[Equipment Guide] Best First Intermediate Table Tennis Rubbers in 2026: A Comprehensive List & Analysis

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Hello all,

In my first post in this forum last week I opened up the topic of why most amateurs (discussion established that those with active coaching and training are likely a nuanced exclusion) should avoid fast equipment and the reasons for that. You can find that topic here.

Since last time I talked about the problem, today I would like to talk about my personal opinion on the solution. As always with opinions, this is my educated opinion after countless hours of research, testing and seeing results in players at my club (where I coach an amateur group of about 30-40 players) and competitions. But if you have a different opinion, that's fine, please share it here and enrich the discussion. This is a fine line topic and there is plenty of grey space in between.

Now a couple guidelines before you get into it and share the post with you:
  1. This post is ONLY about upgrading beginner rubbers (i.e 729 FX, Xiom Intro) to the first intermediate rubbers. It's not about rubbers for high intermediate players or advanced players. That will be another blogpost for another time. So take that into account.
  2. This post is not intended to force anybody to change equipment or suggest that you should talk to me right away me to fix your gear. I always say, technique first. I have described this well in the blogpost I believe.
  3. Lastly, there are hundreds of rubbers out there. I have not tried them all, I'm a human with a normal life and job ;) so if you find something missing on the list, bring it up and I may update my list. Community makes content stronger.
Ok, all this said, here is the blogpost today: https://www.tabletennisequipmenthelp.com/blog/best-first-intermediate-table-tennis-rubbers

And as a summary on this community so you don't have to click on it.

Content sections TL,DR:

1. You should only upgrade beginner rubbers if you are forcing your technique to get more and you cannot. If this is not your case, stick to what you have
2. In order to truly understand rubbers we must go beyond hardness and thickness. We cannot analyse the secret chemical formulas but we can analyse their structure, namely pore size, wall thickness and pip size and distribution. Read the post to learn more about that.
3. When changing, please only change rubbers and keep your beginner blades. This is important to isolate changes and feel what new equipment does to us. It's also good for safety, you keep same blade feeling. And it's also good for control, your blade will keep on being the same, but the rubber will give you a bit more. Perfect to advance in a safe manner.
4. Forehand and backhand have different biomechanics so they need different gear catered to that. You can totally disagree here but this is proven science. Pros can do whatever they want as they are pros and they can bend the rules of physics, but most of us can benefit from a personalised FH/BH rubber.
5. The Rubbers I recommend for the first upgrade from beginner to intermediate are divided in categories to fit the player preference (some I will not mention here but are mentioned in the blogpost. I have purposefully kept the choices limited to help people choose and what I know works 100%. I believe too many options is where confusion starts. In the blogpost I explain why and the rubber structure of each piece of equipment. OK, here is my recommended list in 2026:
  1. FH Chinese: Hurricane Neo 3 39 Orange Sponge if you want/like boosting (keep it to 1 layer before you know what you do, better even, use unboosted first to get to know the feeling for it). Battle II Provincial Blue if not
  2. FH hybrid: Glayzer 09c or Big Dipper 5
  3. FH Tensor: Razka 7 or Rozena
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  1. BH Tensor: Xiom Vega Europe or Rozena
  2. BH Chinese/Hybrid: Hurricane 8-80 or 3-50 or H3 37 or Big Dipper 5

I hope you guys enjoy the content and I hope this will help people choose the correct gear and stop putting too much time and money into equipment. Technique and tactics is what matters, equipment just makes a part of that possible. Please discuss and share your experiences! All feedback and opinions are welcomed ❤️
 
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I wasn’t a fan of the Vega Europe.. For me it lacked grip, and I struggled to create spin. Moon 12 M+ is a very good BH rubber for developing IMO. Great grip, easy to use, no tensor effect but enough speed. And very inexpensive.

For FH: Tibhar Aurus. Can do everything well, no excessive tensor effect, cheap on Aliexpress. Durable.
 
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4. FH Tensor Nittaku Fastarc G1

3. BH Tensor Yinhe Moon 12 mid soft/mid hard
I did mention Fastarc indeed as option 4 in the tensor category, it's likely a bit too fast for a first beginner rubber but can work out.

Yinhe Moon 12 can work out too, I will add it as a budget option, I had Palio AK47 blue/yellow too there.

Thanks for the feedback!
 
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good post victormanriquey.

