Bangeran Electric Wheelchair Review – Is the Mammoth EX a Good Heavy Duty Folding Power Chair?

The Bangeran electric wheelchair line is a small family of folding power chairs built around one idea, a wide seat and a heavy-duty frame that still folds into a car trunk. Our pick of the family is the Bangeran Mammoth EX Foldable at $2,499 in stock. It pairs a 21.5 in ultra-wide seat with a 500 lbs rating on its Specifications sheet, a 70 lbs frame without the battery, and a tool-free fold to 16.5 x 28.5 x 30 in. This Bangeran Mammoth EX review covers all three Bangeran models plus one cross-brand comparison so you can see exactly where the EX fits.
One number needs a flag before you read further. Both EX variants show 500 lbs on their Specifications table but "up to 400 lbs" in the marketing Quick Overview. We quote the spec-sheet 500 lbs throughout and explain the gap in its own section below, because we would rather show you the discrepancy than quietly pick a number for you.
Last updated June 2026. Every spec reflects the current manufacturer Specifications sheet as published on each model's HDM product page and live stock status.
Is the Bangeran electric wheelchair worth buying?
Yes, for the right rider. The Bangeran Mammoth EX Foldable is a solid heavy-duty folding power chair at $2,499, pairing a 21.5 in seat and a 500 lbs spec-sheet rating with a 70 lbs frame that folds tool-free. If you are a heavier rider who wants a wide seat and a folding chair that loads into a trunk, this is the Bangeran model to buy.
It suits a specific buyer. Someone over the 300 lbs limit of a standard travel chair, who wants room across the hips, and who needs the chair to fold for a car or for storage in a small apartment. If that is you, the EX Foldable does the job without the $500 jump to the recline upgrade.
Set your expectations honestly on performance. The Mammoth EX tops out at 4 mph, runs up to 12 miles per charge, and climbs grades of 6° or less. This is a daily-errands and indoor-outdoor chair, not an all-terrain machine for trails. It handles sidewalks, store aisles, gravel driveways and grass, and it stops there.
If lift weight and range matter to you more than seat width, look across the brand line at the Forcemech Navigator Pro at $2,799. It is lighter and travels farther but seats you on a narrower cushion and tops out at a 397 lbs rating. We compare the two head to head further down. All four chairs in this guide are in stock and direct-buy, so whichever you pick ships now rather than sitting on a backorder.
Bangeran Mammoth EX at a glance
The Mammoth EX Foldable lists a 500 lbs capacity on its Specifications sheet, a 21.5 in ultra-wide seat, dual 250W motors and a 70 lbs frame without the battery. With the battery installed the total weight is 77 lbs. Range is up to 12 miles per charge and the top speed is 4 mph. Those are the headline numbers pulled straight from the spec table, with no rounding.
The fold is the selling point. The Mammoth EX folds tool-free, no battery removal needed, down to 16.5 x 28.5 x 30 in, and it ships with a carry handle. That folded footprint slides into most car trunks. The battery lifts out separately, which is the trick to managing the chair solo, since you carry the bare 70 lbs frame rather than the full 77 lbs in one lift.
The build is straightforward heavy-duty hardware. An aircraft-grade aluminum frame carries dual 250W brushless motors, dual shock absorbers and intelligent electromagnetic brakes. You drive it with a 360° waterproof digital joystick, and a Bluetooth remote lets a caregiver fold or operate the chair from up to 10 yards away. Wheels come as solid or inflatable, with 8 in front and 12.5 in rear.
Bangeran Mammoth EX Foldable - our top pick
The Mammoth EX Foldable is the chair most Bangeran shoppers actually want. It covers the heavy-duty folding buyer at $2,499 without forcing the $500 jump to the Auto Recline. It carries the widest mainstream seat in the line at 21.5 in, holds the 500 lbs spec rating, and weighs the least of the two EX models at 70 lbs without the battery.
Buy this one if you are a larger rider who needs a folding chair for a car or for travel and you do not need motorized reclining. The 21.5 in seat gives a heavier or wider rider room that a standard 19.5 in travel chair cannot, and the fold-and-go format means you are not stuck with a non-folding bariatric chair like the 304 lbs Merits Atlantis that never leaves the house.
