rigid Smooth hard surfaces

💡 Floor Protection Tip

Board spinners and foot disks can scuff hardwood or tile over time. A yoga mat or thin foam pad underneath protects your floors while still allowing the spinner to move freely. Jerry's platform style generally won't scratch thanks to its non-slip rubber base.

Quick Pick Guide by Level

🌱 Beginner

Start with a Spinboard ($15–30) or EDEA Spinner ($30–50). Either one teaches you to center your weight and feel the rotation. The Spinboard is cheaper; the EDEA feels closer to ice. You can't go wrong with either as your first spinner.

⬆️ Intermediate

Add a Jerry's Metal Spinner ($40–60) for speed and posture drills alongside your board spinner. If you want to challenge your centering, try a foot disk ($10–25). Two spinners that train different things is better than one expensive spinner.

🏆 Advanced / Competitive

Combine all three: board for realism, platform for speed, foot disk for precision. Consider an Elite spinner ($500–700) only if your coach recommends it and you're competing at a level where the marginal gains justify the investment.

🎯 The Forum Consensus

The skating community is split on which single spinner is "best" — but the consensus is clear: own two. A board for realism and balance, and a fixed platform for speed and endurance. No gadget replaces real ice practice, but combining tools gives you the most complete off-ice training.

Shop Spinners at Adults Skate Too

Find your match — from entry-level boards to Jerry's platform and everything in between.

Leave a comment

Please note: comments must be approved before they are published.