IMAK SmartGlove vs Copper Compression: Two Gloves, Two Different Jobs
Both are fingerless gloves sold to the same worried typist, but they are built around different theories. The Copper Compression glove bets on pressure: squeeze the hand, ease the ache. The IMAK SmartGlove bets on position: support the wrist, cushion the palm, stop the posture that aggravates the nerve. Position has the better mechanical logic for carpal tunnel, and it's why the IMAK wins this comparison for most readers of this site.
Side by Side
| IMAK RSI SmartGlove | Copper Compression Gloves | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical price* | $20-30 | $10-20 per pair |
| Mechanism | Flexible wrist splint + ergoBeads palm cushion | Compression fabric only |
| Wrist support | Yes, flexible | None |
| Sold as | Single glove, fits either hand | Pair |
| Best use | Typing, gaming, repetitive handwork | General aching, stiffness, swelling |
| Marketing to ignore | Little | The copper story (FDA: no credible evidence) |
| Care | Machine washable | Machine washable |
Pick the IMAK If...
Your symptoms show up during keyboard, mouse, or controller hours. The flexible splint discourages the cocked-wrist position, the bead cushion replaces the desk edge under your palm, and you can work in it all day. It's the only glove here that addresses wrist mechanics at all. Read the full IMAK review.
Pick the Copper Compression If...
Your hands ache, stiffen, and swell after use and you want the cheapest comfortable trial of compression, which is the one thing these gloves plausibly deliver. You get two gloves for less than one IMAK. Just know what you're buying: comfort for aching, not wrist support and not a carpal tunnel treatment. Read the full Copper Compression review.
Our Call
For this site's core reader, someone with wrist and nerve complaints from typing, gaming, or repetitive work, the IMAK is worth the extra money because it's the only glove doing mechanical work. And whichever glove you pick, remember the finding that matters most: gloves are the daytime sidekick. The evidence-backed purchase is still a night splint.