There are over a dozen treadmill brands selling into the UK market right now, and they are not all created equal. Some design and engineer their own machines. Others buy generic hardware from a factory in China and stick a badge on it. Knowing which is which saves you money, frustration, and in the worst case scenario, a trip to the tip.

This page covers every treadmill brand worth considering in the UK, from global names like NordicTrack and Peloton down to budget options like Citysports and Homcom. Each brand gets an honest summary: what they do well, where they fall short, their price range, and whether their warranty actually means anything.

If you already know your budget rather than your preferred brand, our best treadmill under £500 and best treadmill under £1,000 guides might be a faster route.

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UK Treadmill Brands at a Glance

Brand Price Range Best Known For
Reebok £400–£2,000 Best warranty, no subscription
NordicTrack £500–£3,500+ iFIT smart training
ProForm £450–£1,500 iFIT on a budget
Peloton £3,000+ Class-driven motivation
JTX Fitness £400–£1,500 British brand, direct support
Domyos (Decathlon) £300–£1,000 Walk-in store warranty
JLL Fitness £250–£700 Budget value
Xterra Fitness £400–£800 No-frills runners
Citysports £150–£350 Walking pads and under-desk
WalkingPad £250–£500 Compact folding design
Homcom £150–£400 Lowest entry price

Reebok

Price range: £400–£2,000 | Models: 7+ | Subscription required: No | Warranty: Lifetime frame, 10-year motor, 2-year parts & labour

Reebok covers more of the UK treadmill market than almost any other brand. Their current range runs from the GT40z walking treadmill at around £400 up to the Z-tech series at £1,500+, with the Jet and Floatride series filling the middle ground.

The standout advantage is warranty. Reebok gives you lifetime frame and 10-year motor cover as standard, no registration required, no deadline to meet. Most competitors require you to register within 28 days or you lose extended cover. Reebok just gives it to you.

Every Reebok treadmill works in manual mode without any subscription. Zwift and Kinomap compatibility is included on most models if you want app-based training, but it is entirely optional. UK-based phone and chat support rounds out a genuinely strong package.

The Floatride FR30z is one of the best treadmills under £1,000 from any brand, and the Jet 300 is the best folding option in their range.

→ Read our full Reebok treadmills guide

NordicTrack

Price range: £500–£3,500+ | Models: 6+ | Subscription required: Optional but encouraged | Warranty: Lifetime frame, 10-year motor (if registered within 28 days)

NordicTrack is the biggest name in smart treadmills globally, and they have a serious presence in the UK market. Every NordicTrack treadmill is built around iFIT, their connected training platform that lets instructors automatically control your speed and incline during workouts.

If you want guided training, NordicTrack does it better than anyone. The T Series (5, 8, 9, 10) covers budget through to mid-range, while the Commercial Series (1750, 2450) competes at the premium end. Build quality is consistently good across the range, and the higher-end models feature HD touchscreen consoles.

The catch is the subscription model. iFIT costs around £39/month for a family plan. NordicTrack treadmills work without it, but the experience is significantly reduced. You also need to register your warranty within 28 days of purchase or you drop from the full cover to a basic 12-month warranty. That is a meaningful downside compared to Reebok’s no-registration approach.

NordicTrack and ProForm are sister brands, both owned by iFIT (formerly ICON Health & Fitness). They share the same parent company, many of the same components, and the same iFIT platform.

→ Read our full NordicTrack treadmills guide

ProForm

Price range: £450–£1,500 | Models: 5+ | Subscription required: Optional but encouraged | Warranty: Lifetime frame, 10-year motor (if registered within 28 days)

ProForm is NordicTrack’s sister brand, offering similar iFIT integration at a lower price point. Think of it as the value route into the NordicTrack ecosystem. The Carbon series (T7, TL, TLS, TLX) covers the budget and mid-range, while the Pro series pushes into premium territory.

The hardware is good. ProForm treadmills use ProShox cushioning, Quiet Drive motors, and the same iFIT compatibility as NordicTrack. Where you see the price difference is mainly in screen size and build materials rather than fundamental capability.

The same 28-day registration requirement applies as with NordicTrack. Miss that window and your warranty drops to 12 months. The subscription expectation is also the same: iFIT enhances the experience considerably, but it is an ongoing cost.

