Eleiko Öppen Bar Review: The Trap Bar That Makes Strength Training Feel Effortless

There aren’t many pieces of equipment that change how you lift. Most are simply nicer versions of what already exists—better finishes, slightly improved knurling, maybe a prettier silhouette if you’re lucky. But every once in a while, something comes along that genuinely elevates the training experience.

The Eleiko Öppen Bar is one of those rare, intelligent upgrades that makes you wonder how we all settled for traditional trap bars for so long.

© Iron House Design

Jim and I test equipment constantly—partly because it’s our business, partly because we're both incredibly particular after decades in the fitness world. So when we both agree on something, and agree immediately, it’s worth paying attention. This bar impressed us within minutes.

The Open Design: A Trap Bar That Doesn’t Trap You

Traditional trap bars feel… well, trapping. Bulky, awkward, unforgiving, and often a nightmare to maneuver in both home gyms and commercial spaces.

The Eleiko Öppen Bar is the exact opposite.

The open-sided architecture instantly makes the bar more inviting—and more usable. Whether you’re stepping into a deadlift, lunging, carrying, or rowing, it never feels like you’re fighting the equipment. Instead, it adapts to you.

From a design standpoint, it’s beautiful. From a functional standpoint, it’s one of the smartest specialty bars on the market.

The Built-In Loading Jack: Eleiko’s Stroke of Genius

Let me say this plainly: once you use a trap bar with a loading jack, you will resent every bar that doesn’t have one.

Instead of tilting the bar onto a plate, shimmying it around, and risking a low-back twinge just to load the thing, the Eleiko Öppen Bar simply lifts itself. Positioning the bar on it rubber feet allows the plate holders to automatically be off the ground. You slide plates on and off effortlessly—no wrestling match required.

Jim actually laughed the first time he did this because of how obvious the solution is. It’s one of those “how did no one do this sooner?” innovations.

The rubber feet also stabilize the bar throughout the lift, keeping it balanced and smooth—something serious lifters appreciate the second they pick it up.

Handle Heights That Make Lifting Accessible for Everyone

Two handle heights, both clearly marked, give lifters flexibility depending on strength level, mobility, or training intent. The neutral grip keeps the shoulders and elbows aligned naturally, and the 28mm handle diameter feels comfortable for almost every hand size.

Jim’s take?
The higher handles are a game changer for anyone with limited hip mobility or lower-back sensitivity, while the lower handles still allow experienced lifters to train a true hinge pattern.

The 1.0 mild knurling is intentional—it gives grip without tearing skin. This matters for high-volume sessions or for people who want strength without calluses as souvenirs.

Versatility: One Tool, Endless Training Options

Because the bar is open, balanced, and not overly heavy, it broadens the training possibilities:

  • Deadlifts (both high and low handle)

  • Walking lunges

  • Farmer’s carries

  • Split stance deadlifts

  • Rows

  • Step-ups

  • Loaded holds

  • Overhead presses (yes, you actually can with this one)

For home gym owners—especially our Iron House clients—this matters. You get multiple high-value training modalities from a single premium piece.

Jim pointed out how smooth the transition feels between movements. Nothing wobbles, nothing shifts. That’s Eleiko’s engineering showing through the moment your hands touch the bar.

Swedish Craftsmanship: Precision You Can Feel

This bar is built in Eleiko’s Halmstad, Sweden facility, and the quality is unmistakable:

  • Chromed sleeves with over 12 inches of loadable space

  • Rigid 60 mm steel tubing for ideal weight distribution

  • Perfectly balanced frame

  • Five-year warranty

  • Over 1,100 lbs of max training capacity

Even with significant weight, the bar doesn’t flex unpredictably or tip. The lift feels centered and controlled—something that’s rare even among high-end trap bars.

Rack-Ready and Platform-Friendly

One of the biggest frustrations with specialty bars is that they often don’t play well with racks or platforms.

The Öppen Bar does.

It fits most racks comfortably, the plates land inside platform drop zones, and the width feels deliberate rather than clunky. For anyone building a luxury home gym where space and flow matter, this bar cooperates instead of complicating the design.

How It Feels to Lift: The Part That Actually Matters

From my perspective, the bar feels smooth, stable, and surprisingly light on its feet. It doesn’t rattle, doesn’t pitch forward, and doesn’t force you into awkward angles.

From Jim’s perspective—and this is where his 30+ years in performance matter—the Öppen Bar promotes a more efficient hip hinge, keeps the shoulders aligned, and encourages stronger leg drive without compromising form. He called it “a safer, smarter deadlift for 95% of lifters,” and I agree.

