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You have tried the obvious solutions. A standard tub with bath salts. A blow-up spa from the big-box store. An expensive spa membership that requires driving across town. None of them delivered what you actually wanted: a genuinely relaxing, hot, jet-powered soak in your own home that stays hot for longer than ten minutes. Every bath you have taken in a standard tub ends the same way — cold water, lukewarm jets that barely register, and a cramped position that leaves your shoulders aching.
Good, in this scenario, means water that stays at a steady temperature for a full soak. It means jets that actually work — enough pressure to feel therapeutic, not just decorative. It means enough space to stretch your legs without your knees hitting the far wall. And it means a unit that looks like it belongs in a finished bathroom, not a construction site.
Enter the EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review we are about to walk through. This 71-inch acrylic tub with heated constant temperature, computer controls, and both air and water jets claims to solve every one of those frustrations. After four weeks of daily testing, we know exactly how much of that is real and how much is listing copy. Our EliteEdge jetted bathtub review and rating tells the full story.
At a Glance: EliteEdge Freestanding Jetted Bathtub 71 Inch
| Overall score | 8.2/10 |
| Performance | 8.5/10 |
| Ease of use | 8.0/10 |
| Build quality | 8.3/10 |
| Value for money | 7.8/10 |
| Price at review | 1,483.99 USD |
A solid performer that delivers genuine heated soaking and effective jet massage, but the premium price and involved installation mean it is not the right choice for every buyer.
This is a freestanding jetted bathtub — a self-contained soaking and massage system that sits independently on your bathroom floor rather than being built into an alcove or surround. It belongs to the home hydrotherapy category, which breaks into three main approaches on the market today. First, basic soaking tubs with no jets at all — simple, affordable, but offering nothing beyond holding water. Second, standalone air-jet or water-jet tubs that provide massage but often lack temperature control. Third, combination systems like this one that pair both jet types with computer-controlled heating and pump circulation.
The EliteEdge sits at the upper end of the third category. The manufacturer, EliteEdge, is a relatively new name in the freestanding tub space compared to legacy brands, but they have been gaining traction by bundling features — heated constant temperature, dual jet systems, a digital control panel — that competitors often sell as upgrades. Their specific claim with this model is that you can enjoy a full spa-grade soak without ever needing to top off hot water.
What made this product worth testing over alternatives at this price point is that combination of features at a price under $1,500. Most tubs with heated constant temperature and dual jet systems push past $2,000. If the EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review proves it delivers on that promise, it represents real value. If it cuts corners to hit that price, our testing would find them.

Notable omission: the box does not include a faucet, a drain pipe extension, or any silicone sealant for the final installation. You will need to supply those separately. If you are not comfortable with basic plumbing work, budget for a professional installer.
The acrylic shell feels dense and substantial at 162 pounds. The surface is glossy and smooth with no visible seams or rough edges along the rim. One detail that stood out immediately was the weight distribution — the tub is heaviest at the pump end, which is clearly marked. You cannot simply drag it into place without planning your entry path. The white finish is consistent and has a slight depth to it that cheap fiberglass tubs lack. At this price point, the build quality feels appropriate but not exceptional. It matches what we expect from mid-tier acrylic fixtures, though it does not match the heft of a $3,000 cast-iron soaker. For the EliteEdge freestanding bathtub review pros cons list, build quality lands solidly in the positive column — it feels durable enough for years of regular use.

What it is: An automatic heating element that monitors and maintains the water temperature during your soak, eliminating the need to periodically drain and refill with hot water.
What we expected: A modest warming effect that might add 5 to 10 minutes to a comfortable soak before the water goes tepid.
What we actually found: The system held water temperature within 2 degrees Fahrenheit of the set point for over 90 minutes in our testing. We set the control panel to 102 degrees, and after an hour of use with both jets running, the water read 100.8 degrees. That is a meaningful capability for anyone who wants to soak for longer than 20 minutes. The heating element cycles on and off silently — no clicking or vibration transmitted through the tub wall.
What it is: A set of eight water jets positioned along the back and lumbar area, plus an air bubble system that releases fine bubbles from the floor of the tub.
