JTX Cyclo-3M Review 2026

JTX Ignite AirX Rider seated erg-style air bike

JTX · Spin Bike Review

JTX Cyclo-3M Review 2026

Every range needs an honest entry point, and for JTX that is the Cyclo-3M. At £299 it is the cheapest bike they make: a compact, quiet magnetic spin bike that skips the tech and just gets you riding. For plenty of people starting out, that is exactly the right call.

JTX Cyclo-3M compact spin bike

JTX Cyclo-3M

Compact magnetic spin bike

3.9/5
FitRank
Very good
Performance3.8
Build4.0
Value4.4
Features3.4
£299
Summer Sale · 10% off Check price at JTX

Price and discount applied at checkout on jtxfitness.com

The verdict

What I like about the Cyclo-3M is that it does not pretend to be more than it is. This is a straightforward magnetic spin bike for people who want to ride at home without spending big or fiddling with apps. The resistance is quiet and smooth, the frame is steady enough for daily cardio, and at 30kg with transport wheels you can wheel it out of the way when you are done. It even picked up a best-buy nod on Channel 5’s Shop Smart Save Money, which tells you where it sits: a budget champion, not a performance machine.

The compromises are the ones you would expect at this price. The 6kg flywheel is on the light side, so the ride does not carry the same momentum as the heavier bikes above it, and you get no Bluetooth, no app support and only hand-pulse heart rate on a basic console. For a beginner building the habit, none of that really matters. For anyone chasing structured training or virtual classes you will outgrow it, and that is fine, because that is not who it is for.

Strengths

  • Genuinely affordable entry to the JTX range at £299
  • Quiet, smooth magnetic resistance
  • Compact and light, with transport wheels for easy storage
  • Device and bottle holders included
  • Simple to use, ideal for building a routine

Watch-outs

  • Light 6kg flywheel, less momentum than pricier bikes
  • No app connectivity or Bluetooth
  • Hand-pulse heart rate only, no chest-strap support
  • Flat pedals and a basic console
  • 1-year warranty, shorter than the rest of the range

Ride feel and real-world experience

For a budget bike, the Cyclo-3M rides better than its price suggests. JTX engineers the 6kg flywheel to spin faster so it mimics the momentum of a heavier one, and in practice the ride is smooth and whisper-quiet, helped by the magnetic resistance the brand uses across its spin range. It will not have the planted, road-like heft of the 16kg Studio Pro, and you notice that on hard standing efforts, but for steady cardio, daily weight-loss rides and class-style sessions it is more than smooth enough. It was even voted best bike by spinning instructors on Channel 5’s Shop Smart Save Money.

The padded seat adjusts vertically and horizontally and the handlebars adjust vertically, so most riders can find a comfortable position, and at a slim footprint with a 120kg user limit it stays stable despite being light. The resistance dial is easy to reach and there is an emergency stop. The console is basic but clear, covering speed, time, distance, RPM, calories and pulse through hand sensors, and there is no app connectivity, so this is a ride-and-go bike rather than a connected one.

Assembly, size and setup

The Cyclo-3M is the easiest bike in the range to live with from the off. It arrives mostly assembled with the tools included, and most people are riding within half an hour. At just 30kg it is light enough for one person to build and to move, and the front transport wheels make it genuinely easy to wheel out of the way and store, which is a big part of its appeal for smaller homes.

Living with it: noise, footprint and storage

This is the JTX bike for tight spaces and shared homes. The magnetic resistance makes it whisper-quiet, so early-morning and late-night rides will not disturb anyone, and at 30kg with transport wheels it is the one bike here you can realistically tuck away after each session. Its compact footprint suits a spare corner or a bedroom. Upkeep is minimal, with no friction pads to wear, and it runs the console from batteries so it does not need to sit near a socket.

Apps and connectivity

The Cyclo-3M keeps things deliberately simple: there is no Bluetooth or app connectivity. You ride to the on-board console, which tracks speed, time, distance, RPM, calories and pulse through hand sensors, and that is the extent of the tech. For a beginner building a habit that is no bad thing, but if you want to follow Zwift, Kinomap or class apps, you will need to step up to the Studio Pro, which adds app connectivity and a much heavier flywheel.

Running costs: the no-subscription advantage

At £299 the Cyclo-3M is already the cheapest bike in the range, and it stays cheap because there is nothing to pay after you buy it. There is no subscription, no app fee and no membership: you ride to the on-board console and that is that. If you do want classes, you are free to prop a tablet on the handlebars and follow free spin sessions on YouTube or a free app tier, which keeps your costs at zero. Against a subscription bike like the Echelon EX-30 RCX, whose classes need an ongoing fee, the Cyclo-3M’s pay-once simplicity is part of its budget appeal.

