Comparisons · May 2026

Hill vs. Lloyd vs. Zenith: How the Big Three Chiropractic Table Brands Actually Compare

A straight-talking comparison of Hill, Lloyd, and Zenith chiropractic tables across price, warranty, drop mechanisms, and resale value — so you can stop second-guessing and sign.

Filed May 16, 2026 · 9 min read

A straight-talking comparison of Hill, Lloyd, and Zenith chiropractic tables across price, warranty, drop mechanisms, and resale value — so you can stop second-guessing and sign.

If you have ever stood in a vendor hall at a national chiropractic convention and felt genuinely paralyzed by three nearly identical-looking treatment tables — all padded, all chrome-trimmed, all staffed by reps who insist theirs is the best — you are not alone. A chiropractic adjustment table (also called a treatment table or drop table) is the central piece of equipment in any chiropractic clinic. It does far more than hold a patient: it enables the specific manual techniques a chiropractor uses to move joints, and the mechanical features built into the table directly affect how well those techniques can be delivered. For a student or a first-year practitioner, this is typically a $3,000–$8,000+ purchase you will use thousands of times per year for a decade or more. Getting it wrong is expensive in ways that don’t show up until month six.

This article puts the three longest-standing U.S. table manufacturers — Hill Laboratories, Lloyd Table Company, and Zenith Tables — side by side across the metrics that actually matter at the point of a real purchasing decision: flagship models, drop mechanism feel, warranty terms, parts availability, and the used-market math. There is a clean comparison block below and honest “if X, then Y” verdicts at the end.


What Separates These Three Brands (and Why It Matters Before You Read a Spec Sheet)

Hill, Lloyd, and Zenith are all legacy manufacturers — each with 60-plus years in production, all still making tables in North American facilities as of 2026, and all selling through authorized dealers rather than direct-to-Amazon volume channels. That shared profile is actually meaningful: it means parts availability and service networks exist in ways they simply do not for the wave of imported budget tables that entered the market in the 2010s.

But “legacy” is not a synonym for “interchangeable.” Each company built its reputation through a different technique ecosystem:

Understanding this history saves you from a trap: reading spec sheets in isolation. Two tables can have identical weight ratings, identical drop tension ranges, and differ completely in day-to-day clinical feel. The American Chiropractic Association’s patient-facing overview of chiropractic care (available at acatoday.org) documents the broad range of techniques in active clinical use — a useful reminder that no single table brand serves every technique equally well.


Flagship-to-Flagship: The Honest Spec Comparison

Quick Numbers Block

BrandFlagship ModelMSRP Range (2026)Weight CapacityHi-Lo Electric?Drop SectionsWarranty (frame / upholstery)
HillHylo 110$5,800–$7,400350 lbYesThoracic + PelvicLifetime frame / 1 yr upholstery
Lloyd402V$4,200–$5,600300 lbOptional addPelvic (standard)10 yr frame / 1 yr upholstery
Zenith440B$4,500–$6,100300 lbOptional addCervical + Thoracic + Pelvic5 yr frame / 1 yr upholstery

MSRP ranges reflect authorized dealer pricing as of Q2 2026. Final price varies by configuration, headpiece selection, and financing terms. Always request an itemized quote — “table price” often excludes the paper roll holder, face cushion, and arm rests that add $200–$400.

The Hill lifetime frame warranty is a genuine differentiator and not marketing noise. Frame failures on any of these three brands are rare, but if you are buying a used Hill Hylo from 2010, that warranty may transfer — confirm with Hill directly, as dealer policies vary. Lloyd’s 10-year frame warranty is still well above industry average for mid-tier competitors. Zenith’s 5-year is competitive but shorter; it reflects a lower entry price, not lower build quality.

Drop Mechanism Feel: The Thing No Spec Sheet Tells You

This deserves its own honest discussion. The drop mechanism on a chiropractic table works like this: a section (pelvic, thoracic, or cervical) is spring-loaded so it sits about a quarter-inch above flush. The practitioner sets the tension, then applies a thrust. The section drops flush, adding a small assistive movement to the adjustment. The “feel” comes from spring tension range, recoil noise, and how quickly the section resets.

If you can visit a distributor or a college technique lab before you buy, do it. Fifteen minutes of hands-on drop feel is worth more than any spec sheet.


Total Cost of Ownership: The Math Clinics Usually Skip

Purchase price is line one of a much longer equation. Here is what the full math looks like over a 7-year ownership window on a $5,500 mid-configuration table:

For a practitioner financing their first table and planning to upgrade in 5–7 years, the Hill’s resale strength can make a $7,000 purchase more financially defensible than a $4,500 Zenith — particularly when you run the depreciation math through a Section 179 lens. Chiropractic Economics covers practice startup equipment budgeting regularly; their annual income survey provides regional benchmarks worth reviewing before you finalize your budget.


Each entry below includes a direct product link for reference and price-checking. Note that Hill and Lloyd do not typically sell their flagship clinical tables through Amazon directly — the links below cover portable and entry-level models where these brands or close-equivalent products are listed, which is how most practitioners first interact with the product line. Full clinical tables should be purchased through authorized dealers.

Hill Laboratories Portable Chiropractic Table (Entry-Level / Student)

Lloyd-Style Portable Stationary Chiropractic Massage Table (Comparable Platform)

Zenith-Compatible Drop Table (Portable Drop-Piece Training Table)

Affiliate note: Links above use Amazon’s standard product pages. chiropractortable.com may earn a commission on qualifying purchases at no additional cost to you. For full clinical-grade Hill, Lloyd, and Zenith tables, contact an authorized dealer — Williams Healthcare, Cascade, or your state chiropractic association’s preferred vendor list are good starting points.


The Verdicts: If X, Then Y

You have read the comparison. Here is the direct opinion you came for:

If you trained in Thompson technique and plan to use it as your primary delivery method: Buy a Hill. The mechanism feel, the parts ecosystem, and the resale value all reinforce that choice. The Hylo 110 is the standard for a reason.

If you practice Gonstead or Cox flexion-distraction with a high volume of disc patients: Buy a Lloyd 402V. The stability, the pelvic drop tension control, and the used-market availability of this specific model make it the rational choice. A well-maintained used 402V at $2,200–$2,800 is one of the best values in clinical equipment full stop.

If you are a new grad opening a first clinic on a $15,000 total equipment budget, or you practice Diversified and trained on Zenith: Buy a Zenith 440B. You will be immediately productive, the price point gives you room to equip the rest of the room, and the drop feel will match your calibrated hands. Plan for the upholstery refresh at year four and factor in the lower resale if you intend to trade up.

If you are expanding to a second or third treatment room: Consider mixing. A Hill hi-lo in room one for elderly and post-surgical patients — the electric height adjustment is a genuine accessibility feature that state health department guidelines for clinical environments increasingly expect — and a Zenith or Lloyd in room two for your core adjustment work. Many established multi-doc practices run exactly this configuration.

The best table is the one that disappears under your hands and lets you focus on the patient. According to Palmer College of Chiropractic’s technique curriculum, students rotate through multiple table platforms precisely because technique and equipment are inseparable parts of the same clinical skill set. That insight does not expire when you graduate — it should drive every equipment decision you make.

Citations

  1. American Chiropractic Association — 'What is Chiropractic' patient overview (acatoday.org, retrieved 2026)
  2. Palmer College of Chiropractic — Technique curriculum resources
  3. Chiropractic Economics — equipment coverage and buyer guides
  4. IRS Publication 946 — How to Depreciate Property (Section 179)