Functional Trainer vs Separate Machines: What's Actually Better for Home Gym?

Functional Trainer vs Separate Machines: What's Actually Better for Home Gym?

Functional Trainer vs Separate Machines: What's Actually Better for Home Gym?

Last updated: April 2026 — A real cost and space comparison between buying a functional trainer rack versus separate machines for your home gym.

TL;DR: A VERVE Tori Functional Trainer Rack ($5,249) gives you a full power rack plus dual cable functional trainer in a single footprint. Buying a separate rack ($1,599) + standalone cable machine ($2,000-$4,000) + lat pulldown ($1,500-$3,000) costs more, takes up 2-3x the floor space, and gives you less exercise variety. For home gyms where space and budget efficiency matter, the Tori is the clear winner. The only scenario where separate machines win is a commercial gym with unlimited floor space and budget.

The Real Comparison: Tori FT Rack vs Separate Equipment

Let us do the honest maths. Here is what it would cost to replicate the Tori's functionality with separate pieces of equipment:

Option Equipment Cost Floor Space
Option A: Tori FT Rack Full power rack + dual cable functional trainer (all-in-one) $5,249 ~1.5 sqm
Option B: Separate Pieces Zen Power Rack ($1,599) + Standalone functional trainer ($3,000-$4,000) + Lat pulldown machine ($1,500-$3,000) $6,099-$8,599 ~4-5 sqm

Option A saves you $850-$3,350 and uses 60-70% less floor space. The maths is not close.

Space Comparison — Where It Really Matters

Most Australian home gyms are in single or double garages. A standard single garage is approximately 3m x 6m (18 sqm). A double garage is approximately 6m x 6m (36 sqm). Every square metre matters.

Equipment Approx. Footprint Clear Space Needed Total Space
VERVE Tori FT Rack 1230mm x 853mm ~2m x 2m (with clearance) ~4 sqm
Separate power rack ~1300mm x 1200mm ~2m x 2m ~4 sqm
Separate cable machine ~1000mm x 800mm ~1.5m x 2m ~3 sqm
Separate lat pulldown ~1200mm x 1000mm ~1.5m x 2m ~3 sqm
Total: Separate ~10 sqm
Total: Tori ~4 sqm

In a single garage gym, the difference between 4 sqm and 10 sqm is the difference between a functional gym and one where you cannot move between equipment.

Exercise Variety Comparison

The Tori Functional Trainer Rack combines:

  • Full power rack: Squats, bench press, overhead press, pull-ups, rack pulls, pin squats — every barbell movement, with sandwich J-hooks and safety straps
  • Dual adjustable cables: Face pulls, cable flyes, tricep pushdowns, cable rows, wood chops, pallof presses, cable curls, lateral raises — hundreds of cable exercises at any height
  • Lat pulldown / low row: High cable for pulldowns, low cable for rows — built into the same unit
  • Pull-up bar: Multi-grip pull-up bar included
  • Full attachment compatibility: Dip handles, lever arms, landmine, plate storage, band pegs — the entire VERVE 75x75mm attachment range works with the Tori

With separate machines, you get the same exercises but across three different pieces of equipment taking up three times the space. And separate machines typically do not share accessories or attachments — each is its own island.

When Separate Machines Actually Make Sense

To be fair, there are scenarios where buying separate equipment is the better choice:

Commercial gym with unlimited floor space: A dedicated functional trainer station plus a dedicated power rack section allows more members to train simultaneously. In a 500+ sqm gym, this is not a space constraint — it is a member flow decision.

Specialised training requirements: If you need a commercial-grade lat pulldown with 200kg+ capacity for elite athletes, a dedicated machine will outperform the cable function of any combo unit.

You already own a quality rack from another brand: If you have a non-VERVE rack that you love and does not have cable attachment options, a standalone functional trainer is your only option for cable work.

For the vast majority of home gym owners — the Tori is the smarter purchase.

The Upgrade Path Alternative

If $5,249 is too much upfront, VERVE's modular system lets you build toward the same endpoint gradually:

Phase Equipment Cost Running Total
Phase 1 Zen Power Rack + barbell + bench + plates ~$3,310 (Essentials Bundle) $3,310
Phase 2 Tori Cable Attachment $2,999 $6,309

Phase 1 gives you a complete barbell training setup. Phase 2 adds full cable functionality without replacing anything. Total cost is $6,309 (slightly more than the standalone Tori FT Rack at $5,249 because you are buying the rack separately), but you spread the investment over time and can start training immediately.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is a functional trainer as good as dedicated machines?
For home gym use, yes. The Tori's dual 150kg weight stacks (75kg working per side at 2:1 ratio) provide more than enough resistance for any home gym application. A dedicated commercial lat pulldown with a 200kg+ stack will provide more resistance at the top end, but for 99% of home gym users, 75kg per side is more than you will ever need.
Q: Does the cable quality on a functional trainer match a standalone cable machine?
The Tori uses the same cable, pulley, and weight stack construction as standalone commercial cable machines. The spring-loaded cable height adjustment pins allow quick repositioning. The 2:1 pulley ratio is standard across commercial functional trainers. Cable quality is not compromised by the integrated design.
Q: Can I squat and bench inside the Tori while using the cables?
Not simultaneously — the cables and the barbell work share the same interior space. But switching between cable work and barbell work takes seconds. In a superset-style workout, you can alternate between bench press and cable flyes with minimal transition time.
Q: What if I outgrow the Tori's weight stacks?
At 75kg working resistance per side, outgrowing the cable stacks is unlikely for most people. For reference, a 75kg cable chest fly is an extremely advanced load. If you do reach that limit on certain exercises, you can add resistance bands to the cables for additional load.
Q: Is the Tori available for low-ceiling spaces?
Yes. The standard Tori stands 2316mm tall. The Tori Short ($5,099) is 1950mm tall — designed specifically for garages and basements with low ceilings. Same specs, same weight stacks, just shorter uprights.
Q: How does the Tori compare to all-in-one machines from Force USA?
Force USA all-in-one machines combine a rack, cable system, and sometimes a Smith machine. The key differences: the Tori uses 75x75x3mm steel (heavier, more rigid), has separate dual 150kg weight stacks (not shared), and is compatible with the full VERVE attachment ecosystem. Force USA units are typically lighter construction and share a single weight stack between cable functions. The Tori is a more robust, commercial-grade solution.

One Machine. Every Exercise.

The VERVE Tori Functional Trainer Rack combines a full power rack with dual cable stacks in a single footprint. Less space, less money, more exercises.

View the Tori FT Rack