How it compares

At £299 the Cyclo-3M’s most direct rival is the Echelon EX-30 RCX, which when discounted lands near the same money. The difference is the platform: the Echelon is built around its paid class subscription, while the Cyclo-3M is a simple, subscription-free magnetic bike with no monthly fees ever. If you want instructor-led classes, the Echelon makes sense; if you just want to ride and keep costs down, the Cyclo-3M is the cleaner buy. Against cheap online spin bikes it stands out on JTX’s build quality, warranty and in-home support, and if you later want app connectivity and a heavier flywheel, the Studio Pro is the upgrade path.

Who it is for

This is the bike for beginners, casual riders and anyone who simply wants to do more cardio at home without overthinking it. If you want a heavier flywheel, app connectivity and a commercial-grade frame, step up to the JTX Studio Pro, which is the serious performance pick. You can weigh the whole range on the JTX exercise bikes hub.

Specifications

Bike typeSpin (compact indoor cycle)
ResistanceMagnetic, manually adjustable
Flywheel6kg, inertia enhanced
Maximum user weight120kg
ConsoleDistance, time, RPM, calories, watts, heart rate
ConnectivityNone
Heart rateHand pulse sensors
Power supplyBatteries (self-powered)
PedalsFlat pedals
AdjustmentHandlebars vertical, seat vertical and horizontal
IncludedDevice holder, bottle holder, transport wheels
Assembled size (l x w x h)119 x 54 x 126 cm
Machine weight30kg
Warranty1-year in-home repair
Usage classHome

Warranty and after-sales

The Cyclo-3M comes with a one-year in-home repair warranty covering parts and labour, registered automatically at purchase, along with JTX’s 28-day no-quibble returns policy. The one-year term is shorter than the rest of the range, reflecting its entry-level position, but in-home repair still means an engineer comes to you rather than you returning the bike. For a £299 bike backed by an established brand with proper UK support, that is solid reassurance, and more than you get with many budget online spin bikes.

FitRank breakdown

Performance 3.8

Smooth and quiet for steady riding, but the 6kg flywheel carries less momentum than heavier bikes, so the ride feels lighter under hard efforts. Good for beginners, not for high-intensity training.

Build quality 4.0

Solid and stable for a compact home bike, with a 120kg user limit and a 30kg frame. The 1-year warranty reflects its entry-level position in the range.

Value 4.4

The strongest pillar. At £299 from a brand with JTX’s support and warranty cover, it is a lot of reliable, no-fuss bike for the money.

Features 3.4

Deliberately minimal. A basic console, hand-pulse heart rate and no connectivity keep the price down, but mean there is little here for data-led or app-based training.

Frequently asked questions

Is the JTX Cyclo-3M good for beginners?
Yes. It is designed as an entry-level bike for beginners and casual riders, with simple magnetic resistance, a quiet ride and an easy setup. It is one of the most approachable bikes in the JTX range.
Does it connect to apps?
No. The Cyclo-3M has no Bluetooth or app connectivity. If you want to ride with Zwift or Kinomap, look at the JTX Studio Pro or Racer-M instead.
How heavy is the flywheel?
It uses a 6kg inertia-enhanced flywheel. That keeps the bike light and quiet, though it gives less momentum than the heavier flywheels on JTX’s higher-end bikes.
Can I move it easily?
Yes. At 30kg with built-in transport wheels, it is one of the easier bikes to wheel out of the way between sessions.
Is the 6kg flywheel powerful enough?
It is light on paper, but JTX engineers it to spin faster to mimic a heavier flywheel, so the ride stays smooth for steady and class-style riding. For hard standing climbs, the heavier Studio Pro is the better choice.
Is the Cyclo-3M quiet?
Yes, very. The magnetic resistance makes it whisper-quiet, so it suits early mornings, shared spaces and flats.
Chris Linford, fitness equipment reviewer
Chris Linford · Fitness equipment reviewer
Chris writes the home fitness reviews across our sites, including our sister site HomeTreadmill.co.uk. He compares every machine against its rivals on UK pricing and specs, and scores each one with FitRank.

We may earn a commission if you buy through links on this page, at no extra cost to you. It never affects our FitRank score. See our affiliate disclosure.