It’s the kind of bar that gives you confidence from the first rep.

Are There Downsides?

Only a few:

  • The price – It’s Eleiko. Premium engineering comes with a premium cost.

  • The knurling – Lifters who love aggressive, cheese-grater knurling may want something sharper.

  • Ruins you for other trap bars – Once you train with this, everything else feels prehistoric.

And honestly, that’s about it.

Final Verdict

A Best-in-Class Trap Bar for Lifters Who Want Longevity, Quality, and Ease

The Eleiko Öppen Bar is one of the best strength tools available today and one of the most thoughtfully engineered specialty bars we’ve ever tested. It’s versatile, beautifully constructed, easy to use, and genuinely enhances the lifting experience.

For home gym owners, designers, trainers, and serious lifters alike—this bar is an investment that pays dividends every single training session.

And yes, we both absolutely love it.

PENT Fitness Equipment: Our Honest Review of the World’s Most Luxurious Gym Line

The First Time I Saw PENT

The first time I saw PENT Fitness equipment, I remember thinking: This can’t possibly be real gym gear. It looked more like art—polished walnut, brushed steel, and leather so soft it belonged in a Bentley. But it was real, and I knew right then that if luxury design had a place in fitness, this was it.

Four images of Iron House home gym designs featuring PENT fitness equipment.

Iron House Home Gym Designs - All Featuring PENT Fitness Equipment

Since then, I’ve designed countless spaces using PENT—from private wellness suites to full gyms—and I can honestly say there’s nothing like it. It’s not just equipment. It’s craftsmanship, architecture, and sculpture rolled into one. Each piece is handmade in Poland, where PENT was founded in 2012, and every order feels custom because it usually is.

Design Worth Obsessing Over

PENT Fitness equipment doesn’t shout for attention; it quietly commands it. The dumbbells sit in perfectly aligned rows, their natural wood grain catching light like furniture in a luxury showroom. The Scala wall bars and Colmia Dumbbells are so beautiful that I’ve seen clients turn them into centerpieces—not just functional equipment.

There’s a calm precision to everything they make. You can tell that someone obsessed over every curve, every angle, every screw. And while most gym equipment looks out of place in a home, PENT looks designed for one. It integrates into interiors the same way a great piece of art or architecture does—with purpose and intention.

Where Beauty Meets Reality

Of course, no review is complete without a little honesty. Because for all that beauty, there are a few practical quirks that make PENT feel more like a fine European sports car—exquisite to own, but not without its nuances.

Let’s start with the benches. They’re stunning—solid wood frames, leather upholstery, and seamless finishes—but they don’t have wheels. And while that adds to the clean design, it also means moving one is a full-body workout. The adjustable bench, in particular, is very heavy. I design for a lot of women, and I can tell you firsthand—it’s not easy to move around without help.

Then there are the dumbbells. They go up to 50 pounds beautifully. Beyond that? Not so practical. PENT does make heavier sets, but I wouldn’t recommend them. Without knurling for grip, that much weight can become a safety issue. It’s not a flaw, just a matter of design priorities—beauty over brute force.

And finally, their balance trainer. It looks gorgeous, but it’s not meant to mimic a Bosu ball. It’s softer—more cushion than dome—and while it’s great for core work or rehabilitation, it doesn’t challenge stability the same way a traditional Bosu does. Think of it as refinement, not resistance.

The Verdict

PENT isn’t for everyone—and that’s exactly the point. This is equipment for those who view fitness as an extension of lifestyle. For those who want their gym to feel like a continuation of their home, not a disruption to it.

It’s not about performance at all costs; it’s about design that inspires performance. When you lift a PENT dumbbell or reach for a Lova kettlebell, there’s a kind of mindfulness to it. You move differently. You slow down. You treat your body—and your space—with a little more respect.

And that’s something I love about PENT. It real does make people fall in love with their workouts again.

Final Thoughts

If you’re building a luxury home gym, spa, or wellness studio, PENT will elevate it instantly. Yes, it’s an investment. But it’s also timeless. The pieces age beautifully, they photograph beautifully, and they make people feel something.

As a designer who’s spent years around every type of gym equipment on the market, I can say this: PENT isn’t just fitness equipment—it’s the new definition of wellness luxury. And they keep expanding their line regularly. If you haven’t already seen it, you should also check out their new pilates equipment and even their newest addition, a cable machine like no other.