Mcombo 7890 Dual-Motor Lift Recliner vs Esright Power Lift Recliner
Updated July 2026
We may earn a commission when you buy through links on this page — it never affects our scores or picks. How we make money.
Quick Winner: Mcombo 7890 Dual-Motor Lift Recliner
The budget battle: for about $220 more, the Mcombo adds a second motor, a longer warranty that covers upholstery, and a better build — the smarter budget buy over the rock-bottom Esright.
Score comparison
Specifications
Mcombo 7890 Dual-Motor Lift Recliner
- Weight capacity
- 350 lbs
- Motors
- Dual motor, independent backrest/footrest; recline up to 165°
- Lift-assist
- Lift-from-prone HOME button (~16 sec)
- Heat/massage
- 8 vibration points + lumbar heat
- Amenities
- USB + USB-C ports, extended 4.7" footrest, remote anti-fall tether
- Material
- Faux leather (fabric version also sold)
- Seat size (Medium)
- 22.1"W x 23.6"D; recommended user 5'3"–5'9"
- Warranty
- 2 years (lift/recline mechanism, frame, electronics, upholstery/cushions)
Esright Power Lift Recliner
- Weight capacity
- 320–350 lbs (model-dependent)
- Motor
- Single motor standard (dual on select SKUs), OKIN-branded
- Recline range
- 150°–170°
- Massage
- 8 vibration nodes, 5 modes, 2 intensities
- Heat
- 1 back heat zone
- Amenities
- USB + Type-C ports, side pockets, cup holders
- Material
- Faux leather, microfiber, or linen
- Warranty
- 1 year on lift motor and steel frame only (fabric not covered)
The verdict
These are the two budget Amazon lift recliners, and the extra money is worth it. The Esright (~$330) is the cheapest way into a powered lift chair — a single motor, recline, heat, and an 8-node massage — but it carries only a 1-year warranty on the motor and frame, a China-linked import brand with no dealer network or parts catalog, and recurring complaints of defective units and footrests that will not close. The Mcombo 7890 (~$550) costs about $220 more and answers with a second independent motor, a 2-year warranty that unusually covers the upholstery, an anti-fall remote tether, and a better-regarded build. Both are budget chairs with Amazon-only support, so neither is a decade-long device — but dollar for dollar the Mcombo is the more capable and more durable of the two. Buy the Esright only if $330 is a hard ceiling; otherwise stretch to the Mcombo.