What you give up against the Auto Recline is the recline itself and the headrest. The seat does not tilt back under power, so if you sit for hours at a stretch and want to shift your weight for pressure relief, that is the reason to spend the extra $500. For most buyers running errands and getting around town, the fixed seat is fine and the lower price wins.
The Bangeran folding power chairs we recommend
- #1Best overall
Mammoth EX Foldable Heavy Duty Power Wheelchair
Our pick of the Bangeran line and the value buy for a heavy-duty folding rider. It carries the widest mainstream seat in the family at 21.5 in, holds a 500 lbs rating on its Specifications sheet, and folds tool-free to 16.5 x 28.5 x 30 in. At 70 lbs without the battery it is the lighter of the two EX models, and at $2,499 it covers the heavy-duty folding buyer without the $500 jump to motorized reclining. Range is up to 12 miles and the top speed is 4 mph, driven by dual 250W motors.
See price & details- Pros
- 21.5 in ultra-wide seat, the widest in the Bangeran line for a larger rider
- 500 lbs rating on the Specifications sheet, the highest in this guide
- Folds tool-free to 16.5 x 28.5 x 30 in with a 70 lbs without-battery frame
- Lowest price of the heavy-duty picks at $2,499 in stock
- Cons
- Spec table says 500 lbs but the marketing copy says 'up to 400 lbs', confirm before loading near the limit
- 12 mile range is shorter than the Forcemech Navigator Pro's 18 miles
- No motorized reclining or headrest, that is the Auto Recline upgrade
- #2
Mammoth EX Auto Recline Heavy Duty Power Wheelchair
The comfort upgrade for a rider who sits for long stretches. It keeps the standard EX's 500 lbs spec rating, 21.5 in seat, dual 250W motors, 12 mile range and 4 mph top speed, and adds an automatic reclining backrest you control from the joystick plus an adjustable headrest. The only mechanical cost is a small frame-weight bump to 73 lbs. Spend the extra $500 over the standard EX only if rest positions and pressure relief matter to your day, otherwise the Foldable is the better value.
See price & details- Pros
- Joystick-controlled automatic reclining backrest for long sits and pressure relief
- Adjustable headrest included for neck support once reclined
- Same 500 lbs spec rating and 21.5 in seat as the standard EX
- Cons
- $500 more than the EX Foldable for the recline and headrest only
- Same 400 vs 500 lbs spec discrepancy as the standard EX
- 73 lbs frame, 3 lbs heavier than the standard EX
- #3
Navigator Pro Heavy-Duty Foldable Electric Wheelchair
The cross-brand comparator for a buyer who values lift weight and range over seat width. The Navigator Pro frame is 52 lbs without its battery, far lighter to load solo than the Mammoth EX's 70 lbs, and it runs up to 18 miles per charge against the Bangeran's 12. It tops out at 4.5 mph, rides on flat-free polyurethane wheels, and carries 3.5 in of ground clearance. The tradeoff is capacity and width, a 397 lbs ceiling and an 18 in cushion against the Mammoth EX's 500 lbs spec rating and 21.5 in seat. At $2,799 it sits just above the Bangeran on price.
See price & details- Pros
- 52 lbs without battery, far easier to load solo than the Mammoth EX
- 18 mile range, the longest in this guide
- 4.5 mph top speed and 3.5 in ground clearance for curb cuts
- Cons
- 397 lbs ceiling, below the Mammoth EX's 500 lbs spec rating
- 18 in cushion is narrower than the Bangeran's 21.5 in seat
- $2,799, higher than the Mammoth EX Foldable
- #4
Mammoth Foldable Power Wheelchair
The budget entry and the lightest Bangeran, included to show where the line starts. It is rated to 300 lbs on a narrower 19.5 in seat and weighs 60 lbs total at $1,499, the lowest price in the family. Range is up to 12 miles and the top speed is 4 mph, the same as the EX models, driven by the same dual 250W motors. This is the right chair for a rider under 300 lbs who wants a folding power chair on a tight budget, but heavier or wider riders should size up to the EX Foldable.
