Verdict
Head-to-head · Best Power Racks for Home Gym

Force USA MyRack vs REP Fitness PR-4000

Which is the better buy? Side-by-side on rating, price, strengths, and watch-outs — with the published ratings we averaged to get there.

The short answer

REP Fitness PR-4000 comes out ahead by a clear margin (4.2 vs 4.7). The gap is mostly about Serious home-gym builders who want a configurable 3x3 commercial-grade rack and a long-term attachment ecosystem without paying Rogue prices. — read the strengths below before deciding.

Force USA MyRack
Ranked #5 in Best Power Racks for Home Gym
Force USA MyRack
$399as of Jun 8

The Force USA MyRack is a modular budget rack that crams an enormous attachment ecosystem, including lat pulldowns and cable crossovers, into a low starting price. It uses 12-gauge steel with proprietary 2.4-inch uprights and claims a high static weight rating, with Westside-style spacing across 54 adjustment points. Reviewers praise the value and versatility but flag the thinner steel, proprietary uprights that limit third-party accessories, and middling attachment-material and powder-coat quality.

Strengths
  • Huge modular attachment ecosystem including cable work
  • Low starting price around $399
  • Westside-style spacing with 54 adjustment points front and back
Watch-outs
  • 12-gauge steel is thinner than the 11-gauge competition
  • Proprietary 2.4-inch uprights limit third-party attachments
  • Attachment materials and powder coat prone to wear
REP Fitness PR-4000
Higher ratedRanked #1 in Best Power Racks for Home Gym
REP Fitness PR-4000
$800as of Jun 8

The REP Fitness PR-4000 is the home-gym value benchmark: 3x3-inch 11-gauge steel, a 1,000-pound rackable capacity, Westside hole spacing, and a deep ecosystem of more than ten attachments, all starting around $621. Reviewers from Garage Gym Reviews and BarBend consistently frame it as matching or beating racks costing far more. It is fully configurable through REP's rack builder, with 80- or 93-inch heights and four depth options, making it the centerpiece most builders should default to.

Strengths
  • 3x3-inch 11-gauge steel with a 1,000 lb rackable capacity
  • Westside (1-inch bench-zone) hole spacing with laser-cut numbers
  • Fully configurable height, depth, and post count via rack builder
Watch-outs
  • Upright numbers are printed on the front only, complicating rear safety setup
  • Cable-attachment D-handles lack knurling for grip
  • Configurations can balloon in price as attachments are added

How they stack up

Force USA MyRack

The only rack here with a built-in cable ecosystem, but built from thinner 12-gauge steel than the 11-gauge REP PR-4000, Rogue R-3, and Titan T-3. Its proprietary 2.4-inch uprights split the difference between the 2x2 REP PR-1100 and the 3x3 PR-4000, while limiting third-party accessory compatibility.

REP Fitness PR-4000

Uses the same 3x3-inch 11-gauge steel and 1,000 lb capacity as the Rogue R-3 but at a lower price with a deeper attachment ecosystem. Far more rack than the budget REP PR-1100 (2x2, 14-gauge) and the Titan T-3, and built from thicker steel than the 12-gauge Force USA MyRack.

Specs side-by-side

SpecForce USA MyRackREP Fitness PR-4000
Weight CapacityUp to 2,000 lbs static1,000 lbs rackable
Material12-gauge steel3x3-inch 11-gauge steel
Uprights2.4 x 2.4-inch (proprietary)
Hole SpacingWestside, 54 pointsWestside (1-inch bench zone)
Footprint87" H x 47" W x 55" D47" W x 23-41" D, 80" or 93" H
Attachments20+ including cable crossover10+ (Ares cable, lat, dip, landmine)
WarrantyLifetime structuralLimited lifetime frame
Posts4 or 6
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