Peloton Gym Equipment Commercial Series

Peloton Gym Equipment Brings Connected Fitness to Gyms

Last Updated: May 10, 2026By

Peloton’s first purpose-built commercial equipment ships in late 2026, backed by Precor’s global reach and 14% year-over-year revenue growth.

Peloton is expanding its reach into gyms in a bigger way. The company announced new Peloton gym equipment purpose-built for high-traffic commercial facilities during its Q3 FY2026 earnings call. The products, known as the Commercial Series, will begin shipping in late 2026 and will initially be available in the US, UK, Canada, Germany, Australia, and Austria.

Peloton gym equipment Commercial Series rendering showing commercial-grade bike and treadmill designed for high-traffic gym environments

What the New Peloton Gym Equipment Includes

The Commercial Series launches with a connected bike and a connected treadmill, representing the first releases in a new line of connected cardio and strength products. It is a step beyond the existing Pro Series, which was designed for hospitality and residential properties. As covered in The Clip Out’s full breakdown of the Commercial Series, the lineup pairs Peloton’s software platform and content library with Precor’s industrial-grade hardware engineering, with additional connected cardio and strength products expected to follow.

According to the official Peloton press release, the new Peloton gym equipment will serve members across the entire fitness spectrum: at home, in lighter-use hospitality and residential fitness locations, and now within large gym facilities. Gym operators will be able to partner with Peloton’s Commercial Business Unit to outfit entire facilities with cardio, strength, and recovery equipment.

A Business Unit Already Growing

The announcement comes on the back of real momentum. Peloton’s commercial business unit grew revenue 14% year-over-year in Q3, and the segment already serves more than 80,000 facilities across more than 60 countries. The CBU also grew revenues 10% year-over-year in fiscal Q2, a signal that demand for Peloton gym equipment was gaining traction before the Commercial Series even hits the market. For full context on the Q3 results, see Peloton’s Q3 FY2026 earnings recap.

Leadership cited the company’s current 3% share of the global commercial fitness equipment market as the core reason for optimism. At 3%, there is substantial room to grow without competing against itself in the consumer segment. The Commercial Series is positioned to capture gym-side demand that purpose-built Peloton gym equipment has not fully addressed until now.

Precor’s Role in Delivering Peloton Gym Equipment

Peloton’s subsidiary Precor is central to how this plays out. Precor leads product development, hardware engineering, and global delivery, while Peloton provides the software ecosystem and design direction. Precor has become a cornerstone of Peloton’s commercial business unit, and its existing footprint in more than 60 countries gives Peloton a built-in path to international scale that would have taken years to build independently.

Peloton’s leadership acknowledged directly on the earnings call that the company “took its eye off the ball” on the commercial side for a couple of years following the Precor acquisition. That admission frames what comes next as a recovery and recommitment rather than a new initiative. Management indicated that gyms are responding positively to Precor’s renewed focus, and that Peloton is the only fitness brand that gym members ask for by name.

Why This Move Fits Peloton’s Broader Strategy

CEO Peter Stern was direct in the press release: “Peloton is going to the gym.” With the Commercial Series, the company is bridging the gap between home and gym by combining its digital content platform with Precor’s industrial-grade hardware to deliver Peloton gym equipment at scale.

It also fits squarely into Peloton’s broader 2026 roadmap, which has centered on diversifying beyond the residential hardware cycle and building sustainable, recurring revenue through commercial and software channels. Based on the company’s improving financial position, it is heading into that window with more confidence than it has had in years.


 

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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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