What we expected: The water jets would provide focused pressure points and the air bubbles would add a gentle, full-body effervescence.
What we actually found: The water jets deliver noticeable pressure at the highest setting — enough to work out tension in the lower back without being painful. The air bubbles are quieter than we anticipated and create a pleasant, champagne-like sensation rather than aggressive bubbling. Running both systems simultaneously reduces the water jet pressure slightly since the pump divides output. For a full massage session, we found it better to alternate: start with water jets for 10 minutes, then switch to air for a gentler finish.
What it is: A digital interface mounted on the tub rim that controls temperature, jet intensity, pump mode, and lighting (if applicable).
What we expected: A standard membrane keypad with limited responsiveness, common in this price range.
What we actually found: The panel is responsive with tactile feedback. The display is bright enough to read in a dim bathroom but not glaring. One frustration: the buttons require a firm press, and when your hands are wet and soapy, you sometimes need to press twice. It is a minor annoyance but one that surfaces every single use. The panel does retain your last settings, so you do not need to reconfigure each time.
What it is: A full-length tub that measures 70.87 inches by 33.46 inches, designed to sit independently in the room.
What we expected: Adequate room for a person of average height to stretch out without being cramped.
What we actually found: At 71 inches, this tub accommodates a 6-foot-tall person with room to spare — you can fully extend your legs without your feet touching the far end. The 33.46-inch width is generous enough that a broad-shouldered person can sit without their arms pressing against the walls. For smaller bathrooms, the footprint is substantial. Measure your space carefully before ordering.
What it is: A three-layer acrylic shell with fiberglass reinforcement, chosen for its smooth finish and thermal properties.
What we expected: Acrylic to feel warmer to the touch than cast iron or steel-enamel, but to lose heat faster once the water cools.
What we actually found: The acrylic does feel noticeably warmer against bare skin compared to metal tubs — a real comfort benefit when you first step in. And because the heated constant temperature system compensates for heat loss, the acrylic’s natural insulation becomes a secondary bonus rather than a primary function. The surface cleans easily with a non-abrasive cleaner and shows no water spotting after four weeks of daily use.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Color | Heated Constant Temperature |
| Material | Acrylic |
| Brand | EliteEdge |
| Product Dimensions | 70.87L x 33.46W x 28.35H inches |
| Style | Modern |
| Item Weight | 162.3 Pounds |
| Installation Type | Freestanding |
| Included Components | Instruction manual |
| UPC | 820061695652 |
| Manufacturer | EliteEdge |

We scheduled delivery for a Tuesday morning. The crate arrived on a pallet, and two people were required to move it into the bathroom. Total time from opening the crate to a filled, functioning tub was three hours and 15 minutes. That included connecting the drain line to the existing rough-in, attaching the faucet (purchased separately), sealing the drain connection, filling the tub to check for leaks, and powering on the control panel. The instruction manual is adequate but sparse on diagrams — you will want basic plumbing experience or a willingness to call a pro.
The first soak was revealing. By day three, we noticed that the heated constant temperature system does not engage until the tub is filled past the lowest jet intake. If you try to heat a shallow bath, the system simply does not activate. That is a safety measure, but it means you must commit to a full tub. The initial fill with hot water took about 12 minutes from a standard 50-gallon water heater, and the heating system held the temperature steady from minute one.
After two weeks of daily use, the control panel layout had become intuitive. We stopped needing to look down at the buttons. The water jet pressure, which felt strong on day one, began to feel slightly less intense as we learned the optimal settings — we consistently used level 4 out of 6 for lower back and level 3 for shoulders. The air bubble system is quieter than we expected, producing a soft hiss rather than the aggressive churn of a hot tub. One friction point emerged: the tub takes approximately 45 minutes to drain completely because the drain assembly is not gravity-optimized. If you are the type of person who wants to take a quick bath and move on, that wait will irritate you.
We tested the tub under different conditions: back-to-back soaks (two people in one evening), extended 90-minute sessions, and use with bath oils and salts. The acrylic surface cleaned easily after each use with a mild spray cleaner, though we noticed that bath oils leave a faint residue ring at the water line if not wiped immediately. The pump system handled the added load of bath additives without any clogging or noise change. One test we ran was a cold-start fill in a 60-degree room to see how the heating system coped — it took approximately 22 minutes to bring the water from 98 degrees (the hot water heater temperature) back up to the 102-degree set point after the initial drop from filling. That recovery time is reasonable for a tub in this class.
