New Peloton Walking Classes Drop for Hikers and Steppers
Peloton Walking Classes Just Got a Stacked Update
More incline hikes and step-targeting add-ons are now in the library.
Peloton’s Walking tab got busier this week. Several new classes landed in the on-demand library, spanning two of the platform’s most stackable formats: percentage hike classes and Extra Steps walks. If you have been working through the incline levels or trying to hit a daily step goal, there is fresh content waiting for you.
New Peloton Walking Classes: What Dropped This Week
The new additions include multiple percentage hike classes and Extra Steps walks, all accessible under the Walking tab in the Peloton app or on the Tread touchscreen. Here is what is now in the library:

15 min Extra Steps Walk: 2000 Steps with Joslyn Thompson Rule
10 min Extra Steps: approximately 1000 Steps with Jeffrey McEachern (in German)

15 min 8% Hike with Jon Hosking 15 min
10% Hike with Kirsten Ferguson
The Extra Steps format uses BPM-driven music to guide pace, which keeps the movement purposeful rather than passive. The percentage hike classes do the same thing with incline: you know exactly what grade you are walking at before you press play, which makes it easy to plan and track your effort.
A Consistent Release Cadence
This kind of drop is not unusual. As we covered in March, new percentage hike classes have been arriving at a pace of roughly three to four per month since the format launched in October 2025. Extra Steps classes have a slightly less predictable cadence, with a notable gap between September 2025 and the March 2026 additions. This week’s release suggests both formats are getting ongoing attention.
The steady rollout matters for members who use these as add-ons. Having new classes at specific incline levels or step targets means you are not repeating the same session every time you want to tack something onto the end of a stack.
Why Stacking Short Classes Works
There is a straightforward reason these formats are popular for stacking. Finishing a longer run or strength session and then adding 10 or 15 minutes of focused work at a fixed incline or step count extends the aerobic benefit without requiring a separate workout block. You stay warm, keep the heart rate elevated a bit longer, and close out the session with something measurable.
Short, structured finishers have long been a tool in endurance and strength programming. The percentage hike and Extra Steps formats apply that same logic in a format that is low-impact and easy to complete. You do not need to think about pacing or effort levels mid-class. The structure is set. You just walk.
No Tread Required
One thing worth noting: these Peloton walking classes are not locked to the Tread. Extra Steps walks in particular are designed to be taken anywhere, which means you can play the class and just listen while outside and get the same guided, music-paced experience on a sidewalk or trail. The percentage hike classes are Tread-based by design since incline is built into the format, but if you are already outside on a hill, the concept translates.
You can browse all current Peloton walking classes at members.onepeloton.com/classes/walking.
Have you been stacking these onto your workouts, or are you taking them as standalone sessions? Let us know!
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.
Latest Podcast

Subscribe
Keep up with all the Peloton news!


