Lose Weight

For busy people who want real fat loss—without wrecking your joints. Pick your movement: walking treadmills, ellipticals, rowers, upright/fan bikes, or rope trainers. Expect quiet drives, compact footprints, simple consoles, and HR-strap support so 20–30 minutes/day actually happens. Do both: steady-state most days + 1–3 weekly interval sessions for faster results. New to cardio? Choose low-impact options. Crave intensity? Go HIIT-ready. Your routine, simplified.

207 products

Lose Weight: build a routine you can actually stick to

Who it’s for — Anyone ready to drop body fat without wrecking your joints or your schedule. Whether you prefer walking, pedaling, rowing, or all-out intervals, this collection curates cardio that makes consistency easier—quiet drives, compact footprints, and simple consoles you’ll actually use.

How to choose — Match the machine to the way you like to move and the time you have. If you’ll walk daily, a walking treadmill is a no-brainer; if you love fast, short sessions, a fan bike or rope trainer handles HIIT perfectly. Prefer low-impact, whole-body work? Go elliptical or rower. For the best results, pair steady-state (easy-moderate) on busy days with intervals (hard/easy repeats) 1–3×/week.

Key specs that matter
Drive/resistance type, impact level, noise, max user support, console programs, HR strap compatibility, footprint & storage.
Fat-loss friendly features
Quick-start buttons, interval presets, upright storage, transport wheels, and stable handrails if you’re starting slow.
Pro tip
Set a time target first (e.g., 20–30 min most days). Your machine is the tool; your calendar is the plan. For general activity guidance, see the FAQ below. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
Low-Impact Options HIIT-Capable Picks Small-Space Friendly

Quick compare: weight-loss workhorses

Model Modality Impact Intensity Range Programs / Resistance Footprint / Storage Noise Why it helps you lose
Endurance T150 Commercial Treadmill Walk / Run (incline) Medium (deck cushioned) Easy walks → sprint intervals Commercial console presets Full-size; fixed Moderate Rock-solid feel invites longer sessions; incline boosts calorie burn without speed. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
Endurance T50 Walking Treadmill Walk (steady) Low Gentle → brisk walk Straightforward controls Compact; easy placement Low Daily step-stacking machine—perfect for beginners or desk-adjacent walking. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
Endurance E300 Elliptical Elliptical (upper + lower) Low Recovery spins → hard efforts Multi-level resistance & programs Center-drive; stable Low Zero-impact, full-body—easy on knees yet great for long calorie sessions. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
Endurance FB300B Fan Bike Air bike (arms + legs) Low Unlimited (effort-based) Air resistance; interval-ready Compact; wheels Medium-High (fan) HIIT king: short, brutal intervals for maximum output when time’s tight. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
Endurance R300 Rower Air rower (full-body) Low Base rows → sprints User-controlled air resistance Upright storage (space-savvy) Moderate High calorie burn per minute with minimal joint stress. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
Endurance B4UB Upright Bike Cycle (upright) Low Endurance → tempo ~24 levels; 10+ programs Small footprint Low Quiet, convenient cardio you’ll use daily; easy HR-zone workouts. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Ropeflex RX2100 Rope Trainer Endless rope pull Low Light pulls → power intervals Magnetic resistance Wall/rack mount; minimal space Low Upper-body cardio that torches calories and scales to any level. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
Ropeflex RX3200 Rope Pull Rower Rope + sliding seat Low Technique rows → all-out Auto-scaling rope resistance Rower-length; wheels Moderate Unique hybrid: rowing drive with continuous rope for massive time-efficiency. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}

Models sourced from My Fitness Outlet product pages linked above.

Smart add-ons

Pair your machine with a wearable HR monitor or watch for zone targeting and calorie tracking; many consoles are strap-compatible. (See bike/treadmill pages for specifics, or explore our Garmin lineup.) :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}

FAQs

How much cardio do I actually need to lose weight?

For general health, aim for 150–300 minutes/week moderate or 75–150 minutes/week vigorous activity, plus 2 days of strength training. For meaningful fat loss, most people benefit from pushing toward the higher end (or beyond 225 minutes/week) while adjusting nutrition. Always scale to your fitness level and talk to your clinician if you have medical conditions. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}

HIIT or steady-state: which burns more fat?

Both work. HIIT (e.g., fan-bike sprints) is time-efficient and raises post-exercise burn; steady-state (brisk walking, easy rides) is easier to recover from and rack up minutes. A practical blend is 2–3 steady sessions + 1–2 interval sessions weekly. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}

What’s the best machine if my knees are sensitive?

Choose low-impact options: elliptical, rower, upright/recumbent bike, or rope trainer. Start with conversational-pace work and progress slowly; keep resistance smooth and cadence steady. :contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}

How should I set up a beginner week for fat loss?

Example: Mon 25-30 min brisk walk (T50) • Wed 20 min intervals (FB300B: 10×:30 hard/:90 easy) • Fri 30 min easy row (R300) • Sat 30-40 min elliptical (E300). Add 2 short strength sessions for muscle retention. :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}

Do I need strength training to lose weight?

You’ll lose less muscle and keep metabolism higher if you add 2+ days/week of resistance work alongside cardio. Bodyweight or cable/free-weight circuits are enough—just train major muscle groups. :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14}