Since I play with Nittaku Fastarc G1 on BOTH sides (and love it) -

I would like to hear more about why do you think we need a different backhand rubber? what exact different qualities are you looking from a backhand specific rubber?
Thanks @Nash77 !

What blade do you have? I can then recommend what I would do in that case as the blade impacts the rubber choice a lot.

For the why on different FH/BH rubbers I mentioned in the blogpost, basically the body mechanics are different so the needs are different. The tl;dr is that with the forehand you can generate a lot of body power, so you don't need extra help, you need more control and not bottoming out too fast. Usually, a harder, tackier rubber can generate much more power on forehand if technique is correct. For backhand, since your body is in the way, the rubber needs to help you generate power. Unless you are FZD or JZK, we can all benefit for a bit of extra free speed and spin on BH :)
 
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Fastarc G1
Joola dynarz CMD
Rakza z
Rhyzen ZGR
Curl p1r
Battle 2
H8-80
I have tried Dynarz CMD and it gave me a lot of bounce, wouldn't you rather have Rhyzen Fire/Ice here @passifid ? For a first intermediate rubber? And for FH/BH in your experience? I'd say BH? Also, I have not tried Rhyzen ZGR, what is your experience there? Looks faster than Fire/Ice :)

I have Fastarc G1 on the list, together with Razka Z, Battle 2 and 8-80, they are all great choices, some a bit faster and a bit higher throwing so I mentioned to be careful with those.

For Curl p1r, I made the post only about inverted, but will consider it if I make an anti/pips post!

Thanks and let us know on the above!
 
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I wasn’t a fan of the Vega Europe.. For me it lacked grip, and I struggled to create spin. Moon 12 M+ is a very good BH rubber for developing IMO. Great grip, easy to use, no tensor effect but enough speed. And very inexpensive.

For FH: Tibhar Aurus. Can do everything well, no excessive tensor effect, cheap on Aliexpress. Durable.
It lacked grip due to humidity, contact point or overall? Moon 12 I will add to the list together with Palio AK47 :)

For the Aurus, I have not tried it, wouldn't you say (from what I can read now online about sponge data and structure) that is a bit too bouncy for the first intermediate rubber? :)

Thanks for the feedback!!!
 
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I have tried Dynarz CMD and it gave me a lot of bounce, wouldn't you rather have Rhyzen Fire/Ice here @passifid ? For a first intermediate rubber? And for FH/BH in your experience? I'd say BH? Also, I have not tried Rhyzen ZGR, what is your experience there? Looks faster than Fire/Ice :)

I have Fastarc G1 on the list, together with Razka Z, Battle 2 and 8-80, they are all great choices, some a bit faster and a bit higher throwing so I mentioned to be careful with those.

For Curl p1r, I made the post only about inverted, but will consider it if I make an anti/pips post!

Thanks and let us know on the above!
Rhyzen ZGR used to the best rubber for prime imo it's a bit slower than dynarz CMD but has a semi tacky top sheet it's awesome both sides.

CMD kinda is a bit fast for first intermediate rubber in between G1 and t19 but very spin insensitive which is nice could change to rhyzen CMD for a bit slower which is my first recommended rubber for a first serious bat. Much softer but extremely controlled and can still loop.

For intermediate I would argue all those rubbers other than b2 and p1r can be used either side to varying success
 
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Rhyzen ZGR used to the best rubber for prime imo it's a bit slower than dynarz CMD but has a semi tacky top sheet it's awesome both sides.

CMD kinda is a bit fast for first intermediate rubber in between G1 and t19 but very spin insensitive which is nice could change to rhyzen CMD for a bit slower which is my first recommended rubber for a first serious bat. Much softer but extremely controlled and can still loop.

For intermediate I would argue all those rubbers other than b2 and p1r can be used either side to varying success
I see thanks @passifid ! And then I wonder, why CMD instead of Rhyzen Fire/Ice? Since I feel that CMD was a bit bouncier than those and I'm unsure a first intermediate would enjoy that :) I will add any of them to the guide after you let me know, I already added Yinhe 12 Moon blue, that is a good addition.

About B2, yeah, I prefer H3N unboosted and I recommend that first for sure, it's better to get started, but some people don't like boosting. It's a pity though because with H3N boosted on forehand you can do all you need and fine tune it to your own liking. It's either boost at home yourself or factory boosting anyways.
 