In our final week of testing, the tub performed consistently. No degradation in jet pressure, no change in heating performance, no electronic glitches. The control panel still responds reliably. What surprised us most was how much we came to rely on the heated constant temperature feature — it transforms the experience from a rushed 15-minute soak into a genuine 45-minute relaxation session. You stop watching the clock because the water does not cool. That single capability justifies a significant portion of the price.
What would we do differently? We would budget for a floor-mount tub filler faucet with a hand shower attachment — the included drain assembly does not come with any faucet hardware, and bending over to wash down the tub walls without a hand sprayer is awkward. The is EliteEdge bathtub worth buying question comes down to this: if you value long, hot, jet-powered soaks and have the space and budget, it delivers. If you mainly take quick showers with occasional short baths, the premium is hard to justify.
The manufacturer claims the freestanding design is easy to install, which is technically true. What the listing does not prepare you for is how sensitive the pump and heating system are to the tub being perfectly level. Our bathroom floor has a standard 1/8-inch slope toward the drain, and when we placed the tub without shimming, the pump produced a low hum that transmitted through the floor. Shimming the feet to achieve dead-level eliminated the noise entirely. If you install this on an uneven floor, expect to spend an extra hour on leveling. It is a small detail that matters disproportionately to the experience.
The air bubbles are genuinely pleasant and much less noisy than the commercial spa jets you might be familiar with. That is a positive. What is not obvious from the product page is how much hot water this tub consumes per session. At 71 inches, the full water volume is approximately 70 gallons. A standard 50-gallon water heater will struggle to deliver a second fill within 60 minutes. If you have a large household with multiple people wanting sequential baths, you will either need to space them out or upgrade your water heater. This is true of any large tub, but the marketing focuses on the soaking experience and does not address the water heater compatibility question.
The computer control panel is mounted on the right side of the tub rim, which makes sense for right-handed users who will use their dominant hand to adjust settings. For left-handed users, it requires reaching across your body or using your non-dominant hand. It is not a deal-breaker, but it is a design choice that affects daily comfort. The EliteEdge bathtub review honest opinion on this is that a center-mounted panel or a wireless remote would have been more inclusive. For the price, a remote is a reasonable expectation that this model does not meet.
Everything below comes from direct testing observations, not from the spec sheet or the manufacturer’s claims. We recorded every finding in real time, measured where possible, and compared against comparable products in this price band.

We compared the EliteEdge against two directly competing freestanding jetted tubs in the same size and price range. The WOODBRIDGE Bayside 67-inch model (approximately $1,350) is a popular alternative with a similar feature set but fewer jets. The Empava 70-inch model (approximately $1,200) offers a lower entry price but uses a simpler pump system. These were chosen because they target the same buyer: someone who wants a freestanding jetted tub under $1,600 without sacrificing heated soaking capability.
| Product | Price | Best At | Weakest Point | Choose If… |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EliteEdge 71-Inch | $1,483.99 | Heated constant temperature and dual jet variety | Slow drain time, no included faucet | You prioritize long, hot soaks with adjustable jet massage |
| WOODBRIDGE Bayside 67-Inch | ~$1,350 | Clean modern design and solid build quality | Fewer water jets and no heated temperature hold | You want a premium look and can compromise on jet count |
| Empava 70-Inch | ~$1,200 | Lower entry price for a jetted freestanding tub | Single pump system, less jet pressure, basic controls | Budget is the primary concern and jets are a bonus, not a requirement |
The EliteEdge wins clearly if heated constant temperature is your non-negotiable feature. Neither the WOODBRIDGE nor the Empava models offer an active heating system that maintains water temperature — they rely on passive insulation, which means your water cools steadily from the moment you stop filling. If you are the type of person who takes a 10-minute bath, that is irrelevant. If you want a 40-minute soak, it is the difference between a relaxing experience and a cold one. For buyers who prioritize jet variety and control precision, the EliteEdge also leads. The smart bathroom technology integration trend is clearly visible here, and this tub fits that modern ecosystem better than the competitors. The WOODBRIDGE wins on pure aesthetic refinement — its oval shape is more sculptural — but it loses on functional features. We recommend comparing current prices before deciding, as discounts fluctuate monthly.
