The US connected fitness brand is entering the high-traffic gym market with its first commercial-grade bike and treadmill, built on Precor’s industrial hardware. The move extends Peloton’s reach beyond home and hospitality fitness into large gym operations, with shipping from late 2026.
Peloton Interactive has launched the Peloton Commercial Series, its first connected bike and treadmill line built for high-traffic gym floors. The company said the products will begin shipping in late 2026 and will initially be available in the US, the UK, Canada, Germany, Australia and Austria.
Announced March 16, the launch marks Peloton’s most direct move yet into the large-scale commercial gym segment – a market the company says is worth multiple billions of dollars globally – extending its reach beyond home users and hospitality placements.
A bid to take Peloton’s content beyond the living room
Peloton is positioning the Commercial Series as an on-floor alternative to its consumer devices, pairing Peloton’s classes and software with commercial-grade hardware. The push comes as the company continues to widen its revenue base after the post-pandemic slowdown in connected fitness demand.
Precor builds the machines; Peloton supplies the platform
The line is the first hardware release from Peloton’s Commercial Business Unit (CBU), created in 2025 by combining Precor – Peloton’s commercial equipment subsidiary – with Peloton for Business. Under that structure, Precor leads product development, engineering and delivery, while Peloton provides the connected platform, content library and design direction.
Commercial unit up 10%, but sales base remains opaque
Peloton said CBU revenue rose 10 percent year over year in its fiscal second quarter, without disclosing absolute figures. The company framed the Commercial Series as its first equipment designed specifically for heavy gym use, distinguishing it from products placed in lighter-use settings such as hotels and residential fitness facilities.
First joint pitch lands at the HFA show in San Diego
Peloton and Precor are set to make their first joint public appearance at the Health & Fitness Association (HFA) Show in San Diego on March 17–18, where the CBU will present itself as a single commercial offering.
Why commercial rivals will be watching closely
If Peloton can persuade gyms to adopt a content-led proposition, it could reshape how connected training is sold on the commercial floor. Incumbent suppliers such as Technogym, Life Fitness and Matrix Fitness have typically competed on equipment durability and service networks; Peloton is testing whether a software and content edge can win share when paired with industrial-grade hardware.