← Back to all JTX exercise bikes

JTX Mission Air Review 2026

JTX Mission Air full-body fan bike with moving handlebars

JTX · Air Bike Review

JTX Mission Air Review 2026

The Mission Air is the classic fan bike done properly: moving handlebars, a big fan and resistance with no ceiling. It is JTX’s tool for the kind of conditioning work that leaves you on the floor. Push, pull and pedal harder, and it simply pushes back harder, all for £799.

JTX Mission Air fan bike

JTX Mission Air

Full-body air bike with moving handles

4.3/5
FitRank
Very good
Performance4.6
Build4.6
Value4.3
Features3.9
£799
Summer Sale · 10% off Check price at JTX

Price and discount applied at checkout on jtxfitness.com

The verdict

This is the fan bike in the JTX range, the type with moving handlebars that drive your arms and legs together for a genuine full-body effort. The air resistance is effectively infinite, because there is no top level to hit: the faster you work the fan, the harder it fights back. That is exactly what you want for CrossFit-style and HIIT conditioning, where the machine needs to meet maximum effort with maximum resistance and never tap out before you do.

The build is gym-quality, rated to 160kg, and at 63.5kg it stays rooted to the spot through the most violent intervals. The honest limitation is connectivity. Unlike the AirX Rider, the Mission Air has no wireless app support, so everything lives on its own console with interval and target-heart-rate programmes. For most fan-bike buyers, who care about effort and output rather than pedalling through a virtual French village, that is no loss at all, but it is why it scores a little lower on features.

Strengths

  • Full-body workout from moving handlebars plus pedals
  • Infinite air resistance that scales with effort, ideal for HIIT
  • Gym-quality build, 160kg maximum user weight
  • Interval and target heart-rate programmes built in
  • Self-powered, no mains needed

Watch-outs

  • No wireless app connectivity
  • High noise rating, loudest format of bike here
  • Flat pedals only, no clip-in option
  • 2-year home warranty, no separate commercial cover

Ride feel and real-world experience

The Mission Air is a classic full-body fan bike, and it rides the way that breed does: brutally honest. There is no resistance dial, because the fan sets the difficulty itself, so the harder you push the pedals and pull the moving handlebars, the more it fights back. That makes it superb for HIIT, Tabata and CrossFit-style conditioning, where you want a machine that meets maximum effort with maximum resistance and never tops out. Because the arms move with the legs, it works the whole body at once, chest, back, arms and core as well as the legs, which is why air bikes post some of the highest calorie-per-minute outputs of any cardio kit.

The flip side of all that fan is noise: the Mission Air carries a high noise rating, the loudest format of bike in the JTX range, so it is best in a garage, spare room or somewhere a roaring fan will not disturb anyone. The gym-quality build and 160kg user limit keep it stable through violent intervals, and at 63.5kg it does not wander. The console covers the metrics that matter for interval work, with interval and target-heart-rate programmes built in, though there is no app connectivity, so what you see is what you get.

Assembly, size and setup

The Mission Air comes with its tools and assembles in around an hour along familiar lines. At 63.5kg it is one of the heavier bikes in the range, so positioning is a two-person job, after which the transport wheels let you move it. It is self-powered, running the console from batteries, so it does not need to sit near a socket, which is handy given it is happiest in a garage or spare room.

Living with it: noise, footprint and storage

Noise is the headline consideration. As a fan bike the Mission Air is loud by design, so it is the wrong choice for a flat with thin walls or late-night sessions near sleeping family, and the right choice for a garage gym or a dedicated training space where you can let rip. It is a substantial bike that wants a permanent spot, and being battery-powered it can live anywhere there is room. Maintenance is minimal: there are no resistance pads to wear, just the occasional wipe-down and a bolt check.

Apps and connectivity

This is the one area where the Mission Air keeps things simple: there is no wireless app connectivity. Everything runs on its own console, which tracks the core metrics and includes interval and target-heart-rate programmes, with Polar H10 chest-strap support for heart rate. For most fan-bike buyers that is no great loss, since the appeal of an air bike is raw, effort-driven conditioning rather than virtual routes, but if app support matters to you, the Ignite AirX Rider is the air bike in the range that connects to Zwift.

Running costs: the no-subscription advantage

The Mission Air has the lowest running cost of any bike here, because there is nothing to pay and nothing to subscribe to. There is no app, no membership and no licence: it runs from batteries, and every feature, the interval and target programmes, the metrics and the heart-rate support, is included for the life of the bike. For the kind of effort-driven conditioning a fan bike is built for, that is all you need. Compared with a subscription bike whose monthly fee never stops, the Mission Air simply asks for the purchase price and nothing more.