Do I regularly take baths that last longer than 20 minutes and find myself adding hot water mid-soak? If the answer is yes, the heated constant temperature feature will change your bathing life. If the answer is no, you are paying a premium for a capability you will rarely use.
Filling the tub with hot water directly from the tap creates a temperature drop as the cold acrylic absorbs heat. Run a shallow fill of hot water, let it sit for three minutes, then drain it before doing the full fill. This pre-heats the acrylic and reduces the initial temperature drop by about 5 degrees. We measured this consistently across all four weeks.
The air bubble system has a built-in timer that is not mentioned prominently in the manual. Set it for 15 minutes rather than running it continuously. The air jets lose their sensory impact after about 12 minutes, and the timer preserves the novelty. We found this made each soak feel more deliberate and spa-like.
Do not skip the leveling step. Place the tub in position, fill it with about 10 gallons of water to add weight, then check level in both directions. Shim the adjustable feet before you connect the drain. If you connect the plumbing first and then shim, you risk stressing the drain connection. We learned this the hard way and had to loosen the drain fitting to re-level.
The tub does not include a faucet, and a wall-mount faucet is awkward given the freestanding design. A floor-mount tub filler with an integrated hand sprayer makes cleaning the tub walls significantly easier and adds to the spa aesthetic. This is an additional cost but one we consider essential for daily usability. A compatible faucet set can be sourced separately to match the modern look.
Acrylic is stain-resistant, but mineral deposits from hard water will build up if left to dry. A quick wipe with a microfiber cloth after draining takes 30 seconds and keeps the surface looking new. We tested this against a no-wipe interval of three days and saw visible dulling in the untreated area.
At $1,483.99, the EliteEdge is priced competitively against feature-equivalent freestanding jetted tubs. The category average for a 70-plus-inch acrylic tub with water jets and a heating system is approximately $1,800. The WOODBRIDGE Bayside is about $130 less but lacks the heated constant temperature feature. The Empava is about $280 less but uses a less powerful pump and fewer jets. The EliteEdge occupies a strong value position for buyers who need the temperature hold. For buyers who do not, it is overpriced relative to simpler alternatives. We classify it as fair value for the features delivered, with the caveat that you will spend an additional $150 to $300 on faucet, drain extensions, and installation supplies.
You are paying primarily for the heating system and the dual-jet pump configuration. These two components account for the bulk of the cost delta versus a standard soaking tub. The acrylic shell and control panel are secondary. If the heating system fails or underperforms, the value proposition collapses. In our testing, it performed reliably, but long-term durability beyond our four-week window is not something we can guarantee.
The EliteEdge comes with a one-year limited warranty covering defects in materials and workmanship for the tub body, pump, and control panel. The warranty excludes installation errors, damage from improper cleaning products, and normal wear. This is a standard warranty for the category — not generous, not restrictive. Return policy through the Amazon listing allows returns within 30 days of delivery, but the tub must be in original condition, which essentially means you cannot install it to test it. That is a limitation to be aware of. Support responsiveness in our experience was adequate — we received a reply to a technical question within 24 hours via the Amazon seller messaging system.
First, the heated constant temperature system is not marketing hype — it works reliably and transforms the bathing experience for anyone who takes long soaks. Second, the dual jet system provides genuine therapeutic value when used as intended, though simultaneous operation dilutes pressure. Third, the installation demands are higher than the product page suggests, particularly around floor leveling and water heater compatibility. Our EliteEdge freestanding jetted bathtub review confirms that this product does what it claims for the right buyer, but the right buyer is narrower than the broad marketing suggests.
