Enhance MPP Turbo vs EPP Turbo
Last updated: April 28, 2026
Two $99 foam paddles. Very different feel.
Choose the Enhance MPP Turbo if you want maximum pop, spin, and a lively hollow response under $100. Choose the Enhance EPP Turbo if you want the calmer, more predictable foam paddle with better reset feel. Both are $99.99 with code PRH, but the MPP is the attacker and the EPP is the safer all-court budget pick.
How we tested
Every paddle we cover goes through the same on-court protocol - individual play, head-to-head comparisons, and tournament use before anything gets written down. Every paddle below has a full review on the site; click through to see scores, specs, and the deal we found for each.
The rankings
Each category below links to the full review for that paddle.
Compare the full reviews before you buy.
Use the review pages for full scores and specs, then check the deals page for any current codes.
The difference in one sentence
The MPP Turbo is springier, louder, and more explosive; the EPP Turbo is denser, calmer, and easier to control. That is the whole comparison. Both are elongated 16mm foam paddles, both use a CFC face layup with raw T700 grit, and both drop to $99.99 with code PRH.
Why MPP feels hotter
The MPP Turbo uses a full floating MPP foam core with an EVA perimeter ring. In our ratings, it scored 9.4 power, 9.6 pop, and 9.5 spin. That is elite output for a paddle under $100, and it is why the MPP is now our top budget pick.
The trade-off is touch. The same springy response that makes counters jump can make dinks and resets fly if your hands get tight. The MPP is not hard to play, but it is less forgiving emotionally: lazy contact gets exposed.
Why EPP feels safer
The EPP Turbo uses full floating EPP foam with an EVA perimeter ring. It scored lower on raw pop than the MPP, but it gives you a more planted response. Resets feel easier to absorb, blocks are less jumpy, and the sound is more of a deeper thock than a hollow thonk.
If you are moving from a traditional honeycomb paddle into foam for the first time, the EPP version is the easier transition. You still get power and spin, but the paddle does not feel like it is trying to launch every touch shot.
Spin and power
MPP wins the spec-sheet fight: 9.5 spin and roughly 2,260 RPM in our data compared with 9.1 spin and roughly 2,250 RPM for the EPP. That gap is not massive in RPM terms, but the MPP's livelier face makes spin shots feel more aggressive because the ball leaves faster.
For players who drive, counter, and speed up often, MPP is the better weapon. For players who win by extending rallies and waiting for a mistake, EPP is the better value.
Who should buy the MPP Turbo
- You want the most pop and spin possible under $100.
- You like a hollow, lively foam feel.
- You counter hard and speed up often.
- You are comfortable managing extra launch on resets.
Who should buy the EPP Turbo
- You want a budget foam paddle that feels more predictable.
- You care about resets and blocks as much as drives.
- You prefer a denser, more planted EPP response.
- You want premium foam construction without the liveliest trampoline feel.
Bottom line
Most aggressive players should buy the MPP Turbo. Most control-leaning budget buyers should buy the EPP Turbo. The price is the same, the discount code is the same, and the right answer comes down to how much launch you want from the paddle face.
Related guides
Before checkout, see if there is an active code.
We keep the discount page updated and clearly mark brands with no active PaddleReviewHub code.