How it compares

The Mission Air goes head to head with the icons of the category: the Assault AirBike, the Rogue Echo and the Schwinn Airdyne, all full-body fan bikes built for the same brutal conditioning work. It holds its own on build, with a gym-quality frame and a 160kg user limit, and JTX’s in-home warranty is more generous than many. Within the JTX range, if you want a seated, data-rich, Zwift-connected air bike instead of the full-body push-pull, the Ignite AirX Rider is the alternative, and if quiet matters more than full-body intensity, a magnetic spin bike like the Studio Pro or one of the Echelon bikes is the calmer, near-silent option.

Who it is for

Buy the Mission Air if you want full-body conditioning and do not care about apps or virtual routes, the CrossFit, HYROX and HIIT crowd who train by effort and output. If you would rather a seated, cycling-focused air bike with a performance console and Zwift support, the JTX Ignite AirX Rider is the better fit. The JTX exercise bikes hub compares both side by side.

Specifications

Bike typeAir bike (fan bike, moving handlebars)
ResistanceAir, infinite (effort scaled)
Maximum user weight160kg
ConsoleDistance, time, RPM, speed, calories, heart rate, watts
ProgrammesInterval, target
ConnectivityNone
Heart ratePolar H10 chest strap
Power supplyBatteries (self-powered)
PedalsFlat pedals
SeatInterchangeable universal seat, vertical and horizontal adjustment
Assembled size (l x w x h)123 x 55 x 120 cm
Machine weight63.5kg
Warranty2-year in-home repair, 10-year frame
Usage classHome

Warranty and after-sales

The Mission Air comes with a two-year in-home repair warranty covering parts and labour, plus a 10-year guarantee on the frame, registered automatically at purchase, and a 28-day no-quibble returns policy. In-home repair means JTX sends an engineer to you rather than asking you to crate up a 63.5kg bike. That is a reassuring package for an air bike, and more generous on home support than many of the big fan-bike brands offer.

FitRank breakdown

Performance 4.6

Infinite air resistance and moving handlebars deliver a genuine full-body workout that scales to any intensity. Excellent for conditioning, intervals and metabolic work.

Build quality 4.6

Gym-quality construction with a 160kg user limit and 63.5kg mass keeps it stable through hard efforts. A 10-year frame warranty backs the build.

Value 4.3

Solid for a gym-grade full-body air bike at £799, though the lack of connectivity means you are paying for build and resistance rather than tech.

Features 3.9

The weak spot. Useful interval and target programmes are on board, but with no wireless app support it trails the more connected machines in the range.

Frequently asked questions

Does the Mission Air connect to apps like Zwift?
No. The Mission Air has no wireless connectivity. Its metrics and interval and target programmes run on its own console. If app support matters to you, the JTX Ignite AirX Rider connects to Zwift.
Is it a full-body workout?
Yes. The moving handlebars work your arms and upper body while you pedal, so it trains the whole body rather than just the legs.
How loud is it?
It carries a high noise rating. Fan bikes are the loudest type of exercise bike because the fan moves a lot of air, so factor that in for flats or shared spaces.
Does it need to be plugged in?
No. It is self-powered and runs the console from batteries.
Is the Mission Air good for HIIT?
Yes, it is built for it. The infinite air resistance meets maximum effort with maximum resistance, which suits HIIT, Tabata and CrossFit-style conditioning perfectly.
Where should I put a fan bike?
Somewhere noise will not be a problem, such as a garage or spare room. Fan bikes are the loudest type of exercise bike because of the air the fan moves.
Chris Linford, fitness equipment reviewer
Chris Linford · Fitness equipment reviewer
Chris writes the home fitness reviews across our sites, including our sister site HomeTreadmill.co.uk. He compares every machine against its rivals on UK pricing and specs, and scores each one with FitRank.

We may earn a commission if you buy through links on this page, at no extra cost to you. It never affects our FitRank score. See our affiliate disclosure.

← Back to all JTX exercise bikes

JTX Ignite AirX Rider Review 2026

JTX Ignite AirX Rider seated erg-style air bike

JTX · Air Bike Review

JTX Ignite AirX Rider Review 2026

The Ignite AirX Rider is JTX’s erg-style air bike, and it is built for people who quietly enjoy the hurt of interval training. A freewheel, dynamic air resistance and a properly serious performance console, all for £799. If you want an air bike that rewards effort the way a good rower does, this is the one to look at.

