05/29/2026
In Spartan We Trust.
Not because of a logo, and not because of a piece of equipment. We trust in what it represents: preparation, discipline, and the confidence that comes from doing the work long before the pressure arrives. We trust in our training, our teammates, and the lessons learned through countless repetitions, mistakes, and hard-earned experience.
Every piece of training equipment is simply a tool. Its purpose is to allow officers, soldiers, and professionals to train hard enough to learn while remaining safe enough to come back and train again tomorrow. Training that is too soft can create false confidence. Training that is unnecessarily dangerous can create injuries. The goal is to find the balance between realism and safety, where skills are tested, confidence is built, and lessons are learned under pressure.
That’s where growth happens. That’s where capability is forged. And that’s where trust is earned.
Have a safe weekend.
05/15/2026
Today, on Peace Officers Memorial Day, we pause to recognize and honor the men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty.
Behind every badge is a human being. A son or daughter. A husband, wife, parent, friend, partner, teammate. People who willingly stepped into difficult, unpredictable, and often dangerous situations in service of others.
At Spartan Training Gear, we work closely with law enforcement agencies across North America and around the world. We see firsthand the professionalism, sacrifice, and responsibility carried by those who put the uniform on every day. We also understand that training, preparation, and readiness are not abstract concepts. They exist because the risks are real.
Today is not about politics or headlines. It is about remembrance.
It is about honoring the officers who never came home, the families who continue carrying that loss, and the communities forever impacted by their sacrifice.
To all active and retired peace officers, trainers, and first responders within our community: thank you for what you do, and thank you for continuing to show up for others despite the weight that often comes with the profession.
And to those who gave everything in service to others, we remember you. 💙🖤
05/06/2026
🛑 The problem isn’t that officers aren’t trained. It’s that they’re underexposed to the right kind of training.
Most use-of-force incidents are hands-on. Not fi****ms. Not tools. Hands-on control.
But budget and time allocation still lean heavily the other way.
At the same time, data from groups like the Bureau of Labor Statistics and National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health shows law enforcement injury rates far above average, with a large portion tied to physical encounters and training itself.
Read that again: training is injuring the people it’s supposed to prepare.
So what happens?
Intensity gets dialed back.
Reps go down.
Realism drops.
And officers hit the street underprepared for the exact type of force they use most.
Meanwhile, performance data shows that when control tactics are applied properly, the vast majority of incidents end without officer injury.
That gap isn’t about knowledge. It’s about how often you can safely train at speed, under pressure, with resistance. That’s the real constraint.
And it’s exactly the gap we built Spartan Training Gear to solve.
Because if your people can’t train realistically without getting hurt, they won’t train enough.And if they don’t train enough, the risk doesn’t go away—it just shows up later.
Usually when it matters most.
05/05/2026
🛑 Most departments don’t have a training problem. They have a budget allocation problem.
Fi****ms and fi****ms training consume a significant portion of agency resources, and for good reason. It’s high liability, highly regulated, and mission critical. But here’s the reality most don’t want to say out loud. The majority of real-world use-of-force encounters don’t involve fi****ms. Officers rely on hands-on control tactics in roughly 80% of force incidents, yet defensive tactics training is often underfunded, under-prioritized, and in many cases, under-protected.
That’s where the risk is. Law enforcement officers already experience injury rates nearly 3x higher than the average worker, with many injuries tied to physical encounters and training environments. Research has also shown that defensive tactics training itself can account for a significant portion of training-related injuries when it’s not properly structured or supported.
Here’s the part that matters. Most of those injuries are avoidable. Data shows that when control tactics are applied correctly, 97% of incidents result in no officer injury. So the issue isn’t the training. It’s how we train.
If your people aren’t getting realistic, high-rep, scenario-based defensive tactics training in a controlled and protected environment, you’re exposing them to unnecessary risk. Not just physically, but operationally and financially.
And here’s the kicker. You don’t need massive budgets to fix it. There is gear out there that is budget-friendly, scalable, and designed specifically to reduce training injuries while increasing realism. That’s the kind of investment that pays for itself the first time it prevents a single lost-time injury. Because every preventable injury costs more than the gear that could have stopped it.