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It lacked grip due to humidity, contact point or overall? Moon 12 I will add to the list together with Palio AK47 :)

For the Aurus, I have not tried it, wouldn't you say (from what I can read now online about sponge data and structure) that is a bit too bouncy for the first intermediate rubber? :)

Thanks for the feedback!!!
I tried it in the winter here in Norway, so the issue was certainly not humidity! A guy I know who also coaches beginners and intermediates tried it and agreed with my assessment.

Aurus.. Maybe a bit bouncy, but definitely not more than Rakza 7.
 
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Thanks @Nash77 !

What blade do you have? I can then recommend what I would do in that case as the blade impacts the rubber choice a lot.

For the why on different FH/BH rubbers I mentioned in the blogpost, basically the body mechanics are different so the needs are different. The tl;dr is that with the forehand you can generate a lot of body power, so you don't need extra help, you need more control and not bottoming out too fast. Usually, a harder, tackier rubber can generate much more power on forehand if technique is correct. For backhand, since your body is in the way, the rubber needs to help you generate power. Unless you are FZD or JZK, we can all benefit for a bit of extra free speed and spin on BH :)
My blade is Nittaku Acoustic with the G-Revision handle. An all-wood, somewhat fast blade with a great feel and limba layer.

I used to play with C-1 on backhand, but I like G-1 on backhand more - it's more lively and to me It's very controllable and has good spin and a nice arc.

Would you say there's a better BH rubber option then G-1 that would add power without sacrificing too much in other areas?
 
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I see thanks @passifid ! And then I wonder, why CMD instead of Rhyzen Fire/Ice? Since I feel that CMD was a bit bouncier than those and I'm unsure a first intermediate would enjoy that :) I will add any of them to the guide after you let me know, I already added Yinhe 12 Moon blue, that is a good addition.

About B2, yeah, I prefer H3N unboosted and I recommend that first for sure, it's better to get started, but some people don't like boosting. It's a pity though because with H3N boosted on forehand you can do all you need and fine tune it to your own liking. It's either boost at home yourself or factory boosting anyways.
I don't like fire and ice i think theyre a bit pants overall that would be more of a first ever custom bat thing.
 
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I tried it in the winter here in Norway, so the issue was certainly not humidity! A guy I know who also coaches beginners and intermediates tried it and agreed with my assessment.

Aurus.. Maybe a bit bouncy, but definitely not more than Rakza 7.
@Larshos Definitely not the humidity! hahaha maybe more that it was frozen 🤣 All good, I funnily used it often and it was all fine, so it's interesting, but nevertherless, I will add the Aurus to the list, Aurus Sound/Select for BH and prime for FH I guess?
 
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My blade is Nittaku Acoustic with the G-Revision handle. An all-wood, somewhat fast blade with a great feel and limba layer.

I used to play with C-1 on backhand, but I like G-1 on backhand more - it's more lively and to me It's very controllable and has good spin and a nice arc.

Would you say there's a better BH rubber option then G-1 that would add power without sacrificing too much in other areas?
Ah the acoustic, what a great blade, I've had 2 of them and use to be my previous blade, before that Violin. Acoustic is such a great piece of wood :D It's definitely not slow in any case!

C-1 is more controlled and soft than G-1 as it's supposed to be the smaller brother, but probably you are at the level where G-1 works better, it's definitely more lively and springy, while still having the safety of the arc.

Whether there is a better rubber for the backhand than G-1 is a matter of many factors: your level, your equipment preferences, your blade and what you want to do with it. For example, Dignics 05 is a great rubber for the backhand, some of our best national players use it and it's a rocket. Dignics 09c is my backhand rubber and what a blessing it is, but a totally different philosophy than 05 for example. Tackier, higher throwing, slow when playing passively for short game. Razka Z can do the same but cheaper. Other options that are great are the Tenergy series, or MX-P for a really strong punchy backhand (tried it often with one of my play partners, it's tough too!). All of them have slightly different ways of playing and properties, so I'd need to know more to say :)
 
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I would never recommend R7 and Vega Europe to anyone - bouncy af super spinsensitive rubbers.
G-1/C-1 are better in any way possible.
 
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@Larshos Definitely not the humidity! hahaha maybe more that it was frozen 🤣 All good, I funnily used it often and it was all fine, so it's interesting, but nevertherless, I will add the Aurus to the list, Aurus Sound/Select for BH and prime for FH I guess?
I only have experience with the regular Aurus, which I would suggest for intermediates on FH. The sponge is 47, but the top sheet is soft so it feels softer than most 47 degree rubbers.
 
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