JTX Ignite AirX Rider air bike

JTX Ignite AirX Rider

Commercial-grade erg-style air bike

4.6/5
FitRank
Excellent
Performance4.7
Build4.7
Value4.4
Features4.5
£799
Summer Sale · 10% off Check price at JTX

Price and discount applied at checkout on jtxfitness.com

The verdict

Air bikes come in two flavours: the full-body fan bike with moving arms, and the seated erg-style rider built for the legs and lungs. The AirX Rider is firmly the second kind. Thanks to the freewheel and dynamic air resistance, it pushes back exactly as hard as you do, scaling from gentle zone-two spinning to eyeballs-out sprint intervals without a resistance dial anywhere in sight. The 160kg user limit and commercial-grade build mean it shrugs off the repeated hammering that interval work dishes out.

What lifts it above a bog-standard air bike is the console. On top of the usual numbers it gives you drag factor, pace, watts, interval and split data, and it stores your history, which is performance-rower territory and exactly what structured training lives on. It talks to Zwift, too. For a £799 home machine pointed at HYROX-style and race prep, that is a strong hand.

Strengths

  • Freewheel and dynamic air resistance that scales infinitely with effort
  • Performance console with drag factor, pace, splits and history
  • Commercial-grade build, 160kg maximum user weight
  • Connects to Zwift, interchangeable universal seat
  • Self-powered, no mains needed

Watch-outs

  • Moderate fan noise, as with any air bike
  • SPD pedals suit cycling shoes more than trainers
  • Seated rider format, not a full-body fan bike with arms
  • 2-year home warranty, shorter than the Studio Pro’s 3

Ride feel and real-world experience

The Ignite AirX Rider rides like the race-focused tool it is. Air resistance has a character all of its own: there is no knob to set, because the faster and harder you pedal, the more the fan pushes back, so the bike scales seamlessly from a gentle warm-up to an all-out sprint and never runs out of resistance. The seated, erg-style position keeps the focus on your legs and lungs rather than the full-body push-pull of a fan bike, and the freewheel lets you coast, which matters for interval work where you back off between efforts.

Air bikes are inherently louder than magnetic spin bikes, since the fan moves a lot of air, so the AirX Rider carries a moderate noise rating: noticeable but not unreasonable for a home, and far from the loudest air bike out there. The commercial-grade build and 160kg user limit mean it stays planted through hard efforts, and the standout is the performance console, which reports drag factor, pace, watts, splits and stored history, the kind of data structured and race training actually uses. It connects to Zwift, and the interchangeable seat lets you fit a saddle you prefer.

Assembly, size and setup

The AirX Rider comes with the tools needed and goes together in around an hour. At 43kg it is lighter than the spin bikes but still easier to position with two people, partly because of its size: it is a tall, long machine at 144 by 62 by 150cm, so measure your space, including headroom, before it arrives. It is self-powered, so there is no need to place it near a socket, and transport wheels help you move it once built.

Living with it: noise, footprint and storage

The things to plan for are noise and space. As an air bike the AirX Rider is louder than a magnetic spin bike, so it is less suited to a flat with thin walls or late-night use next to a sleeping household, though it is far from the noisiest air bike around. It is a large machine that wants a proper footprint, and being self-powered it can go anywhere there is room rather than near a plug. Upkeep is minimal, with no resistance pads to wear, just the occasional wipe-down.

Apps and connectivity

The AirX Rider connects to Zwift over Bluetooth, which is unusual and welcome on an air bike, letting you ride virtual routes and structured sessions on your own screen. As with the rest of the JTX range there is no compulsory subscription. Its own performance console is the real draw, though, with rower-grade data including drag factor, pace, splits and workout history, plus Polar H10 chest-strap heart-rate support, so structured training works fully on the bike alone.

Running costs: the no-subscription advantage

As with the rest of the JTX range, the AirX Rider carries no compulsory subscription, which matters more than it sounds. Its performance console is fully featured out of the box, so the drag factor, pace, splits and history that structured training relies on cost you nothing on an ongoing basis. If you want virtual riding you can add Zwift on your own terms, but plenty of air-bike training, intervals, calorie sprints and conditioning work, needs no app at all. Set against a subscription bike, where the monthly fee continues for as long as you own it, the AirX Rider is a pay-once machine.

