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Best For: Parents who can find one in stock, wants the sewn-tight enclosure design at a kids-trampoline price

SkyBound Super 7ft Trampoline Review (2026)

Reviewed by PT Lab Team
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55 Fair

Limiting: Springs (55/100)

PT Score Breakdown

Frame
60
Limiting Springs
55
Mat
55
Enclosure
75
Warranty
55
Value
50
How we calculate PT Scores →

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Net sits on top of the safety pad with no gap, genuine safety design vs typical kids trampolines
  • Octagonal 84" diameter (3 arch frames, 6 bent steel poles)
  • Foam-padded enclosure poles
  • 36 x 5.5" springs with 6-stitch polypropylene mat
  • 2-year frame warranty (better than Little Tikes 90 days)
  • Indoor or outdoor capable, single-person ~1hr assembly

Cons

  • **Likely discontinued**, not on SkyBound's 2026 catalog. Finding stock is the problem
  • 105-110 lb weight limit (sources conflict)
  • Age range disputed: 3-10 per manufacturer vs up to 6 per PT conservative reading
  • No warranty coverage beyond the 2-year frame
  • PT page database price ($1, 300) is wrong, real MSRP was ~$150
  • PT Score widget on the live page shows 0/100 (technical bug, not actual score)

Full Review

Important: this trampoline is likely discontinued. The SkyBound Super 7 (ASIN B00A2XG0GS) has been listed on Amazon since 2013, and as of early 2026 it no longer appears in SkyBound’s official product catalog. SkyBound’s current lineup focuses on larger, higher-end models like the Stratos and SkySoar series. If you’re reading this because you’ve spotted one in stock somewhere, everything below still applies. If you’re shopping for a 7ft kids’ trampoline today and can’t find this model, skip to our alternatives section near the bottom.

One more thing to clear up immediately: some third-party sites list this trampoline at inflated prices. That price is wrong. The SkyBound Super 7 retailed at a budget price point when it was in production. It was always a budget-friendly kids’ trampoline, not a premium backyard system. If you see a listing well above what it originally retailed for you’re looking at inflated reseller pricing or a data error.

What SkyBound Got Right

SkyBound started in 2009 as a replacement parts supplier, fixing other brands’ trampolines out of a warehouse in Orange, California. By 2014, they’d pivoted into building their own. The Super 7 came from that transition period, and it carries some genuinely thoughtful design choices that reflect a company that spent years studying what breaks on trampolines and why.

The biggest selling point is the enclosure design. On most kids’ trampolines in this size range, the safety net attaches to the frame and leaves a visible gap between the net and the spring pad. Kids’ feet can slip into that gap. On the Super 7, the mesh enclosure sits directly on top of the safety pad with no space between them. A child bouncing off-centre hits padded netting before reaching any hard edge. For a budget trampoline from 2013, that’s a detail most competitors still don’t match.

Eight sides also work in the Super 7’s favour. An octagonal frame distributes bounce force more evenly than a hexagonal one, and the 84-inch diameter gives slightly more jumping surface than what most “7ft” round trampolines actually deliver. Round trampolines at this size tend to funnel bouncers toward the centre. Octagons are less aggressive about that.

Key Specifications

SpecificationDetail
ShapeOctagonal
Diameter84 inches (7ft)
Overall dimensions84″ H x 84″ W x 84″ D
Frame18-gauge steel with moulded plastic covers
Springs36 x 5.5 inches
Weight limit105-110 lbs (sources vary; treat 105 lbs as the safe figure)
Recommended age3-10 years (manufacturer). We’d say 3-6 conservatively.
Mat materialPolypropylene, 6-stitch
EnclosureMesh netting with zipper closure, sits on pad (no gap)
Pole system3 arch frames (6 bent steel poles), foam-padded
Product weight66 lbs
ColoursBlack, red, blue, yellow
Indoor/outdoorBoth
AssemblySingle person, under 1 hour
Warranty (frame)2 years
Warranty (other parts)None
Return policy30 days if defective
Original MSRPCheck current price
Current availabilityLikely discontinued

A note on the weight limit: SkyBound’s own documentation says 105 lbs in some places and 110 lbs in others. We’d treat 105 lbs as the working number unless you can verify the specific batch. For context, the average 10-year-old in the US weighs about 70-85 lbs, so most kids within the stated age range will be fine.

The PT Score Situation

Our PT Score widget for this product currently shows all zeros. That’s a technical issue on our end, not a reflection of the trampoline’s quality. Rather than wait for the fix, here’s our honest assessment in plain language.

18-gauge steel framing is standard for this price range but not exceptional. 36 springs at 5.5 inches produce a moderate bounce, adequate for kids under the weight limit but nothing that’ll impress a teenager. The 6-stitch polypropylene mat is solid for the price. The enclosure is the high point, and the 2-year frame warranty beats what most budget competitors offer.

Where it falls short: there’s no warranty coverage on anything except the frame. Springs, mat, padding, enclosure net, all of that is on you once the box is open. The 105 lb weight limit also puts it below several competitors in the same size bracket. And at 66 lbs, this thing is heavy for what it is. We’ve moved lighter 10ft trampolines. If you planned to shuffle it between the playroom and the garden on weekends, rethink that.

Who This Was Built For

  • Kids aged 3-6 who need a first trampoline with strong safety features. The no-gap enclosure and padded poles are well suited to younger bouncers.
  • Families who want indoor and outdoor flexibility. The 84-inch footprint fits in larger playrooms, and it handles outdoor use if stored properly during rain.
  • Parents who value safety engineering over brand prestige. SkyBound’s parts-supplier background shows in the enclosure design.