The ProForm Carbon TLS stands out as one of the quietest treadmills in its price bracket, making it a strong choice for flats and terraced houses.

→ Read our full ProForm treadmills guide

Peloton

Price range: £1,345+ | Models: 2 | Subscription required: Yes (for full experience) | Warranty: 5-year frame, 5-year motor

Peloton is the brand that turned fitness equipment into a lifestyle product. The Peloton Tread is premium hardware with a 23.8-inch HD touchscreen, belt-driven system instead of a traditional motor, and what is arguably the best connected fitness platform in the industry.

The classes are genuinely excellent. Live and on-demand sessions with professional instructors who build real communities. If you are someone who needs external motivation and structure, Peloton delivers it better than any competitor. The hardware quality is also exceptional: the belt drive is smoother and quieter than motor-driven alternatives.

The downsides are significant. The entry price is the highest on this list. The subscription costs £12.99–£24/month on top. The warranty is weaker than Reebok, NordicTrack, or ProForm. And Peloton has had well-documented reliability issues with earlier Tread models, though the current generation is improved.

If you know you will use the classes regularly and the subscription cost does not bother you, Peloton is hard to beat for engagement. If you just want a treadmill to run on, you are paying a premium for features you will not use.

→ Read our full Peloton treadmills guide

JTX Fitness

Price range: £400–£1,500 | Models: 6+ | Subscription required: No | Warranty: Lifetime frame, 2-year in-home parts & labour

JTX is a British fitness equipment brand that designs, manufactures, and sells its own treadmills direct to consumers. No middleman retailers, no third-party sellers. You buy from JTX, and if something goes wrong, you deal with JTX.

That direct relationship is their biggest selling point. UK-based customer support with people who actually know the products. In-home engineer visits for warranty work. A 30-day money-back guarantee with free collection if you change your mind.

The treadmill range covers walking pads (SlimLine, MoveLight) through to serious running machines (Sprint 7, Sprint 8, Club Pro). Build quality is competitive with Reebok and NordicTrack, and the no-subscription approach means every feature works from day one without an ongoing cost.

Kinomap and Zwift compatible across the smart treadmill range. JTX also produces its own workout video library, which is free for customers.

→ Read our full JTX treadmills guide

Domyos (Decathlon)

Price range: £300–£1,000 | Models: 5+ | Subscription required: No | Warranty: 2-year standard (5-year on some models), in-store service

Domyos is Decathlon’s in-house fitness brand, and the treadmill range benefits from Decathlon’s biggest advantage: physical stores across the UK where you can walk in, try the machine, and deal with warranty issues face to face.

The Run 100 and Run 500 cover the budget end. The Run 900 pushes into mid-range territory with a larger motor and running deck. These are practical, well-engineered machines that prioritise reliability over flashy features.

Assembly is typically simpler than competitors (the Run 500 arrives largely pre-assembled), and the no-subscription, no-app-required approach keeps things straightforward. Kinomap compatibility is available on higher-end models.

The trade-off is spec for spec, Domyos treadmills often have smaller motors and running decks than equivalently priced machines from Reebok or NordicTrack. What you are paying for is the convenience of in-store service and the simplicity of the buying experience.

→ Read our full Domyos treadmills guide

JLL Fitness

Price range: £250–£700 | Models: 5+ | Subscription required: No | Warranty: Lifetime frame, 2-year motor, 2-year parts

JLL is a UK-based fitness equipment brand that has carved out a strong position in the budget market. Their treadmills consistently rank among the most popular on Amazon UK, and for good reason: the specs-to-price ratio is hard to beat.

The S300 and T350 are their best sellers, offering powered incline, decent motor power, and folding designs at prices that undercut the competition. UK-based customer service with phone support adds confidence that you are not buying from a faceless overseas seller.

Build quality is adequate for the price but noticeably below Reebok or NordicTrack. These are machines built to a budget, and they feel like it in the details: thinner frames, noisier motors at higher speeds, and smaller running decks. For walkers and light joggers who want a reliable machine without spending £500+, JLL offers genuine value. For regular runners, look further up the price range.