This is exactly the gap we focus on at Spartan Training Gear. Giving departments a way to train hard, train realistically, and reduce avoidable injuries without blowing the budget.
Training is essential, but safe, effective training is what actually keeps officers operational. If you’re responsible for people, this isn’t optional.
05/04/2026
SOF Week 2026 is coming up May 18–22 and Spartan Training Gear will be there.
This isn’t just another trade show. SOF Week brings together the operators, decision-makers, and innovators who are actually shaping the future of special operations. It’s where real-world experience meets evolving tactics, technology, and training.
That’s exactly why we’re showing up.
At Spartan, everything we build is driven by one thing: preparing people for what actually happens under pressure. Not theory. Not rehearsed reps. Reality. Being at SOF Week gives us the opportunity to connect directly with the community we serve, get feedback from those on the ground, and continue refining gear that supports high-intensity, scenario-based training.
We’re looking forward to the conversations, the insights, and the chance to stand alongside the SOF community.
If you’re going to be there, let’s connect.
04/30/2026
Most chiefs don’t think about training injuries in terms of budget exposure. They should.
💰 A single preventable injury during defensive tactics or force-on-force training can quietly cost a department tens of thousands of dollars. Not in equipment, but in consequences. Medical evaluation, workers’ compensation, lost training time, overtime to backfill shifts, light-duty assignments, and administrative review all compound quickly. If an officer is out for several weeks, overtime alone can reach $15,000–$25,000 depending on the agency. Add claim exposure, rehabilitation, and productivity loss, and it is not difficult for one avoidable injury to reach $40,000–$80,000. That does not include liability.
This is not an argument to reduce intensity. Modern policing demands stress-based, scenario-driven training. Officers need resistance, unpredictability, and exposure to controlled chaos before facing it in the field. But there is a difference between productive stress and preventable injury.
When protective systems are poorly engineered, instructors are forced into compromise. Either intensity is reduced to protect participants, weakening realism, or intensity remains high and injury risk rises unnecessarily. Neither outcome serves the agency.
Properly engineered protective equipment removes that compromise. It allows instructors to train at meaningful intensity while reducing preventable injury exposure. It protects the officer, but it also protects staffing, scheduling, and the operational stability of the organization.
Preparation should build capability, not claims. Departments that view training equipment as a risk-mitigation investment rather than a line-item expense are not being cautious. They are leading responsibly.
04/27/2026
💰 The pricing on our gear isn’t pulled out of thin air. It reflects materials, design, testing, iteration, and the environments a product is built for.
Over the last few years, we’ve had people point out that our pricing has increased. That’s true. But so has everything that goes into building the product, from raw materials to production to continuous refinement in the field. More importantly, so has the standard.
We don’t build for shelf appeal. We build for environments where equipment gets pushed, stressed, and relied on under pressure. There’s a difference between something that looks the part and something that performs when it counts.
Market value isn’t just about what something costs. It’s about what it delivers. If you’re comparing on price alone, you’ll always find a cheaper option. If you’re evaluating based on performance, durability, and purpose, the conversation changes.
Different priorities lead to different decisions. We’re comfortable with that.
04/23/2026
While the majority of our work is with law enforcement and military, we make it a point every year to step outside that lane and spend time in the broader martial arts community.
Our combatives approach tends to stand out in that environment. It’s more direct, more scenario-driven, and when the gear comes out, it definitely shifts the tone. But that’s exactly why it matters.
There’s real value in cross-pollination. Bringing practical, pressure-tested methods into traditional spaces helps bridge the gap between controlled training and real-world application.
Different worlds. Same goal.
Prepare people to perform when it counts.
04/22/2026
Realistic training demands intensity.
But intensity without protection is liability.
Force-on-force should expose weaknesses, elevate heart rates, and test decision-making under pressure. It should not sideline your personnel with preventable injuries.
Spartan Training Gear is engineered for full-speed, full-intent scenario work, head to toe, so agencies can build capability without compromising their people.
Because the goal is operational readiness.
Not injury reports.