Pros
- Cheapest way into a powered lift recliner (~$330) with heat + 8-node massage and USB/Type-C
- Very quick no-tool assembly (~10–15 minutes)
- Quiet OKIN-branded motor praised by owners
- Widely available and returnable via Amazon
- Multiple upholstery/color options
Cons
- Weakest warranty in the category — 1 year, motor and frame only, claims filed through Amazon
- China-linked Amazon-import brand (Union Source Co.) with no dealer network or parts catalog
- Recurring complaints of defective units, bent/unfixable armrests, footrest not closing
- Padding/comfort and massage quality rated mediocre
- Storefront name has rotated (Esright/Erfect/AECOJOY), leaving thin accountability
Specifications
- 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)
Performance
For the price, the Esright covers the basics: a single OKIN-branded motor (dual on some SKUs) that lifts and reclines through 150°–170°, an 8-node vibration massage with five modes, a back heat zone, and USB plus Type-C ports. Owners praise the quiet motor and the quick, no-tool assembly. But the experience is a clear step below the Mcombo: the padding and massage quality are rated mediocre, and recurring complaints describe footrests that will not close and armrests that bend without a fix. It works, but it does not feel premium, and reliability is a coin-flip.
Build Quality
This is the weakest build in the guide, which the score reflects. The warranty is the tell: just 1 year, covering only the lift motor and steel frame, with fabric excluded and claims filed through Amazon. Esright is an Amazon-first import brand whose trademark traces to a Ningbo, China sourcing company, with no dealer network, no published parts catalog, and storefront names that have rotated (Esright/Erfect/AECOJOY) — thin accountability if something goes wrong. Reports of defective units shipped are common. Plan on a short ownership horizon.
Value Assessment
On upfront price the Esright wins — nothing here is cheaper for a powered lift recliner — and that is essentially its whole case. But value is not just sticker price: for about $220 more, the Mcombo 7890 adds a second motor, a longer 2-year warranty that covers upholstery, and a better-regarded build, which makes it the smarter budget spend for most people. The Esright only makes sense when $330 is a hard ceiling and the chair will see light use; stretch the budget at all and you do meaningfully better.
Who Should Buy It
Buyers on the tightest budget who need a powered lift recliner for light use and understand they are trading longevity and support for the lowest possible price.
Who Should Skip It
Anyone who can stretch to the Mcombo (a better build, longer warranty, and dual motor for ~$220 more), heavier or taller users, and anyone relying on the chair daily for genuine mobility — the 1-year warranty and thin support are real risks.
Final Recommendation
The Esright Power Lift Recliner is our Best Budget pick strictly on price: it is the cheapest route to a powered lift chair. But it is the weakest option here, and for most people the Mcombo 7890 is worth the modest step up. Buy the Esright only if $330 is the firm limit and your use will be light.