See price & details- Pros
- Lowest price in the Bangeran line at $1,499 in stock
- 60 lbs total, the lightest of the three Bangeran chairs
- Same dual 250W motors, 12 mile range and 4 mph speed as the EX models
- Cons
- 300 lbs capacity, too low for the heavy-duty buyer
- 19.5 in seat is narrower than the EX's 21.5 in cushion
- No reclining and no headrest
How the Bangeran Mammoth models compare
The three Bangeran models split cleanly by job. The standard Mammoth is the 300 lbs budget chair, the EX Foldable is the 500 lbs heavy-duty pick, and the EX Auto Recline adds joystick reclining for $500 more. Read it as a ladder rather than a lineup.
At the bottom sits the standard Bangeran Mammoth at $1,499, rated to 300 lbs on a 19.5 in seat, weighing 60 lbs total. The middle is the EX Foldable at $2,499, rated to 500 lbs per its spec table on a 21.5 in seat, at 70 lbs without battery. The top is the EX Auto Recline at $2,999, same 500 lbs rating and 21.5 in seat, at 73 lbs.
The upgrade decision is simple once you name the trigger. Jump from the standard Mammoth to the EX only if you are over the 300 lbs standard ceiling or you want the wider seat. Jump from the EX Foldable to the EX Auto Recline only if you want motorized reclining and the headrest. Nothing else changes between the two EX chairs, same motors, same range, same fold.
Bangeran Mammoth EX vs Mammoth Auto Recline vs standard Mammoth vs Forcemech Navigator Pro - spec comparison
| Model | Weight capacity | Seat width | Frame weight | Range per charge | Max speed | Folded size (L x W x H) | Reclining | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bangeran Mammoth EX Foldable | 500 lbs | 21.5" | 70 lbs without battery / 77 lbs with battery | 12 Miles | 4 mph | 16.5"x28.5"x30" | No | $2,499 |
| Bangeran Mammoth EX Auto Recline | 500 lbs | 21.5" | 73 lbs | 12 Miles | 4 mph | 16.5"x28.5"x30" | Yes (Automatic) | $2,999 |
| Bangeran Mammoth (standard) | 300 lbs | 19.5" | 60 lbs total | 12 Miles | 4 mph | 24"x17"x30" | No | $1,499 |
| Forcemech Navigator Pro | 397 lbs | 52 lbs without battery | 18 miles | 4.5 mph | 25"x14"x31" | $2,799 |
The 400 vs 500 lb capacity discrepancy explained
Both EX variants list 500 lbs on their Specifications table but "up to 400 lbs" in the marketing Quick Overview, so confirm the working limit with Bangeran before loading near either figure. The gap appears on both the EX Foldable and the EX Auto Recline, in the same place each time, the engineering spec table says 500 lbs and the sales blurb says 400.
We quote 500 lbs because that is the figure on the engineering Specifications sheet, and our rule is to state the spec-sheet number exactly rather than silently average the two or round one down. If your loaded weight, you plus anything you carry, lands between 400 and 500 lbs, call Bangeran or call us at 1-888-233-5563 to confirm the rated limit in writing before you buy. That is the honest move when two manufacturer numbers disagree.
This is also why sourced specs matter on a brand like this. The US search results for Bangeran are mostly resellers listing the same SKUs, and a spec discrepancy like this is exactly the kind of thing a quick listing copies without catching. Reading the spec sheet itself, and flagging where it conflicts, is the only way to buy with your eyes open.
Bangeran Mammoth EX Auto Recline - when the upgrade is worth $500
The Mammoth EX Auto Recline is worth the extra $500 only if you sit for long stretches and want joystick-controlled reclining and a headrest. If your day involves hours in the chair, rest positions and pressure relief, the recline earns its price. If it does not, save the money and take the standard EX Foldable.
What the extra $500 buys is specific. An automatic reclining backrest you adjust from the joystick, and an adjustable headrest to support your neck once the seat is tilted back. That is the whole upgrade. There is no power, range or capacity bump hidden in it.
What stays the same is most of the chair. The 500 lbs spec rating, the 21.5 in seat, the dual 250W motors, the 12 mile range, the 4 mph top speed and the same 16.5 x 28.5 x 30 in folded size all carry straight over from the standard EX. The only mechanical cost of the recline mechanism is a small frame-weight bump, 73 lbs against the standard EX's 70 lbs without battery.
Bangeran vs Forcemech folding power wheelchair - which heavy duty folder wins?
Pick the Bangeran Mammoth EX for the wider 21.5 in seat and the higher 500 lbs spec ceiling. Pick the Forcemech Navigator Pro for the lighter 52 lbs frame, the longer 18 mile range and the 4.5 mph top speed. The whole choice comes down to seat width and capacity against lift weight and range.
