
Best boxing gloves in 2026
We compared the boxing gloves that make the most sense for Polish gym buyers: Everlast, Leone, RDX and the local DBX Bushido, StormCloud and Masters options.
This layer mirrors the product research logic of the Polish site: better guides, clearer comparisons and stronger decision support.

We compared the boxing gloves that make the most sense for Polish gym buyers: Everlast, Leone, RDX and the local DBX Bushido, StormCloud and Masters options.

We compared the most searched Everlast glove lines and checked which ones make sense for beginners, club training and premium buyers.

We picked women’s boxing gloves that truly fit smaller hands instead of relying on color alone to sell the idea.

We compared the kids’ boxing gloves that make sense for first classes, regular club use and more serious junior training.

We break down the RDX glove lines that matter in Poland: F4, F6, F7 and the women’s F6 version, plus local-market alternatives for context.

We compared shin guards for kickboxing and MMA: full-contact models, elastic entry options and the Polish-market picks that actually matter.

We compare full and elastic kickboxing shin guards so it is easier to match the type to technical classes, first contact and regular sparring.

We show which shin guards make sense at the start and when it still does not make sense to overspend on a heavy full-contact model.

We compare shin guards for MMA in the reality of Polish clubs, where striking and kicking often matter more than the class label suggests.

We check which kids’ shin guards make sense at the start and which ones are worth buying only once training becomes regular.

We explain how to choose boxing gloves based on body weight, training type and sparring volume so the ounce number actually means something.

We explain how to wrap your hands for boxing, when 4 m works, when 4.5 m is better and which wraps make sense for beginners and regular gym training.

We explain what kind of mouthguard makes sense for boxing, kickboxing and MMA, when a basic model is enough and when it makes sense to step up.

We compare boxing and kickboxing from a beginner’s perspective: differences in training, gear and how to enter a gym without overspending.

We break down the most important beginner boxing gear and show what is truly worth buying at the start versus what can wait.



The right sparring glove choice should never start with color or a random discount. First understand weight, padding profile and how hard you actually train.



In MMA one glove rarely does everything well. It is worth separating pad work, technical drilling and sparring needs from the start.

Shin guards are not just about thick foam. Stability on the leg, foot profile and behavior during repeated kicks matter just as much.


Bad smell in gloves or headgear is only the symptom. The real issue is trapped moisture and dirt that shorten gear lifespan and create poor hygiene.