
We plunged in the All-In daily for two months — testing how cold and how consistently the chiller holds temperature, how clean the filtration keeps the water, setup, and running cost.
Cold plunging works, but the logistics kill the habit — hauling ice, draining, refilling. The Plunge All-In removes all of it. A built-in chiller holds the water at your set temperature, down to about 37°F, and an ozone-and-filter system keeps it clean for months, so the tub is always cold and always ready. You lift the lid and get in. At $4,990 it is a serious investment, but for anyone who wants cold therapy to actually stick, it is the difference between a habit and a hassle.
| Type | Self-chilling cold plunge tub |
| Temperature | Chills to as low as 37°F |
| Chiller | Powerful compressor, cools and holds temperature |
| Filtration | Ozone + filter, keeps water clean for months |
| Tub | Insulated acrylic, fits users up to about 6'8" |
| Circulation | Jetted for even cold |
| Install | Plug-and-plunge, indoor or outdoor |
| Running cost | Roughly $15–50/month |
| Warranty | Manufacturer warranty |
The All-In is Plunge’s flagship self-contained cold plunge — an insulated acrylic tub with a built-in chiller, pump and filtration in one unit. Unlike an ice bath you fill and dump, it holds cold, filtered water continuously: the chiller keeps it at your chosen temperature and the filtration keeps it clean, so it is ready whenever you are. It is designed to be a permanent fixture, indoors or out, rather than a fill-and-drain chore.
The tub is furniture-grade: an insulated acrylic shell that holds cold well and looks intentional in a home gym, garage or patio. It fits users up to around 6-foot-8, so most people can submerge to the shoulders. The chiller and pump are integrated and reasonably quiet, and an insulated lid keeps the cold in and debris out between sessions. It reads as a premium wellness appliance, which at this price it should.

Plunge’s pitch is ‘plug-and-plunge’, and it is largely true: fill it with a hose, plug it into a standard outlet, set the temperature, and the chiller does the rest. There is no plumbing to install. Placement matters — it needs a level surface and airflow around the chiller — and outdoors you will want shade for efficiency. Once set up, the ongoing effort is close to zero, which is the entire point.
The chiller is the reason to buy it. In our testing it pulled the water down and, crucially, held it there — you set a temperature as low as about 37°F and it stays there, session after session, without ice. Recovery temperatures in the high-40s to low-50s are easy to maintain even in warm weather. That always-ready cold is what makes plunging a daily habit instead of an occasional event; the water is icy the moment you lift the lid.
The other logistics-killer is filtration. The All-In circulates water through a filter and uses ozone to sanitize, keeping the water clean and clear for months rather than needing a drain-and-refill after every use. You rinse the filter periodically and top up occasionally. In our testing the water stayed clear with minimal upkeep — a world away from a stock-tank ice bath that turns murky in days. This is the maintenance most people underestimate, and Plunge handles it.

In use, the All-In is exactly what you want cold therapy to be: consistent, deep and immediate. The jetted circulation keeps the cold even (moving water feels colder and works better than still water), the depth lets you submerge properly, and the fixed temperature means every session is repeatable. In our testing the habit stuck precisely because there was no friction — lift the lid, get in for a few minutes, get out. That repeatability is where the benefits come from.
Running a chiller costs money, but less than you might think — roughly $15–50 a month depending on climate, insulation and how cold and often you run it, comparable to a second refrigerator. Day to day it asks almost nothing: keep the lid on, rinse the filter, top up water. That low friction is the whole value proposition — a cold plunge you will actually use every day rather than a project you abandon after a month.
Against a DIY chest-freezer or stock-tank ice bath, the Plunge costs far more but removes the ice-hauling, the draining and the murky water — the reasons DIY setups get abandoned. Against inflatable portable plunges, it is a permanent, better-insulated, better-filtered fixture. Against ultra-premium stainless tubs costing $10,000-plus, it delivers the core always-cold, always-clean experience for less. Its niche is turnkey cold therapy without the top-tier price.
At $4,990 the All-In is a major purchase, and the value is entirely about adherence: if a self-chilling, self-cleaning tub is what makes you actually plunge daily, it pays back in the benefits you get versus the DIY setup you would quit. If you are disciplined enough to maintain an ice bath, you can spend far less. Plunge backs it with a warranty and support. Cheaper Plunge models (the Air) exist if you want the brand without the full chiller-and-filtration package.
Buy it if you are committed to cold therapy and want it frictionless — always cold, always clean, one step out of bed — and the daily habit matters more than the cost. Skip it if you are just trying cold plunging out (start with a cheaper tub or ice), if budget is tight, or if you have no suitable space for a permanent tub. For the devotee, the All-In is what makes the habit last.
Check the current price and availability before you buy — it moves.
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