Bangeran wins on three fronts. The 21.5 in seat is wider than the Navigator Pro's 18 in cushion, the 500 lbs spec rating beats the Forcemech's 397 lbs ceiling, and the price is lower at $2,499 against $2,799. For a heavier or wider rider, those are the numbers that decide the chair.
Forcemech wins on four. The Navigator Pro frame is 52 lbs without its battery against the Mammoth EX's 70 lbs, so it is far easier to load solo. It runs 18 miles per charge against 12, tops out at 4.5 mph against 4, and carries 3.5 in of ground clearance for curb cuts. If you lift the chair yourself and travel longer distances, that is your chair.
The two share more than they differ on under the hood. Both run dual 250W motors, both cap climbing at a 6° slope, and both fold tool-free for a trunk. The split is purely about the rider and how the chair gets transported, not about drivetrain power.
So the decision rule is clean. A heavier rider who wants a wide seat and the higher capacity picks the Bangeran Mammoth EX. A lighter rider who lifts the chair solo and travels far picks the Forcemech Navigator Pro. If you want to weigh frame weight across more models, read the lightest folding electric wheelchairs ranked by frame weight.
- Rider under 300 lbs and on a tight budgetBangeran Mammoth standard300 lbs, 19.5 in seat, 60 lbs, $1,499
- Heavier rider who wants the widest seatBangeran Mammoth EX Foldable500 lbs spec, 21.5 in seat, 70 lbs no battery, $2,499
- Long sits, wants reclining and a headrestBangeran Mammoth EX Auto Recline500 lbs spec, joystick recline, 73 lbs, $2,999
- Lifts the chair solo and travels farForcemech Navigator Pro52 lbs no battery, 18 mile range, 4.5 mph, 397 lbs, $2,799
Is Bangeran a good wheelchair brand?
Bangeran is a legitimate direct-buy power wheelchair brand. Its Mammoth line is a real, stocked, warrantied folding power chair family sold by several US dealers, so the thin search results reflect a young brand and reseller listings rather than a quality problem.
Here is what the SERP actually shows. Search "bangeran electric wheelchair" and you mostly find resellers carrying the same Mammoth SKUs, plus the brand's own product pages, with few independent buyer reviews. That is why we lean on sourced specs over star counts in this review. There simply are not enough independent ratings to judge the brand on reviews, so the spec sheet is the honest basis for a decision.
Be clear-eyed about where Bangeran sits. It is a value-tier folding brand, not a rehab-prescription brand like Merits. The Mammoth chairs are not HCPCS-coded for insurance reimbursement the way the Merits power chairs are, so if you are working through insurance or a clinician's prescription, that matters. We equip riders, we do not prescribe, so confirm seat width, cushion and posture support with your therapist or physician before you buy a folding chair for daily use.
If your weight or a clinical prescription pushes you past what a folder can do, step up to a coded bariatric chair. Read the Merits Atlantis bariatric power wheelchair breakdown for the 600 lbs end of the range, or our full Merits Gemini heavy duty power chair review for a 450 lbs HCPCS-coded option. Bangeran chairs buy direct from HDM with US phone support and free shipping.
Which Bangeran electric wheelchair should you buy?
Choose by rider weight and what you value most. The standard Mammoth at $1,499 is for a rider under 300 lbs on a tight budget. The Mammoth EX Foldable at $2,499 is for a wide seat and the 500 lbs spec rating. The EX Auto Recline at $2,999 is for buyers who want reclining and a headrest. The Forcemech Navigator Pro at $2,799 is for a light lift and long range.
Map each pick to a profile and a price and the choice falls out. Under 300 lbs and watching the budget, take the standard Mammoth. Heavier rider who wants the widest seat, take the EX Foldable, our overall pick. Long sits and pressure relief, the EX Auto Recline. Solo lift and long daily distances, the Navigator Pro.
Raphael's rule of thumb on capacity, leave a 20 percent margin between your loaded weight and the chair's rating. On a chair like the Mammoth EX where the spec sheet says 500 and the marketing says 400, I size to the lower of the two until the manufacturer confirms otherwise in writing. A rider at 380 lbs is comfortably inside the 500 figure but right at the edge of the 400 one, and that is exactly the rider who should make the call before clicking buy.