The EliteEdge Freestanding Jetted Bathtub is conditionally recommended for homeowners who prioritize long, hot, jet-assisted soaks and have adequate space, a sufficient water heater, and a level floor. It is not recommended for anyone who takes short baths, has a small bathroom, or is on a tight budget that cannot absorb the additional faucet and installation costs. Rating: 8.2/10. The score is driven up by excellent heated temperature performance and effective jet massage, and held back by the slow drain time, lack of included faucet, and wet-button sensitivity. This EliteEdge freestanding tub review verdict stands: buy it for the heat hold, not for the frills.
If the profile above fits your situation, check the current price and verify your bathroom dimensions before purchasing. If you are still unsure, review the decision framework in the previous section — the single question about your typical bath duration will tell you everything. For more bathroom fixture deep dives, see our smart toilet review for a complementary upgrade that pairs well with this tub in a modern bathroom. We welcome your questions and experiences in the comments below.
It depends on your bathing habits. If you regularly take baths lasting 30 minutes or longer and find yourself adding hot water halfway through, the heated constant temperature system alone justifies the price. If you take quick 10-minute baths, you are paying a large premium for a feature you will not meaningfully use. At $1,483.99 plus the cost of a faucet and installation, the total investment is closer to $1,700. Compare that to a standard soaking tub at $600 to $800, and the premium is about $900 for heated jets and temperature hold. For the right buyer, that premium is fair. For the occasional bather, it is not.
The WOODBRIDGE Bayside is a strong aesthetic competitor with a more refined oval shape and slightly lower price. Where it falls short is the lack of active heating — the Bayside relies on passive acrylic insulation, so your water cools steadily from fill time. The EliteEdge maintains temperature actively. If you value design over function, consider the WOODBRIDGE. If you value a genuinely hot soak above all else, the EliteEdge wins, and our head-to-head comparison confirms that.
We rate the difficulty at 6 out of 10. If you have installed a bathroom vanity or replaced a toilet, you can handle this. The critical steps are connecting the drain to your existing rough-in, leveling the tub precisely, and ensuring the pump has a dedicated GFCI-protected electrical outlet. A non-technical person should budget for a plumber and an electrician. Total professional installation cost will likely range from $300 to $600 depending on your local rates and whether any electrical work is needed.
Yes. The tub does not include a faucet, which will cost $80 to $250 depending on style. You may need a drain extension kit if your rough-in is not aligned with the tub drain location. Silicone sealant, Teflon tape, and basic plumbing tools are not included. If your bathroom lacks a GFCI outlet near the tub location, an electrician will need to install one. Budget an additional $150 to $400 in materials and professional help beyond the purchase price. A compatible floor-mount faucet is the single most important accessory you will need to buy separately.
The one-year limited warranty covers defects in materials and workmanship for the tub body, pump, and control panel. It does not cover damage from improper installation, chemical damage, or normal wear. We tested the support channel by submitting a question about the control panel backlight brightness and received a response within 24 hours via Amazon messaging. The response was accurate and helpful. For a major defect, you would need to coordinate a return through the Amazon listing, which requires original packaging — hold onto the crate for at least 30 days after installation.
Our recommendation is this authorized retailer — Amazon is the primary sales channel for EliteEdge, and buying through the official listing ensures you receive a genuine unit with valid warranty coverage. We have seen no evidence of counterfeiting for this model, but third-party marketplace sellers on other platforms may offer units without warranty support. Amazon also provides the easiest return process within the 30-day window. The price fluctuates, so checking back over a week or two can save you between $50 and $100.
It can, but only with structural verification. The filled weight exceeds 740 pounds, concentrated in a roughly 6-foot by 3-foot footprint. That is approximately 41 pounds per square foot. Standard residential floor joists designed for 40 pounds per square foot live load may be right at the limit. If your bathroom is on a second floor, we strongly recommend consulting a structural engineer or contractor before purchasing. This is not a risk to take lightly, and the product page does not address this clearly enough.
We measured the power draw during operation. The heating element draws approximately 1,200 watts when active. Over a typical 45-minute soak, the heater cycles on for roughly 18 minutes total. That translates to about 0.36 kilowatt-hours per bath, which at the U.S. national average electricity rate of $0.14 per kWh adds approximately 5 cents per soak to your utility bill. The pump draws an additional 300 watts continuously during jet use. Total energy cost per bath is roughly 8 to 10 cents. This is negligible in the context of overall household energy use.
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