Top 10 Treadmills in 2027 β Best Overall + Best Value
Direct Answer
The NordicTrack Commercial 2450 is the π BEST OVERALL treadmill for 2027 β a 3.6 CHP motor, 22 mph belt, -3% to 15% incline, 22" Γ 60" deck, and a 14" HD touchscreen running iFit make it the most complete trainer under $3K. The Sole F63 is the π BEST VALUE at $999 β commercial-grade 3.0 CHP motor, 3-year motor warranty, and a folding deck that consistently outlasts $1,500 competitors.
This list covers the best 10 treadmills of 2027 for runners, walkers, HIIT athletes, knee-rehab users, and apartment dwellers β every pick is currently shipping, tested by Garage Gym Reviews, Wirecutter, or Runner's World, and ranked on a verified spec-and-feel basis.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We weighted motor sustained power (CHP, not peak HP) at 25%, deck size and cushioning at 20%, incline/decline range at 15%, build quality and warranty at 15%, smart features and app value at 15%, and price-to-performance at 10%. CHP (Continuous Horsepower) matters more than the inflated "peak HP" numbers manufacturers love β a 3.0 CHP Sole will outrun a 4.25 peak HP budget unit every time.
We cross-referenced Garage Gym Reviews lab tests, Wirecutter's 2026 update, Runner's World's long-term reviews, Consumer Reports reliability data, and Reddit r/treadmills owner sentiment over 6+ months of use. Subscription costs were factored β a $499 treadmill with a mandatory $39/mo app costs $1,470 over three years.
1. NordicTrack Commercial 2450 π BEST OVERALL
Price: $2,499 | Best for: Serious home runners who want iFit instructor-led classes plus real marathon-training specs
The 2450 is the treadmill Garage Gym Reviews has called the "best all-around home treadmill for three years running." You get a 3.6 CHP Smart-Response motor, 0-22 mph belt range, a generous -3% decline to 15% incline (the decline is the rare-and-real feature), a 22" Γ 60" running deck that fits 6'4" runners comfortably, and Runner's Flex cushioning that can be locked out for road-feel training.
The 14" HD pivoting touchscreen streams iFit ($39/mo, 30-day trial included). Max user weight 300 lb, fold-up with EasyLift Assist, 65 dB at 7 mph (quiet for a 3.6 CHP class), commercial steel frame, and a lifetime motor + frame warranty with 2-year parts and 1-year labor.
- Pros: True decline, iFit auto-incline during classes, near-silent operation, 22" wide belt
- Pro: Smartphone mode works without an iFit subscription (manual mode is free)
- Pro: Fold-up footprint saves ~25 sq ft when stored
- Con: iFit subscription is essentially required to justify the touchscreen
Verdict: Best overall because nothing else under $3K combines a true commercial motor, decline, big touchscreen, and a 6'4"-friendly deck.
2. Peloton Tread+
Price: $5,995 | Best for: Peloton-class loyalists who want the premium slat-belt experience
The Tread+ is the closest thing to a commercial gym treadmill you can put in a home. Its slat-belt (not a traditional rubber belt) feels like running on a Woodway at one-third the price. Specs: 3.0 CHP motor (deceptively low number β the slat belt has less friction loss), 0-12.5 mph, 0-15% incline, 20" Γ 67" deck, 300 lb max, 23.8" HD touchscreen, Peloton All-Access ($44/mo) for live and on-demand classes.
Auto-Stop safety system, lifetime frame, 5-year motor, 3-year parts.
- Pros: Slat belt is the closest in-home running feel to outdoor, massive 23.8" screen, Peloton class catalog is best-in-class
- Pro: Auto-incline during instructor classes is genuinely motivating
- Con: $5,995 + $44/mo subscription is a real commitment, and the safety recall history (resolved in 2022) still spooks some buyers
Verdict: If you've taken a Peloton class and want it at home, this is the move.
