Best Treadmills of 2026 Tested by a Running Expert


Why we like it:  As a Peloton loyalist, being able to take walking, running and hiking classes on the 23.8-inch screen with my favorite instructors at home was great. Power walking and interval training let you take advantage of the Plus’ steepest 15% incline (up to 12.5% on the regular Tread), which is ideal for strengthening your posterior chain (the muscles along the back of your body) if you have knee or joint issues.

The touchscreen layout, familiar to anyone who has used the Peloton Bike, offers clear metrics and data. I loved being able to set my pace targets ahead of time, allowing me to define “brisk” and “recovery” speeds for each workout. The variety of classes is a huge plus, and the filters let you select a workout based on instructor, length, class type, music, difficulty level and pace targets. The bootcamp classes combine running and strength training for additional options.

The volume is great, and the custom control music-to-voice ratio is an added bonus. Stability feels solid, and the 37-inch tread width is nice, especially for larger athletes (the Tread Plus has more room to run than the standard Tread). The large accessories tray on the Plus is great for holding a phone, water bottle and anything else. 

The Peloton IQ movement tracker and hands-free voice commands in the Plus could be beneficial for those who want a camera-based monitoring system for strength training, although the program can be a bit glitchy. Keep in mind that Peloton instructors already do an excellent job correcting form, giving tips and helping with exercises, even when they can’t see you. Because the swivel screen is available on both machines, you can easily follow a workout without the camera watching you. 

Who it’s best for: The Tread Plus is best for an active and devoted Peloton member who runs, walks, hikes or does race training (or all of them) regularly, and is also committed to strength training and other fitness. It’s great for households with a significant amount of space (a basement, a garage or an extra room) dedicated to working out. 

It’s a perfect machine for busy, goal-oriented, competitive types who want motivation at home, enjoy variety and also seek the simplicity of one machine for a variety of fitness options and classes. You can also use Peloton Entertainment to stream from providers like Disney Plus, YouTube and Kindle.

Although the Peloton IQ function isn’t set up to track form while running or walking on the Tread Plus itself, it would be a bonus for anyone who wants automated form correction, rep counting and suggested weights for other fitness classes using the screen.

Who shouldn’t get it: The Tread Plus isn’t ideal for anyone who enjoys non-guided fitness or prefers to be self-paced with their own listening entertainment (music, audiobooks, etc). Athletes who prefer running outside or at the gym, or who don’t want to pay extra membership fees ($50 per month) for an all-access fitness app, would be better off with a standard piece of equipment. 

The Tread Plus wouldn’t work for households with limited space or that require compact or folding exercise equipment. The machine is heavy (the Tread Plus weighs 460 pounds, compared to the regular Tread at 286 pounds) and can’t be easily moved to accommodate more space. To benefit from using the Peloton IQ for tracking movement, there needs to be ample space around the machine. 

Runners who prefer touch buttons for speed and incline might have difficulty adjusting to the turning knobs. It’s hard to remember which way to roll them (forward or backward) to increase or decrease the speed or incline. The knobs are fine when making a huge jump (like from 12% to 1% incline), but it felt like a subtle art to master the 0.5 increments by just moving them a notch. 

— Laura Michelle Davis, senior editor





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Recent Reviews


The Windows Insider Program is about to get much easier

Ed Bott / Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.


ZDNET’s key takeaways

  • Microsoft is making the Insider Program less complicated.
  • Beta channel will be a more reliable preview of the next retail release.
  • Other changes will allow testers to quickly enable/disable new features.

Last month, Microsoft took official notice of its customers’ many complaints about Windows 11. Pavan Davaluri, the executive vice president who runs the Windows and Devices group, promised sweeping changes to Windows 11. Today, the company announced the first of those changes in a post authored by Alec Oot, who’s been the principal group product manager for the Windows Insider Program since January 2024.

Those changes will streamline the Insider program, which has lost sight of its original goals in the past few years. (For a brief history of the program and what had gone wrong, see my post from last November: “The Windows Insider Program is a confusing mess.”)

Also: If Microsoft really wants to fix Windows 11, it should do these four things ASAP

If you’re currently participating in the Windows Insider Program, these are meaningful changes. Here’s what you can expect.

Simplifying the Insider channel lineup

Throughout the Windows 11 era, signing up for the Insider program has required choosing one of four channels using a dialog in Windows Settings. Here’s what those options look like today on one of my test PCs.

insider-program-channels-lineup-old

The current Insider channel lineup is confusing, to say the least.

Screenshot by Ed Bott/ZDNET

Which channel should you choose? As the company admitted in today’s post, “the channel structure became confusing. It was not clear what channel to pick based on what you wanted to get out of the program.”