How it compares

As an air bike the AirX Rider competes less with Echelon’s spin bikes and more with dedicated fan and erg bikes like the Assault AirBike, the Schwinn AD7 and the Rogue Echo. Where most of those are full-body fan bikes with moving arms, the AirX Rider is a seated erg-style rider, closer in spirit to a leg-and-lung erg machine, and its performance console matches or beats theirs for data. Within the JTX range, if you want the full-body push-pull instead, the Mission Air is the fan bike to choose, and if you would rather a quiet magnetic spin bike for class-style riding, the Studio Pro is the better fit.

Who it is for

This is the bike for interval and race training, anyone doing HYROX, CrossFit-style conditioning or structured cycling who wants honest, effort-scaled resistance and the data to train by. If you would rather have a full-body air bike that works your arms as well as your legs, look at the JTX Mission Air instead. For a broader look at where air bikes sit against spin bikes, the JTX exercise bikes hub lays out the whole range.

Specifications

Bike typeErg-style air bike, freewheel
ResistanceAir, dynamic (10 levels of damper)
Maximum user weight160kg
ConsoleDistance, time, RPM, pace, calories, watts, heart rate, drag factor, interval and split data, workout history
ConnectivityWireless, Zwift
Heart ratePolar H10 chest strap
Power supplyBatteries (self-powered)
PedalsSPD
SeatInterchangeable universal seat, vertical and horizontal adjustment
Assembled size (l x w x h)144 x 62 x 150 cm
Machine weight43kg
Warranty2-year in-home repair, 10-year frame, 1-year commercial
Usage classCommercial

Warranty and after-sales

The AirX Rider carries a two-year in-home repair warranty covering parts and labour, a 10-year guarantee on the frame, and a one-year commercial warranty, with cover registered automatically at purchase and a 28-day no-quibble returns policy. As with all JTX kit, in-home repair means an engineer comes to you rather than you returning the bike. Two years of parts-and-labour cover plus a decade on the frame is a strong package for an air bike, and matches or beats what most dedicated air-bike brands offer.

FitRank breakdown

Performance 4.7

Freewheel air resistance that scales with effort makes this genuinely excellent for intervals and endurance alike. The harder you ride, the more it gives back, with no ceiling to hit.

Build quality 4.7

Commercial-grade construction and a 160kg user limit, sharing the build and warranty of JTX’s well-rated rower. Comfortably rated for repeated high-intensity sessions.

Value 4.4

A performance air bike with rower-grade data for £799 is competitive, though air bikes are a more niche buy than spin bikes, which tempers the score slightly.

Features 4.5

The standout is the console: drag factor, splits, history and Zwift support put it ahead of most home air bikes, which often ship with only a basic metrics screen.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between this and the JTX Mission Air?
The Ignite AirX Rider is a seated erg-style bike focused on the legs, with a freewheel and a performance console. The Mission Air is a full-body fan bike with moving handlebars that works the arms and legs together. Choose the Rider for cycling-style intervals, the Mission Air for full-body conditioning.
Is it noisy?
It carries a moderate noise rating. Air bikes generate sound from the fan as you pedal, so it is louder than a magnetic spin bike but reasonable for a home setting.
Does it need mains power?
No. It is self-powered and runs the console from batteries, so you can place it anywhere without being near a socket.
Can I use it with Zwift?
Yes, it connects wirelessly to Zwift. There is no compulsory subscription from JTX itself.
Is the AirX Rider a full-body workout?
Not in the way a fan bike is. The AirX Rider is a seated erg-style bike that focuses on the legs and lungs. For full-body push-pull with moving arms, the JTX Mission Air is the one to choose.
Who is the AirX Rider best for?
Interval and race training: HYROX, CrossFit-style conditioning and structured cycling, where you want effort-scaled resistance and detailed performance data.
Chris Linford, fitness equipment reviewer
Chris Linford · Fitness equipment reviewer
Chris writes the home fitness reviews across our sites, including our sister site HomeTreadmill.co.uk. He compares every machine against its rivals on UK pricing and specs, and scores each one with FitRank.

We may earn a commission if you buy through links on this page, at no extra cost to you. It never affects our FitRank score. See our affiliate disclosure.

← Back to all JTX exercise bikes

JTX Studio Pro Review 2026

JTX Studio Pro commercial-grade spin bike

JTX · Spin Bike Review

JTX Studio Pro Review 2026

This is the JTX bike I point people to when they want studio feel without the studio subscription. A commercial gym-grade frame, 32 levels of magnetic resistance and proper app connectivity, all for under £800, which a few years ago would have read like a typo.