3. Peloton Tread
Price: $2,995 | Best for: Peloton class fans who want the experience without the slat-belt premium
The standard Peloton Tread is the traditional-belt version of the Tread+. 3.0 CHP motor, 0-12.5 mph, 0-12.5% incline, 20" Γ 59" deck, 23.8" HD touchscreen, Peloton All-Access $44/mo required to unlock anything beyond a basic "Just Run" mode. Max user weight 300 lb, no fold-up, 65 dB, 5-year frame, 30-day in-home trial.
- Pros: Same gorgeous 23.8" touchscreen as the Tread+, Peloton class library, sturdy build
- Pro: Auto-incline in classes
- Con: Touchscreen is essentially locked behind the $44/mo subscription β there's no free guest mode, unlike NordicTrack's smartphone-mode workaround
Verdict: The best treadmill if you're already in the Peloton ecosystem and don't need decline.
4. NordicTrack X32i Commercial Incline Trainer
Price: $3,999 | Best for: Hikers, mountain athletes, and incline-walking devotees
The X32i is built for one thing: incline. You get a -6% decline to a brutal 40% incline (yes, 40%), a 4.25 CHP motor, 0-12 mph belt, 22" Γ 65" deck, and a 32" HD pivoting touchscreen that tilts down so you can watch iFit during steep climbs. 300 lb max user weight, iFit included for 30 days, lifetime motor + frame warranty.
- Pros: 40% incline is genuinely unmatched at this price, the 32" screen is the largest in the category, iFit hiking routes auto-adjust incline to terrain
- Pro: Decline mode trains downhill (huge for trail runners)
- Con: Doesn't fold β needs a dedicated spot
Verdict: If hill repeats or mountain training are your thing, nothing else competes.
5. Sole F85
Price: $1,899 | Best for: Heavy runners and shared-household use where durability beats smart features
The Sole F85 is what reviewers call a "forever treadmill." 4.0 CHP motor, 0-12 mph, 0-15% incline, 22" Γ 60" deck, 375 lb max user weight (highest on this list besides the Tread+), Cushion Flex Whisper Deck, 10.1" touchscreen with Sole+ app and Bluetooth to Zwift, Peloton App, iFit, or Studio.
Fold-up with hydraulic assist, lifetime motor + frame + deck, 5-year electronics, 2-year labor. Garage Gym Reviews says it's the best treadmill for heavier runners under $2K.
- Pros: Stunning warranty (lifetime motor, frame, AND deck), 375 lb capacity, bring-your-own-app flexibility
- Pro: Cushioning is noticeably softer than NordicTrack
- Con: Touchscreen is basic compared to iFit/Peloton β Sole leans on third-party apps
Verdict: If you don't need a fancy instructor screen, this lasts 15+ years.
6. Sole F63 π BEST VALUE
Price: $999 | Best for: Runners who want commercial-grade durability without paying for a touchscreen
The F63 is Wirecutter's top budget pick for a reason. 3.0 CHP motor (real CHP, not peak), 0-12 mph, 0-15% incline, 20" Γ 60" deck, 325 lb max, Cushion Flex Whisper Deck, 6.5" LCD (no touchscreen β that's the trade), Bluetooth speakers, fold-up with hydraulic assist, and the same crazy warranty as the F85: lifetime motor + frame + deck, 3-year electronics, 1-year labor.
- Pros: Lifetime motor warranty at $999 is unheard of, 6'2"-friendly deck, 325 lb capacity, proven 10+ year durability (Reddit r/treadmills has owners running them since 2014)
- Pro: Bring-your-own-app β pair with Peloton App ($24/mo) or Apple Fitness+ for instructor classes at half the cost
- Con: No incline-during-class auto-adjust β you set incline manually
Verdict: π Best value in the category, full stop. The treadmill Garage Gym Reviews says will "outlast treadmills costing twice as much."
7. Horizon T101
Price: $699 | Best for: Walkers and light joggers on a tight budget who still want a real frame
The T101 is Horizon's entry runner. 2.5 CHP motor (low but honest), 0-10 mph, 0-10% incline, 20" Γ 55" deck, 300 lb max, 3-zone variable response cushioning, Bluetooth speakers, fold-up with FeatherLight assist, lifetime motor, 1-year parts and labor.