The new lineup consists of two primary channels: Experimental and Beta. The Release Preview channel will still be available, primarily for the benefit of corporate customers who want early access to production builds a few days before their official release. That option will be available under the Advanced Options section.

windows-insider-channel-lineup-new

This simplified lineup is easier to follow. Beta is the upcoming retail release, Experimental is for the adventurous.

Screenshot courtesy of Microsoft

Here’s Microsoft’s official description of what’s in each channel now, with the company’s emphasis retained:

  • Experimental replaces what were previously the Dev and Canary channels. The name is deliberate: you’re getting early access to features under active development, with the understanding that what you see may change, get delayed, or not ship at all. We’ve heard your feedback that you want to access and contribute to features early in development and this is the channel to do that.
  • Beta is a refresh of the previous Beta Channel and previews what we plan to ship in the coming weeks. The big change: we’re ending gradual feature rollouts in Beta. When we announce a feature in a Beta update and you take that update, you will have that feature. You may occasionally see small differences within a feature as we test variations, but the feature itself will always be on your device.

These changes will apply to the Windows Insider Program for Business as well.

Offering a choice of platforms

For those testers who want to tinker with the bleeding edge of Windows development, a few additional options will be available in the Experimental channel. These advanced options will allow you to choose from a platform that’s aligned to a currently supported retail build. Currently, that’s Windows 11 version 25H2 or 26H1, with the latter being exclusively for new hardware arriving soon with Snapdragon X2 Arm chips.

Also: Microsoft account vs. local account: How to choose

There will also be a Future Platforms option, which represents a preview build that is not aligned to a retail version of Windows. According to today’s announcement, this option is “aimed at users who are looking to be at the forefront of platform development. Insiders looking for the earliest access to features should remain on a version aligned to a retail build.”

windows-insider-advanced-options-new

The Future Platforms option is the equivalent of the current Canary channel

Screenshot courtesy of Microsoft

Minimizing the chaos of Controlled Feature Rollout

Last month, I urged Microsoft to stop using its Controlled Feature Rollout technology, especially for builds in the Beta channel. Apparently, someone in Redmond was listening.

One of the most common questions we receive from Insiders is “why don’t I have access to a feature that’s been announced in a WIP blog?” This is usually due to a technology called Controlled Feature Rollout (CFR), a gradual process of rolling out new features to ensure quality before releasing to wider audiences. These gradual rollouts are an industry standard that help us measure impact before releasing more broadly. But they also make your experience unpredictable and often mean you don’t get the new features that motivated many of you to join the Insider program to begin with.

Moving forward, Insider builds in the Beta channel will no longer suffer from this gradual rollout of features. Meanwhile, the company says, “Insiders in the Experimental channel will have a new ability to enable or disable specific features via the new Feature Flags page on the Windows Insider Program settings page.”

windows-insider-feature-flags

Builds in the Experimental channel will include the option to turn new features on or off.

Screenshot courtesy of Microsoft

Not every feature will be available from this list, but the intent is to add those flags for “visible new features” that are announced as part of a new Insider build.

Making it easier to change channels

The final change announced today is one I didn’t see coming. Historically, leaving the Windows Insider Program or downgrading a channel (from Dev to Beta, for example) has required a full wipe and reinstall. That’s a major hurdle and a big impediment to anyone who doesn’t have the time or technical skills to do that sort of migration.

Also: Why Microsoft is forcing Windows 11 25H2 update on all eligible PCs

Beginning with the new channel lineup, it should be easier to change channels or leave the program without jumping through a bunch of hoops.

To make this a more streamlined and consistent experience, we’re making some behind the scenes changes to enable Insider builds to use an in-place upgrade (IPU) to hop between versions. This will allow in most cases Insiders to move between Experimental, Beta, and Release Preview on the same Windows core version, or leave the program without a clean install. An IPU takes a bit more time than your normal update but migrates your apps, settings, and data in-place.

If you’ve chosen one of the future platforms from the Experimental channel, those options don’t apply. To move back to a supported retail platform, you’ll need to do a clean install.

Also: Apple, Google, and Microsoft join Anthropic’s Project Glasswing to defend world’s most critical software

The upshot of all these changes should make things a lot clearer for anyone trying to figure out what’s coming in the next big feature update. Beta channel updates, for example, should offer a more accurate preview of what’s coming in the next big feature update, so over the next month or two we should get a better picture of what’s coming in the 26H2 release, due in October.

When can we start to see those changes rolling out to the general public? Stay tuned.





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