Skip to main content

TikTok fitness buffs are buzzing about vibration plates — What are the benefits?

How do vibration plates work? Are there benefits to this futuristic-looking workout?

an blue sneakers on vibration plate working out indoors at home
Marekuliasz / Shutterstock

Vibration plates are shaking up the internet as people find fun and creative ways to work out and get muscles moving. These futuristic plates look like they belong on the Jetsons as some TikTokers stand on the vibrating platform while others attempt challenging poses like squats and push-ups. TikTokers and fitness enthusiasts claim they’re losing pounds and cellulite as well as toning muscles. So, what are the benefits of vibration plates? Is it worth incorporating into your workout schedule?

How do vibration plates work?

vibration plates machines in a gym
Vander Wolf Images / Shutterstock

A vibration plate is a platform you stand, lie, or sit on. You can find them at gyms or physical therapy centers or purchase one to use at home. Most platforms are big enough to stand on with handles you can hold on to for stability. Some people perform exercises on the vibration machines and use resistance bands and weights. The platform vibrates and transmits energy to your body, which forces your muscles to contract and relax numerous times each second.

Recommended Videos

What are the benefits of vibration plates?

Man balancing on hand exercising on grass outside
Bojan / Adobe

Many orthopedic sports medicine physicians and fitness professionals believe we need more scientific evidence regarding the true effectiveness of vibration plates. It isn’t clear if it’s as beneficial as regular exercise. A healthy lifestyle always involves regular physical activity and a nutritionally-dense diet. That being said, moving your muscles and being active in some way is a positive move for your health. You might feel like you’re exerting yourself as your muscles contract and relax on the platform.

Here are some of the benefits of vibration plates:

  • Improve muscle strength
  • Help with weight loss (when you limit calories or consume an appropriate weight-loss diet)
  • Reduce back pain
  • Improve strength and balance in older adults
  • Help with rehabilitation and maintaining muscle tone without heavy impact.
  • Stimulate muscles in a different way.
  • Increase circulation.
  • Activate stabilizing muscles.

A study published in the Journal of Musculoskeletal and Neuronal Interactions showed that vibration plates resulted in significant fat loss. Other studies have shown that users gained muscle mass over 24 weeks and that the effects of the vibration plate were similar to those of moderate-intensity walking.

Developed for the astronauts

Nasa astronaut on the moon
Nasa / Unsplash

Scientists originally introduced vibration therapy to help astronauts. Studies revealed that astronauts who spent months in space stations lost 1 to 2% of bone each month. They regained this bone loss by standing on a lightly vibrating plate for about 10 to 20 minutes each day.

Should you add vibration plates to your workout routine?

woman leg resistance band on vibration plate machine
Miljan Zivkovic / Shutterstock

While more research is needed, and it isn’t clear if the vibration plates provide the same benefits as exercise, some evidence shows that they can improve muscle strength and help with weight loss. Most fitness trainers don’t recommend replacing exercise with the plates; instead, adding the plates to your training schedule. 

Vibration plates aren’t suitable for some people, such as those with recent injuries, blood clots, and blood clot disorders. If you’re unsure about trying a vibration plate, it’s best to ask your doctor or healthcare provider.

It’s up to you if you’d like to add this innovative creation to your workout routine. You could give it a try to mix it up a little or as an alternative to more strenuous physical activity on your ‘more tired’ days. You could stand on the plate for several minutes at the end of your workout. Before purchasing one, you might want to try one at your local gym to see if it’s the right choice for you. 

Topics
Steph Green
Steph Green is a content writer specializing in healthcare, wellness, and nutrition. With over ten years of experience, she…
Train like a martial artist with this low-intensity exercise with major fitness benefits
There's a good reason why martial artist training and traditional Chinese medicine incorporated this form of exercise
Bruce Lee shirtless outside fighting stance martial arts martial artist

From Bruce Lee to Jackie Chan and Jet Li, those who conquer some form of the martial arts can move with such agility, strength, and purpose. This level of athletic prowess requires a great deal of persistence and training. So, how do martial artists train? Some come up with their own styles, and others incorporate different types of training. Qigong is a low-intensity exercise that’s often used as part of martial arts training. Studies reveal this ancient system of physical exercise and meditation can reduce depression and anxiety, improve mood, boost the immune response, and more. Qigong is rising in popularity as people become interested in the many benefits of training like a martial artist.
What is Qigong?

With over 4,000 years of history in China, qigong is based on the principles of traditional Chinese medicine or TCM. ‘Qi’ is energy present in everyone’s body, and qi must flow throughout your body for you to feel your healthiest and your best. In TCM, if the qi becomes stuck or stagnant in a certain area of your body, illness can arise. 

Read more
A new fitness study reveals something great about ‘weekend warriors’
It turns out any exercise is better than no exercise at all
A man and a woman doing jumping jacks.

Your body was made to move. Exercise provides a range of health benefits, including feel-good endorphins, hormone release, and improved balance and posture. The American Heart Association recommends getting at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity every week or 75 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity per week, or a combination of both. Any exercise is better than no exercise at all. The question is: does it matter when you manage to fit those minutes into your schedule? Will you still get the benefits if you only work out on the weekends? Researchers shined a spotlight on this question and yielded interesting results.
The study

The study out of Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital was published in Circulation. The researchers assessed information on 89,573 individuals in the U.K. Biobank study. These individuals wore wrist accelerometers that recorded their total time spent at varying exercise intensities as well as their total physical activity over one week. 

Read more
Do you need to perform the full range of motion for muscle growth? What a new study says
How to grow muscle at the gym
man black hat blue t shirt overhead tricep extension with dumbbell in gym

You might think that you need to perform the full range of motion with each exercise to achieve the best outcome when it comes to muscle growth. The different exercises were specifically designed to take your muscles through the full range of motion, so it would seem that performing the full exercise as intended would be the way to see optimal muscle-boosting results. A new study compared the effects of long-length partial repetitions with full range of motion (ROM) resistance training on strength endurance and muscle growth, and the results might surprise you. Let’s take a look at the research.
What is a long-length partial rep?

Lengthened partial reps refer to half repetitions that you perform repeatedly at the part of the lift when your muscles are the most lengthened. For example, if you were performing a bicep curl, this would refer to the bottom half of the bicep curl, or if you were performing a squat, it would be the bottom half of the squat. The idea is to perform about 50% of the rep. That being said, this new study shows that performing 50% of the rep certainly doesn’t only generate 50% of the muscle-building results.
The study

Read more