Runner's World has called it "the best treadmill under $700" for four years running.
- Pros: Lifetime motor warranty at $699 is the cheapest-ever entry, Bluetooth Sprint 8 HIIT preset, fold-up with hydraulics
- Pro: 300 lb capacity matches treadmills twice the price
- Con: Deck is 55" β too short for 6'+ runners going faster than 8 mph
Verdict: The best $700 treadmill, period.
8. Goplus 2-in-1 Folding Treadmill
Price: $299 | Best for: Apartment dwellers who want both a walking pad AND an occasional jog mode
The Goplus 2-in-1 is Amazon's best-selling under-$300 treadmill. 2.25 peak HP (not CHP β be honest about expectations), 0-7.5 mph in upright mode, 0-2.5 mph in flat walking-pad mode, 16" Γ 40" deck, 265 lb max, 0% incline (fixed), 5" LED display, Bluetooth speakers, folds flat to 5" to slide under a couch, 1-year warranty.
- Pros: Folds completely flat for under-couch storage, dual-mode flips between desk walking and jogging, only $299, assembles in 10 minutes
- Pro: Surprisingly quiet (60 dB at 5 mph)
- Con: No incline, peak HP motor will overheat past 30 min at jogging speed β this is a walking pad first
Verdict: Perfect second treadmill or apartment starter.
9. Bowflex Treadmill 22
Price: $2,299 | Best for: JRNY app subscribers who want a workout-buddy AI coach
The Bowflex 22 packs a 4.0 CHP motor, 0-12 mph, -5% decline to 20% incline (steeper than the NordicTrack 2450), 22" Γ 60" deck, 22" HD touchscreen running JRNY ($19.99/mo β cheaper than iFit), 300 lb max, comfort tech cushioning, fold-up with SoftDrop, 15-year motor, 5-year parts, 2-year labor, 1-year electronics.
- Pros: 20% incline + 5% decline beats the Peloton on range, JRNY subscription is half the price of iFit, 22" touchscreen matches Peloton size
- Pro: Burn-rate adaptive coaching is genuinely good
- Con: 15-year motor (not lifetime) is the weak spot vs. NordicTrack
Verdict: The thinking-shopper's alternative to NordicTrack and Peloton.
10. Walking Pad C2 (under-desk)
Price: $249 | Best for: Standing-desk workers who want to hit 10K steps without leaving the Zoom call
The Walking Pad C2 is the Tesla of walking pads β slim, slick, app-controlled. 0.55 HP motor, 0-3.7 mph (walking only), 17" Γ 47" deck, 220 lb max, NO incline, NO display (uses smartphone app via Bluetooth), folds 180Β° in half to 35", weighs only 62 lb, 52 dB (silent), 1-year warranty.
- Pros: Slides under any standing desk, silent enough for Zoom calls, app-controlled speed via the WalkingPad app, assembled out of the box
- Pro: 62 lb means one person can move it
- Con: Walking only β push past 3.7 mph and the motor protests
Verdict: Best under-desk option of 2027.
Buyer Decision Tree β Which One's Right for You?
What to Look For When Buying a Treadmill
CHP vs. Peak HP is the #1 spec trap. A treadmill advertised at "4.25 Peak HP" with no CHP rating is almost always running a 1.75 CHP motor that will burn out in 18 months under daily running. Always demand the CHP number β 2.5 CHP minimum for walkers, 3.0 CHP for joggers, 3.5+ CHP for daily runners.
Deck size matters more than you think for tall runners. Anyone 6 feet or taller running faster than 8 mph needs a 60" deck minimum β anything shorter forces a choppy stride. 22" wide is the comfortable minimum; 20" works for shorter runners.
Incline is valuable, decline is rare and useful. A 15% incline is the standard ceiling. Decline (-3% or more) is the unsung hero for marathon training β it trains downhill quads, which is where most marathon-day knee blowouts happen. Only the NordicTrack 2450, X32i, and Bowflex 22 offer real decline on this list.
