Peloton is finally bringing its bikes and treadmills to commercial gym floors. The company announced the Peloton Commercial Series today, marking its first equipment line built specifically for high-traffic fitness centers rather than home use.
The new lineup includes a connected bike and a connected treadmill designed to handle constant foot traffic. They combine Peloton’s familiar software and design with heavy-duty engineering from Precor, the company Peloton acquired back in 2020. You’ll start seeing these machines ship in late 2026.
CEO Peter Stern described the move as bridging the gap between home workouts and gym visits. The idea is simple: let members experience Peloton’s instruction wherever they happen to exercise. This announcement signals a serious evolution for a company that built its name on living room workouts.
Built different for the gym floor
These machines aren’t just rebranded home bikes with a new sticker. They feature industrial-grade durability from Precor, which now leads product development for Peloton’s commercial unit. Regular home equipment would wear down fast in a busy gym, so these versions are engineered to survive that environment.
Gym operators can now outfit their facilities through Peloton’s Commercial Business Unit. That unit came together in 2025 through the Precor integration, and it grew revenue by 10 percent year over year in fiscal Q2. The first public demo happens this week at the Health & Fitness Association Show, where Peloton will pitch operators directly.
What stays the same
Despite the tougher hardware, the experience shouldn’t feel foreign. Peloton still handles the software and design direction, so members get the same interface and content they recognize from home. The company promises its best-in-class instruction carries over to these commercial machines.

The Commercial Series represents just the first wave of a broader lineup. Peloton plans to add more cardio and strength products for gyms over time, joining its existing presence in lighter-use spots like hotels and apartment buildings. For now, the focus stays on getting the bike and tread into full-scale fitness centers.
When you’ll see them
Shipping begins in late 2026 across the US, UK, Canada, Germany, Australia and Austria. Those markets match Peloton’s existing consumer base, giving the company a foundation to scale through Precor’s reach in more than 60 countries worldwide.
For gym-goers, this timeline means you could spot these machines at your local fitness center sometime next year. The company is actively pitching operators at the industry show this week, so deals are likely already in the works. If you already use Peloton at home, the commercial versions should feel like a natural extension of your routine, just in a much busier setting.





