The Enhance MPP Turbo is the lively, springy sibling to the EPP Turbo. Featuring a microcellular polypropylene (MPP) foam core, it delivers a hollow, "thonky" response with sharper feedback and stronger pop. At $99.99 with code PRH, it's one of the most aggressive budget paddles of 2026 — but the livelier feel won't be for everyone.
The Verdict
Hollow MPP pop at a budget price.
The first counter-punch I hit with this paddle came back faster than I expected, which says everything about how it plays. After thorough on-court evaluation, the Enhance MPP Turbo Elongated landed in the elite of the paddles we tested in 2026.
If you're comparing it against other foam-core paddles, it's one of several great foam core paddles we've played this year.
Specs
| Overall Score | 9.1 / 10 |
| Price (with code) | $99.99 with code PRH |
| Stock Price | $119.99 |
| Shape | Elongated |
| Thickness | 16mm |
| Core | Full Floating MPP Foam + EVA Perimeter Ring |
| Face | CFC Layup (Carbon-Fiberglass-Carbon) with Raw T700 Grit |
| Weight | 7.9 oz |
| Grip Length | 5.7" |
| Swing Weight | 116–118 |
Performance Scores
On-Court Feel
The MPP Turbo plays with a noticeably different personality than the EPP. The microcellular foam creates a hollow "thonk" sound on contact and a more elastic, trampoline-like response. Counter-punches and speed-ups feel electric — the ball jumps off the face with less effort than the EPP version. The trade-off is real though: resets and dinks require cleaner timing because the lively response can send shots long. If your soft game isn't dialed in, the MPP will expose it. For aggressive baseline drivers and counter-punchers, this is a budget paddle that genuinely competes with $200+ alternatives.
Performance & Testing
The Enhance MPP Turbo Elongated went through our standard on-court protocol - drills, rec play, and at least one tournament match. Scores reflect consensus feedback, not a single reviewer's opinion.
Grit & Durability
Same raw T700 carbon fiber peel-ply surface as the EPP Turbo. Standard grit performance for the price tier — solid initial bite that wears at a normal rate. Not a long-lasting grit paddle, but no worse than competitors at this price. The 1-year warranty and 14-day trial provide a strong safety net.
Who It's For
Aggressive baseline players who win points with pace, players who love the hollow trampoline feel of premium foam paddles, and counter-punchers who thrive in fast hands battles. Skip if you rely heavily on touch and resets, prefer a more muted, planted feel (the EPP Turbo is better for that), or play on lifetime balls that already feel poppy.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Elite pop and energy return for $99.99
- Sharp, crisp feedback on contact
- Strong spin generation (~2,260 RPM)
- Excellent value vs $200+ MPP alternatives like the Luzz Pro 4 Inferno
- 14-day trial period plus 1-year warranty
Cons
- Less forgiving than the EPP — off-center resets fly long
- Hollow "thonk" sound is polarizing
- Elongated shape only (no hybrid or widebody)
- Standard raw carbon grit — not long-lasting tech
- Sells out faster than the EPP version
Bottom Line
Lively MPP foam pop at a budget price — the right pick if you love hollow-feel paddles and play to attack.
If counter-punching is your game and you don't want to drop $200+ on a Luzz Pro 4 Inferno, the MPP Turbo is the closest budget alternative.
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