If none of the four is quite right, keep browsing in stock. You can browse every in-stock folding power wheelchair or see all heavy duty electric wheelchairs built for larger riders. To match a capacity to your body weight before you shop, read how to match a power wheelchair weight capacity to your body weight.
Frequently asked questions
Frequently asked questions
How much weight can the Bangeran Mammoth EX hold?
The Bangeran Mammoth EX Foldable lists 500 lbs on its Specifications sheet, and the EX Auto Recline lists the same 500 lbs. Both variants also show 'up to 400 lbs' in their marketing Quick Overview, so the two manufacturer figures disagree. We quote the 500 lbs spec-table value because that is the engineering number, but if your loaded weight lands between 400 and 500 lbs, confirm the working limit with Bangeran or call us at 1-888-233-5563 before you buy. The standard Mammoth is a different chair, rated to 300 lbs.
What is the difference between the Bangeran Mammoth and Mammoth EX?
Capacity and seat width are the main differences. The standard Bangeran Mammoth is rated to 300 lbs on a 19.5 in seat and weighs 60 lbs total at $1,499. The Mammoth EX Foldable steps up to a 500 lbs spec rating, a wider 21.5 in seat and a 70 lbs without-battery frame at $2,499. The EX is the heavy-duty pick for a larger rider, while the standard Mammoth is the lighter, budget entry for a rider under 300 lbs.
Is the Bangeran Mammoth EX airline approved or travel friendly?
The Mammoth EX is travel friendly in that it folds tool-free to 16.5 x 28.5 x 30 in for a car trunk, but airline approval depends on the airline and the lithium battery, not on a blanket 'approved' label. The EX uses a 12Ah, 24V lithium battery that lifts out. Before you fly, check the watt-hour rating against the FAA PackSafe lithium battery rules and your specific carrier's policy, since most airlines require spillable or large lithium packs to travel in the cabin, not checked. Call the airline ahead with the battery spec in hand.
How far does the Bangeran Mammoth EX go on one charge?
The Bangeran Mammoth EX runs up to 12 miles per charge on its standard 12Ah lithium battery, per the Specifications sheet, the same range as the EX Auto Recline and the standard Mammoth. Real-world range drops with rider weight, hills and stop-start use, so plan for less than the rated figure on a hilly route. If you need more distance, the Forcemech Navigator Pro runs up to 18 miles for $2,799.
Is Bangeran a good electric wheelchair brand?
Bangeran is a legitimate direct-buy power wheelchair brand whose Mammoth folding line is stocked and warrantied and sold by several US dealers. The thin search results reflect a young brand and reseller listings carrying the same SKUs, not a quality problem. It is a value-tier folding brand rather than a rehab-prescription brand like Merits, and the Mammoth chairs are not HCPCS-coded for insurance reimbursement, so judge it on the sourced specs in this review rather than on star counts.
Bangeran Mammoth EX vs Forcemech Navigator Pro - which folding power chair is better?
It depends on your priority. Pick the Bangeran Mammoth EX for the wider 21.5 in seat, the higher 500 lbs spec rating and the lower $2,499 price. Pick the Forcemech Navigator Pro for the lighter 52 lbs without-battery frame, the longer 18 mile range and the 4.5 mph top speed, at a 397 lbs ceiling and $2,799. Both run dual 250W motors, both cap climbing at 6° and both fold for a trunk. A heavier rider who wants a wide seat takes the Bangeran, a lighter rider who lifts the chair solo and travels far takes the Forcemech.
Sources
The capacity, weight, range and dimension figures in this review come from each model's manufacturer Specifications sheet as published on its HDM product page. Where the EX marketing copy and spec table disagree on capacity, we cite the Specifications-sheet value and flag the variance in the body above.
Sources & references
- Bangeran Mammoth EX Foldable Heavy Duty Power Wheelchair - Specifications Authority
- Bangeran Mammoth EX Auto Recline Heavy Duty Power Wheelchair - Specifications Authority
- Bangeran Mammoth Foldable Power Wheelchair - Specifications Authority
- Forcemech Navigator Pro Heavy-Duty Foldable Electric Wheelchair - Specifications Authority
- FAA PackSafe - lithium battery and mobility device rules Authority