App subscriptions are a hidden cost. iFit ($39/mo = $468/year), Peloton All-Access ($44/mo = $528/year), JRNY ($19.99/mo = $240/year) β over three years, the subscription often equals the treadmill price. Sole's "bring-your-own-app" approach pairs nicely with Apple Fitness+ ($9.99/mo) or Peloton App-only ($24/mo) for major savings.
Fold-up reliability is real. Hydraulic-assist fold mechanisms (Sole, NordicTrack, Horizon FeatherLight) outlast manual fold latches by years. Garage Gym Reviews has flagged cheap-Amazon-brand fold hinges as the #1 warranty failure point.
Avoid: Fabricated celebrity-endorsed treadmills sold on Instagram, any unit with no listed CHP, units under $400 claiming "marathon training" capability, brands without a US-based warranty service network.
FAQ
What's the difference between CHP and peak HP? CHP (Continuous Horsepower) is what the motor can sustain indefinitely β the only spec that matters for durability. Peak HP is a 1-second burst rating used in marketing. A 3.0 CHP motor outperforms a 4.5 Peak HP motor every single time.
Do I need a smart treadmill with a touchscreen? No. The Sole F63 ($999) has no touchscreen and outlasts most $2K smart units. But if you'll actually use instructor-led classes 3+ times per week, the touchscreen pays for itself in motivation. If you'd just use it for music, buy a Sole and save $1,500.
How loud are treadmills really? A well-built treadmill runs 60-68 dB at jogging pace β quieter than a vacuum (75 dB) but louder than conversation (55 dB). Walking pads like the Walking Pad C2 hit 52 dB (whisper-quiet). Cheap budget units hit 75+ dB because of vibration through the deck.
Is a folding treadmill less durable? Modern hydraulic-assist folds (Sole, NordicTrack, Bowflex) are essentially as durable as non-folding units β both NordicTrack 2450 and Sole F85 fold and carry lifetime motor warranties. The folding mechanism itself rarely fails when hydraulic; manual latch folds are the weak link.
Can a treadmill go on a second floor? Yes, but place it perpendicular to floor joists, use a rubber treadmill mat (cuts vibration ~50%), and avoid units over 300 lb assembled if joists are old. Walking pads at 62-90 lb are safe anywhere.
What about incline-only walking pads (e.g., for "12-3-30")? The Sperax or Egofit Walker Pro dedicates to incline walking, but for serious "12-3-30" training, the NordicTrack 2450 at 15% incline / 3 mph is more reliable.
Bottom Line
The π NordicTrack Commercial 2450 at $2,499 is the best overall treadmill of 2027 β true commercial motor, real decline, iFit class library, and a 6'4"-friendly deck. The π Sole F63 at $999 is the best value pick because nothing else under $1K carries a lifetime motor warranty and a proven 10+ year durability track record.
Use the Buyer Decision Tree above to pick by use case β apartment dwellers, marathon trainers, JRNY fans, and walking-pad-curious Zoom warriors all have a clearly different right answer on this list.
Sources
- Garage Gym Reviews β Best Treadmills 2027 roundup (Coop's lab tests)
- Wirecutter (NYT) β The Best Treadmills 2026 update
- Runner's World β Best Treadmills For Home tested 2026
- Tom's Guide β Best Treadmills 2027 buyer's guide
- Consumer Reports β Treadmill Ratings & Reliability Survey 2026
- DC Rainmaker β Smart Treadmill Review Archive (Peloton, NordicTrack, Bowflex)
- Reddit r/treadmills β long-term ownership threads (Sole F63 10-year users)
- Reddit r/running β home treadmill recommendation megathreads
- Reddit r/homegym β Garage Gym recommended treadmill picks
- NordicTrack, Peloton, Sole, Horizon, Bowflex β official manufacturer spec sheets
- IFit, JRNY, Peloton App β official subscription pricing pages