JTX Studio Pro spin bike

JTX Studio Pro

Commercial-grade indoor cycling bike

4.6/5
FitRank
Excellent
Performance4.7
Build4.8
Value4.5
Features4.4
£799
Summer Sale · 10% off Check price at JTX

Price and discount applied at checkout on jtxfitness.com

The verdict

Climb on and the first thing you notice is how planted it feels. The heavy-duty steel frame, 62kg of machine and a 135kg user limit give it the no-flex solidity you normally only get on bikes costing four figures, and the 16kg flywheel paired with 32 magnetic levels keeps the ride smooth and quiet whether you are spinning easy or grinding through intervals. Nothing creaks, nothing wanders.

The one thing to be clear-eyed about is the console. The 6.5-inch display is crisp and covers every metric you would want, but it is a data screen, not a built-in touchscreen. The immersive side comes from propping a tablet on the holder and running Zwift or Kinomap, which, with no compulsory subscription, is honestly the cheaper and more flexible way to do it. Just do not expect a Peloton-style screen to light up out of the box.

Strengths

  • Commercial gym-grade steel frame, very stable at intensity
  • 16kg flywheel and 32 magnetic levels for a smooth, quiet ride
  • Connects to Zwift and Kinomap with no forced subscription
  • SPD pedals and multi-position handlebars as standard
  • 3-year in-home warranty, plus 10-year frame cover

Watch-outs

  • Data console only, no built-in touchscreen
  • Needs mains power, unlike most of the JTX range
  • At 62kg it is not a bike you will move around often
  • SPD pedals mean cycling shoes for the best experience

Ride feel and real-world experience

On the bike, the Studio Pro rides like the semi-commercial machine it is. Owners and reviewers consistently describe JTX’s magnetic spin bikes as smooth, near-silent and rock-solid stable, and the Studio Pro is the most planted of the lot: the extra-large steel frame, heavy-duty crank and sealed bearing system keep everything still whether you are spinning high-cadence intervals or grinding a hill climb out of the saddle. The 16kg flywheel carries real momentum, so the pedal stroke feels fluid and road-like rather than light, and many owners say it is on a par with the spin bikes they have used in gyms.

The forward-leaning position mimics a road bike, and the seat and handlebars adjust horizontally and vertically, so it is quick to set up for different riders, a genuine plus in a shared household. The SPD pedals let you clip in with cycling shoes or flip to the cage side and wear trainers. The one consistent criticism is the console: the 6.5-inch display covers the key metrics but is fairly basic, and a couple of data-focused owners have found it fiddly, which is part of why most riders pair the bike with Zwift or Kinomap on a tablet for the visual side.

Assembly, size and setup

The Studio Pro arrives partially assembled with the tools included, and most people are riding within half an hour to an hour. It is a heavy, semi-commercial bike at 62kg, though, so while one determined person can manage the build, it is easier and safer with a second pair of hands to position it. Once together it feels substantial and genuinely gym-grade. The footprint is compact at roughly 119 by 51cm, and transport wheels help you move it, although at this weight you will not be shifting it far or often.

Living with it: noise, footprint and storage

This is where magnetic resistance pays off. The Studio Pro is effectively silent in use, so it is genuinely suited to early-morning or late-night sessions and to flats where noise matters, and you can comfortably ride it in front of the TV. It is not a bike you will tuck away, though: at 62kg with a compact but permanent footprint, it is best given a settled home. There is very little upkeep beyond the occasional wipe-down and a check that the bolts and pedals stay snug, since magnetic resistance has no pads to wear out.

Apps and connectivity

The Studio Pro connects over Bluetooth to Zwift and Kinomap, two of the most popular training apps, which you run on your own tablet propped on the device holder. That gives you virtual routes, structured workouts and group rides, and crucially there is no compulsory JTX subscription: you use whatever app account you choose, or none at all. The bike works fully on its own 6.5-inch console too, tracking the core metrics, and it is heart-rate ready through hand-pulse sensors and a Polar H10 chest strap.

Running costs: the no-subscription advantage

One of the Studio Pro’s quietest advantages is what it does not cost you. Unlike an Echelon or a Peloton, there is no compulsory monthly membership: the bike works fully on its own console, and if you want virtual routes you add Zwift or Kinomap on your own terms, both of which you can use on a free tier or a modest paid plan, switch between, or drop entirely. Over two or three years a class subscription can quietly add up to more than the bike itself, so for a self-motivated rider the Studio Pro’s pay-once model often works out far cheaper in the long run than a subscription bike at a similar price, such as the Echelon EX-5.

