Is Binder a real alternative to an Endless Pools swim unit?
Yes — but only if you understand the two products solve different problems. Endless Pools is a popular self-contained swim unit from the US manufacturer Endless Pools: one object, one shell, one swim jet, dropped into a room or deck. Binder is a counter-current turbine built into a real swimming pool — the one you already own in your Cyprus villa, or the one you're about to build. If "I want an endless swim in something that still looks like a pool" describes you, Binder is the honest alternative. If "I have no pool and nowhere to put one" describes you, Endless Pools is probably the right category. Neither is universally better.
Two different answers to the same wish
People searching for "Endless Pool alternative" almost always want the same thing: the feeling of swimming against a steady current, at home, whenever they want. That wish is real, and there's more than one way to meet it.
Endless Pools, the American manufacturer, meets it by selling a complete, self-contained object — a compact swim unit with its own shell, its own water, its own heater, and its own jet. It's a product in the truest sense: you buy it, it arrives, it goes in. That's a genuinely useful category, and we have nothing bad to say about it.
Binder, the German manufacturer whose counter-current systems we distribute across Cyprus, meets the same wish from the opposite direction. Instead of building a small, dedicated swim unit, Binder builds the turbine that turns a full-sized pool — one you own, or one you're about to build — into an infinite swimming channel. The pool is still a pool. The turbine just makes one end of it act like a river.
That difference is the whole article. Everything else follows from it.
Why this matters in Cyprus specifically
Cyprus is an outdoor-pool country. Most serious homes on the island already have a pool — tiled, integrated into the architecture, chosen to match the stonework, built for the climate. Nobody who has spent that money on a pool wants to then put a second, smaller, plastic-lined swimming object on their terrace next to it. The aesthetic mismatch alone would be painful.
That's the single biggest reason we hear "Endless Pool alternative" from Cyprus clients. They don't want a swim-spa. They already have the pool. They just want lap-swim functionality added to it, invisibly, without losing the pool they already love.
This is the scenario Binder's EasyStar retrofit was built for: hook onto the edge of the existing pool, no wall cut, no draining, same turbine as the built-in HydroStar, installed in roughly half a day to a day. The visual weight of a skimmer, not an appliance.
On the island, the Binder-vs-Endless question almost always resolves one way: if you already have a villa pool, adding a Binder counter-current system is the lower-disruption, higher-aesthetic answer. We say this not to knock Endless Pools — they're a serious product — but because dropping a dedicated swim unit next to an existing 10-metre villa pool rarely makes sense.
The comparison, category vs. category
This is not a HydroStar-vs-a-specific-Endless-model benchmark. That wouldn't be fair, and we don't have the test bench for it. Instead, here's the honest category comparison.
Where Binder genuinely wins
For the Cyprus case — and honestly, for most Mediterranean markets — three things tilt the decision toward Binder.
It respects the pool you already have. EasyStar was designed for exactly this. Same turbine as the HydroStar built-in models, same broad current, hooked onto the pool edge with a bracket matched to your pool type (skimmer, overflow, or above-ground). No draining. No pipework. No high-voltage wiring. A certified installer is typically on-site for half a day to a day.
The swim feel is engineered for training, not just novelty. EasyStar's turbine produces a broad, laminar surface-and-undercurrent profile. This isn't marketing — it's the reason Paralympic swimmer Elena Krawzow, EasyStar's brand ambassador, trains against it rather than a narrow pump jet. You can read more about that design philosophy on our technology page and on why Binder.
The range covers everything from villa to commercial. HydroStar comes in eight models, from the BGA 160 (1.35 kW, ideal for private villa pools) up to the BGA 1200 (6.8 kW, 320–1,200 m³/h, built for commercial training facilities). If you're scoping a new build, there is a model that fits — see the full HydroStar lineup or browse all Binder systems.
Where Endless Pools is genuinely the better answer
We'd rather be honest than sell you the wrong product. There are real scenarios where a dedicated self-contained swim unit is the right call, and Binder is the wrong one:
- You have no pool and can't build one. An indoor conversion, a basement fitness room, a small courtyard with no excavation possible. A self-contained unit is the only category that works.
- You want to move it one day. A dedicated swim-spa is, in principle, relocatable. A HydroStar built into a tiled villa pool is not.
- Your pool is under 4.5 m and you also have no space to build one. HydroStar needs 4.5 m minimum; EasyStar needs 5.0 m. Below that, Binder's LittleStarlet compact unit covers some cases — but if you need an indoor compact solution, a dedicated swim-spa is legitimately the right category.
In any of those three cases, we'll tell you honestly: go look at Endless Pools. That's not weakness; it's trust.
If you already own a pool: look at EasyStar first. If you're building a new pool: look at HydroStar. If you have no pool and no realistic way to build one: Endless Pools is the honest category for you, and we won't try to talk you out of it.
What about cost?
We won't quote Endless Pools prices — that's not our place, and we don't have transparent, current figures we trust to publish. What we can say, honestly, is this:
If you already have a pool, adding EasyStar is almost always less invasive and less expensive than buying and installing a new standalone swim unit next to it. That's not a Binder marketing claim; it's a physics claim. You're adding one bracket-mounted turbine and a low-voltage cable, versus delivering, siting, plumbing, and electrically connecting a whole new water-filled object.
If you're building a new pool from zero, the budgets get closer, because now you're comparing "new pool + HydroStar" with "standalone swim unit + its installation". At that point the decision becomes aesthetic and lifestyle, not financial. Which is why most people choose the thing that still looks like a pool.
The short version
Endless Pools is a real product from a real company. Their fans have good reasons. If the category fits your life — no pool, no room for one, indoor compact footprint — we'd rather you buy one and swim happily than buy the wrong Binder system from us.
But if you live in Cyprus, already own a villa pool, and the only thing missing is the endless-swim feeling, Binder is the category-correct answer. It turns your existing pool into an infinite one. You keep the aesthetics, the guest space, the evening floats — and you get the lap-swim you came here searching for.
Start with the HydroStar overview if you're building, the EasyStar overview if you already have a pool, or the full product range if you're still deciding.
