Peloton Entertainment and Scenic Classes

Peloton Entertainment and Scenic Content: A Hidden Gem

Stream Netflix, Disney+, and NBA League Pass or travel through real-world routes in South Korea, Portugal, and beyond. Your metrics never leave the screen.

Peloton members tend to talk about instructors, leaderboards, and output numbers. Fewer talk about Peloton Entertainment and Scenic, one of the platform’s most quietly useful features, and one that Peloton named as a differentiator in its Q3 FY2026 earnings presentation.

That detail is worth noting. When a company highlights a feature in its investor deck, it is signaling where it believes lasting value lives.

Peloton Entertainment and Scenic - screenshot

What Peloton Entertainment and Scenic Actually Is

The feature lives inside a section Peloton calls Experiences, and it is available on Bike, Tread, and Row. Each piece of equipment has its own version of the Experiences menu with options tailored to that format. The Entertainment section sits as a dedicated tab alongside Experiences on all three and pulls in streaming platforms you already subscribe to.

The core idea is consistent across all three. Instead of following an instructor through a standard class, members can ride, run, or row while watching something else, moving through a real-world scenic route, or doing both simultaneously. Real-time metrics stay on screen throughout.

For members who have never explored it, Peloton Entertainment and Scenic is one of the most underused tools on the platform.

Which Equipment Has Access

Peloton Entertainment and Scenic is available on Bike, Tread, and Row. Each piece of equipment has its own dedicated Scenic experience built into the Experiences menu: Scenic Ride on Bike, Scenic Run on Tread, and Scenic Row on Row. Entertainment appears as its own dedicated tab in the bottom navigation bar on all three.

This is a platform-wide feature. A meaningful number of Tread and Row owners may not realize that Peloton Entertainment and Scenic content it is sitting right there in their navigation.

The Entertainment Options

The Entertainment section currently includes eight streaming partners: Disney+, Netflix, YouTube, YouTube TV, AMC+, DirecTV, Kindle, and NBA League Pass. Members log in with their existing credentials for each service. No additional subscription through Peloton is required. Peloton’s official Entertainment guide has the full breakdown of each provider and what it offers.

That lineup covers most of the major bases. Live sports through YouTube TV, DirecTV, and NBA League Pass. On-demand content through Netflix, Disney+, and AMC+. Long-form video through YouTube. Reading through Kindle, which is a practical option for lower-intensity sessions.

The ability to watch live sports during a workout is one of the more underappreciated elements here. If you have been putting off a long session because a game is on, that conflict no longer exists.

Members can also pair Entertainment with Just Guidance, a feature that runs instructor-curated target metrics in the background while you stream. It adjusts automatically to the duration of your workout, so you can watch what you want without giving up a structured effort.

How Peloton Scenic Routes Are Organized

Peloton scenic routes are broken into three subcategories: Guided, Time, and Distance. Each format gives members a different way to experience Peloton scenic routes without following a stand instructor-led class.

Guided scenic content pairs real-world footage with instructor narration. These are not standard instructor-led classes. The instructor accompanies you through the landscape and narrates the route. Locations in the current library include London, Montenegro, Lucerne, Portugal, Norway, and an Earth Day route narrated by Sam Yo. Several guided options are narrated in German, with instructors including Cliff Dwenger, Charlotte Weidenbach, Mayla Wedekind, and Benny Adami. Peloton has also been expanding this format with audio-guided scenic classes that continue to add new locations to the library.

Peloton Entertainment and Scenic - guided classes

Time-based Peloton scenic routes let members move at their own pace through a scenic landscape for a set duration. Current locations in this category include South Korea, Taiwan, Washington state, New York, and Laos. A recent addition worth noting is the Peloton Scenic 5K, a collaboration with New York Road Runners that takes Tread members through Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens.

Peloton Entertainment and Scenic - time classes

Distance-based scenic content follows the same format but is structured around a target distance. The Row’s featured scenic content reflects this well: routes include the 1500m Milford Sound Row, the 2000m Swan River Row, the 5 min Naivasha Lake Row, the 15 min Bayou Lacombe Row, and the 15 min South Carolina Country Row narrated by Alex Karwoski. The locations span New Zealand, Australia, Kenya, Louisiana, and the American South, which underscores how genuinely global the scenic library already is.

Peloton Entertainment and Scenic - distance classes

 

Why the Earnings Call Mention Matters

Peloton is navigating a period of declining subscriber numbers and has been public about the challenges involved. Part of its response is a sharper focus on content breadth, including global expansion through AI dubbing that translates classes into additional languages more efficiently. The full picture is in The Clip Out’s coverage of the Q3 FY2026 earnings presentation.

Peloton Entertainment and Scenic fits into that strategy in a specific way. The scenic library requires no translation. Peloton scenic routes like a row through Milford Sound, a run through the streets of Laos, or a ride along the coast of Montenegro works for any member anywhere in the world. It is already a global-ready product without the localization overhead that instructor-led content requires.

The guided scenic content narrated in German is a direct example of this in practice. Peloton is already building a multilingual scenic library, and the format scales more cleanly than traditional classes.

Highlighting the feature in an investor presentation is not incidental. It reflects a deliberate push around platform stickiness that extends beyond instructor loyalty, and it signals that Peloton sees this content as a long-term retention tool.

Where to Find It

Peloton Entertainment and Scenic is easy to find on all three devices. On Bike, navigate to Experiences from the home screen and select Scenic Ride. On Tread, the same section offers Scenic Run. On Row, select Experiences and choose Scenic Row. The full Peloton Entertainment and Scenic experience is accessible as a dedicated tab in the bottom navigation bar on all three pieces of equipment.

For members who have not explored the Peloton scenic routes library recently, the collection spans multiple continents and continues to grow. If the standard class format has started to feel repetitive, this is the most direct fix already built into the platform you own.

 


  The Clip Out is an independent Peloton news site with reporting, analysis, and community insights. We deliver breaking updates, feature reporting, and expert context on the stories driving the community and the industry. Our weekly podcast offers deeper conversation and perspective, and you can find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeart, TuneIn, and YouTube Music. You can also follow us on our socials on Facebook, Threads, Instagram, BlueSky, and YouTube. See something in the Peloton universe that you think we should know? Visit us at theclipout.com and submit a tip.

About the Author: Jen Kern

Jen has been a Peloton member since early 2020 and is a travel-loving adventurer always on the hunt for the next vacation. In 2025, she ran her first marathon at the Berlin Marathon (thanks to many Peloton running programs that somehow turned her into a real runner.) Jen owns her own consulting company, where she works with behavioral health agencies to streamline their processes and go paperless. When she’s not training or consulting, she’s planning her next trip, enjoying a great glass of wine, or floating in her pool pretending she can’t hear anyone call “mom.” You can find her on the Peloton leaderboard, fueled by miles, memories, and #Reasons2Wine.

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