Who Should Look Elsewhere

  • Kids over 90 lbs or approaching the weight limit. The 105 lb cap is tight. If your child is growing quickly, they’ll age out within a year or two.
  • Anyone looking to buy this new in 2026. Stock is scarce to nonexistent. Don’t pay inflated reseller prices for a trampoline that retailed at a budget price point.
  • Families wanting a long warranty. Two years on the frame is decent, but zero coverage on springs, mat, and net is a gamble if something tears or wears out.

How It Compares to Current Alternatives

Since the Super 7 is difficult to find, here’s how it stacks up against models you can still buy today.

ModelShapeWeight LimitFramePrice (approx.)Key Difference
SkyBound Super 7Octagonal105-110 lbs18-gauge steel + plasticCheck current priceNo-gap enclosure, octagonal shape
Little Tikes 7ftRound105 lbsBlow-moulded plastic + steelCheck current priceOutdoor only, shoe storage, trusted brand
Bounce Pro 7ftHexagonal100-110 lbsGalvanised steel + plasticCheck current priceQuiet bounce, indoor/outdoor, good value
Upper Bounce 7.5ftRound150 lbsGalvanised powder-coated steelCheck current priceHigher weight limit, 42 springs, sturdier build
Skywalker 8ftRound175 lbs (ASTM)Galvanised steel, T-socketsCheck current price56 springs, patented no-gap enclosure, biggest capacity

The Skywalker 8ft deserves special attention here. It costs about the same as the Super 7 did, offers 175 lbs of capacity per ASTM testing, and includes its own patented no-gap enclosure system. If SkyBound’s enclosure design was the feature that caught your eye, the Skywalker delivers the same concept with a higher weight limit, more springs, and availability at every major retailer. It’s a foot larger in diameter, so check your space.

The Upper Bounce 7.5ft is the closest size match with a 150 lb weight limit and 42 springs instead of 36. If you want to stay in the 7-foot range, it’s the one to look at.

For younger children, the Bounce Pro 7ft offers a quiet, well-built hexagonal trampoline at a lower price point. We’ve reviewed it, and it remains one of the better budget picks in this category.

SkyBound in 2026

SkyBound has moved well past the Super 7 era. Their current lines start at 10ft and top out at 16ft, with frames rated to 1,000-1,320 lbs and prices across a wide range+. The SkySoar and Stratos Pro series both feature patented quick-assembly designs, and they’ve expanded into springless trampolines using bungee cord systems.

They don’t sell anything in the 7ft kids’ segment anymore. If you’re set on buying from SkyBound, their smallest current offering is a 10ft model. That’s a different product for a different buyer, but their build quality has come a long way from 2013.

Our Verdict

The SkyBound Super 7 had a genuinely clever enclosure, an octagonal frame that most brands don’t bother with at this size, and a 2-year warranty that outpaced the competition. SkyBound’s background as a parts supplier meant they understood where trampolines fail, and the Super 7 reflected that.

But in 2026, it’s the wrong trampoline to chase. Stock is gone or heavily marked up. The 105 lb weight limit sits below what the Skywalker 8ft and Upper Bounce 7.5ft offer at similar prices. And SkyBound themselves have moved on to larger, more capable designs.

If you’re shopping for a 7-8ft kids’ trampoline right now, the Skywalker 8ft is the pick we’d steer most families toward. For more options, browse our full trampolines for kids category or start with our best trampolines for kids and toddlers roundup. And whichever model you choose, read our trampoline safety guide before the first bounce.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the SkyBound Super 7ft trampoline still available to buy?

Probably not. The ASIN (B00A2XG0GS) dates to 2013, and the product no longer appears in SkyBound’s official catalog or their Amazon store. You might find leftover stock through third-party sellers, but expect inflated prices. The trampoline retailed at a budget price point so anything well above that is likely overpriced.

Why do some websites show this trampoline at inflated prices?

That’s a data error. The SkyBound Super 7 was always a budget kids’ trampoline priced at the budget tier. Some affiliate databases and price trackers have incorrect figures. The MSRP was never anywhere near four figures.

What’s the actual weight limit?

SkyBound’s documentation shows both 105 lbs and 110 lbs depending on the source. We recommend treating 105 lbs as the working limit. That’s enough for most children in the 3-8 age range but tight for larger kids approaching 10 years old.

Can it be used indoors?

Yes. The 84-inch (7ft) footprint fits in larger playrooms and basements, and the foam-padded poles reduce the risk of injury from pole contact. You’ll want at least 8 feet of ceiling clearance above the mat surface. At 66 lbs, it’s awkward to move frequently, so pick a spot and leave it there.

What makes the enclosure different from other trampolines?

The mesh safety net sits directly on top of the spring padding rather than attaching to the frame with a gap between them. On most competing trampolines, there’s a visible space between the net and the pad where a child’s foot or hand could slip through. The Super 7 eliminates that gap. Skywalker now offers a similar patented no-gap design on their current models.

What are the best alternatives if I can’t find this model?

The Skywalker 8ft Round (56 springs, 175 lb ASTM capacity, no-gap enclosure) is the strongest current alternative. The Upper Bounce 7.5ft (42 springs, 150 lb limit) stays closer in size. The Bounce Pro 7ft is the budget pick if you want to stay at the lowest price point. For the full selection, visit our trampolines for kids category.

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