→ Read our full JLL treadmills guide

Xterra Fitness

Price range: £400–£800 | Models: 3+ | Subscription required: No | Warranty: Lifetime frame, 2-year motor, 1-year parts

Xterra is an American fitness brand that has quietly built a reputation for solid, no-frills treadmills at reasonable prices. They are less well known than Reebok or NordicTrack in the UK, which means less brand tax in the price.

The TRX2500 is their standout UK model: a folding treadmill with a 2.25 HP motor, 12% power incline, Bluetooth speakers, and a 140 × 51 cm running deck that is wider than most competitors at this price. No app lock-in, no subscription required, no connected platform to worry about.

Xterra treadmills are built for people who want to run and nothing else. No touchscreen, no class library, no gamification. If that appeals to you, they represent excellent value. If you want connected features, look elsewhere.

→ Read our full Xterra treadmills guide

Citysports

Price range: £150–£350 | Models: 3+ | Subscription required: No | Warranty: 1-year standard

Citysports dominates the UK walking pad and under-desk treadmill market. If you have searched for a cheap walking treadmill on Amazon, you have almost certainly seen their products. They consistently rank in the top results for compact, foldable walking machines.

These are not running treadmills. Most Citysports models top out at 6–8 km/h with no incline, small decks, and lightweight frames. They are designed for walking while working, gentle daily movement, or as a starting point for people who want to build a walking habit.

At that price point and for that purpose, they are genuinely useful. Build quality is basic but functional, and the foldable designs are among the most compact on the market. Do not expect them to last as long or feel as solid as a Reebok or NordicTrack. They are disposable fitness equipment, priced accordingly.

→ Read our full Citysports treadmills guide

WalkingPad

Price range: £250–£500 | Models: 4+ | Subscription required: No | Warranty: 1-year standard

WalkingPad essentially created the foldable walking pad category and remains the brand to beat in this space. Their machines fold in half (literally), making them the most compact treadmills on the market when stored.

The 2-in-1 models with a foldable handle offer both walking and light jogging modes, with speeds up to 12 km/h. Build quality is a step above Citysports, with better materials, smoother belt tracking, and more refined app integration via the KS Fit app.

WalkingPad is the right choice if compact storage is your absolute priority and you primarily want to walk. For running, the small deck size and lightweight frame make them unsuitable.

→ Read our full WalkingPad treadmills guide

Homcom

Price range: £150–£400 | Models: 5+ | Subscription required: No | Warranty: 1-year standard

Homcom is a budget home goods brand that sells everything from furniture to fitness equipment. Their treadmills are among the cheapest available in the UK, frequently appearing in the £150–£300 range on Amazon and other retailers.

At that price point, expectations need to be realistic. Homcom treadmills have small motors, narrow running decks, basic consoles, and lightweight frames. They are functional for light walking but will struggle with anything more demanding. Noise levels at higher speeds can be significant, and long-term durability is a question mark.

If your budget is genuinely capped below £250 and you want a motorised treadmill for walking, Homcom gets you moving. For anything beyond light walking, saving an extra £100–£200 for a JLL or entry-level Reebok will give you a meaningfully better experience.

→ Read our full Homcom treadmills guide

How to Choose a Treadmill Brand

Brand loyalty matters less than you might think with treadmills. A good Reebok at £900 will beat a bad NordicTrack at £900. That said, each brand has a genuine philosophy that affects what you get for your money.

If you want guided smart training: NordicTrack or Peloton. Both build their experience around connected platforms with professional instructors. NordicTrack offers more hardware variety and price range. Peloton offers a more polished platform with stronger community features.

If you want no subscription, no hassle: Reebok, JTX, or Xterra. All three build treadmills that work fully out of the box with no ongoing costs. Reebok has the best warranty, JTX has the best UK support, Xterra has the best value for pure runners.

If you want in-store support: Domyos from Decathlon. No other brand lets you walk into a high street shop, test the treadmill, and handle warranty claims face to face.

If you are on a tight budget: JLL offers the best value under £500 from a brand with UK support. Below £300, Citysports and Homcom will get you walking, but do not expect them to last.

If you want smart training without subscription lock-in: ProForm gives you iFIT capability but works well in manual mode too. The quieter motors and QuickFold designs make them practical for smaller homes.

For detailed recommendations by budget, see our best treadmill under £500 and best treadmill under £1,000 buying guides.