Play Gyms
9 products
9 products
Movement is how children make sense of the world. Climbing, balancing, swinging, and pushing through resistance are not just play - they are the raw ingredients of physical confidence, body awareness, and the kind of focused energy that helps kids thrive at home, in school, and in therapy. Our sensory gym equipment collection brings together the best indoor play gym options across North America for families, educators, and occupational therapists who want active play to mean something.
From compact Canadian-made indoor playsets to commercial-grade balancing board systems and therapeutic motor tools, this collection is built around purposeful movement. LimiKids indoor play gyms fit inside a standard living room yet deliver a full range of climbing, swinging, and gross motor challenges that grow with your child. HABA Pro's birch wood balancing board sets bring commercial-grade vestibular and proprioceptive input to therapy rooms, gyms, and schools across North America. Southpaw's deep pressure tools - including the Steamroller Ramp and Platform Set and the Step Rocking Boat - provide the kind of heavy work and movement input that OTs reach for when supporting children who need more from their sensory diet.
This collection serves the full range of people who understand what great movement equipment can do. Parents building a home sensory gym will find pressure-mounted playsets that require no drilling and fit in a 3-by-3-foot footprint. Physical education teachers, occupational therapists, and special education staff will find commercial-calibre balancing paths and therapy platforms built for daily use. Anyone creating an active break space, sensory corner, or OT clinic outfitting for clients will find equipment selected with professional standards in mind. Neurodiverse children and neurotypical children alike benefit from the vestibular, proprioceptive, and gross motor input this equipment delivers.
The vestibular and proprioceptive systems work together to tell the brain where the body is in space and how much force it is using. When children climb, balance, swing, or push through resistance, they are feeding these systems the input they need to feel organised, calm, and ready to learn. Occupational therapists call this a sensory diet - a regular schedule of movement-based activities that keeps the nervous system regulated throughout the day. A well-chosen piece of indoor play gym equipment at home or in a therapy room is one of the most practical ways to support that regulation, whether the goal is building gross motor milestones, supporting sensory integration, or simply giving high-energy children a safe and purposeful outlet.