How it compares

The Studio Pro’s natural rival is the £799 Echelon EX-5, and the contrast is clean. Both are bring-your-own-screen bikes at the same price, but the Studio Pro has a heavier 16kg flywheel against the Echelon’s 13kg, a longer three-year warranty, and, most importantly, no subscription, where the EX-5 is built around Echelon’s paid classes. Choose the Studio Pro if you want to own your ride outright and prefer Zwift; choose the EX-5 if instructor-led classes are the draw. Against Peloton the Studio Pro is far cheaper and frees you from the membership, though you give up the polished built-in screen, and it comfortably out-builds budget magnetic bikes from the likes of Schwinn on stability and finish.

Who it is for

This is the JTX bike for the performance-focused rider, someone training with structure who wants a machine that will not flinch during a hard session and will last years of daily use. The commercial-grade build and shared-household durability also make it the sensible pick if more than one person will ride it regularly. If you mostly want gentle, casual rides, the cheaper Cyclo-3M covers that for far less, and you can see how the range compares on our JTX exercise bikes hub.

Specifications

Bike typeSpin (indoor cycle)
ResistanceMagnetic, 32 levels
Flywheel16kg, inertia enhanced
Maximum user weight135kg
Console6.5″ display: distance, time, speed, calories, watts, heart rate
ConnectivityWireless, Zwift and Kinomap
Heart rateHand pulse sensors, Polar H10 chest strap compatible
Power supplyMains
PedalsSPD
AdjustmentHandlebars horizontal and vertical, seat horizontal and vertical
Assembled size (l x w x h)119 x 51 x 113 cm
Machine weight62kg
Warranty3-year in-home repair, 10-year motor and frame, 1-year commercial
Usage classCommercial

Warranty and after-sales

JTX warranties are one of the brand’s real strengths, and the Studio Pro gets the best of them: a three-year in-home repair warranty covering parts and labour, plus a 10-year guarantee on the motor and frame parts and a one-year commercial warranty. In-home means that if something goes wrong, JTX sends an engineer to you rather than asking you to crate up a 62kg bike, and cover is registered automatically at purchase. There is also a 28-day no-quibble returns policy. That is a more generous package than most rivals, and notably longer than Echelon’s two-year cover or Peloton’s shorter labour terms.

FitRank breakdown

Performance 4.7

A 16kg flywheel and 32 magnetic levels give a controlled, road-like ride that scales smoothly from recovery spins to hard efforts. SPD pedals and a stable frame mean nothing shifts when you stand to climb.

Build quality 4.8

The commercial-grade steel frame, 62kg mass and 135kg user limit are the headline here, backed by a 10-year frame warranty. This is the pillar where the Studio Pro most clearly out-builds its price.

Value 4.5

Light-commercial build and app connectivity for £799, with no subscription, undercuts most studio bikes that feel this solid. The current Summer Sale discount sharpens that further.

Features 4.4

App connectivity, multi-position handles and a clear metrics console cover the essentials. It loses a little ground only because rivals at this price sometimes include a built-in touchscreen.

Frequently asked questions

Does the JTX Studio Pro need a subscription?
No. The bike works fully on its own console, and you can optionally connect it to apps such as Zwift or Kinomap using your own account. There is no compulsory JTX subscription.
Does it have a screen?
It has a 6.5-inch data console showing speed, distance, watts, heart rate and more. It is not a built-in touchscreen, so the visual app experience comes from a tablet you mount on the device holder.
Is it suitable for tall or heavier riders?
The seat and handlebars adjust both horizontally and vertically, and the maximum user weight is 135kg, so it suits a wide range of riders. Check the 92 to 119cm seat height range against your inside leg if you are at the extremes.
Can more than one person use it?
Yes. The commercial-grade build is rated for shared household use and frequent sessions, and the quick seat and handlebar adjustment makes switching riders straightforward.
Is the JTX Studio Pro a commercial bike?
It is built to a semi-commercial, gym-grade standard with an extra-large steel frame and a sealed-bearing crank, and carries a one-year commercial warranty alongside its three-year home cover. It is rated for shared household and light commercial use.
Is the console any good?
The 6.5-inch display shows the key metrics clearly but is fairly basic, and some data-focused riders find it limited. Most pair the bike with Zwift or Kinomap on a tablet for the visual experience.
Chris Linford, fitness equipment reviewer
Chris Linford · Fitness equipment reviewer
Chris writes the home fitness reviews across our sites, including our sister site HomeTreadmill.co.uk. He compares every machine against its rivals on UK pricing and specs, and scores each one with FitRank.

We may earn a commission if you buy through links on this page, at no extra cost to you. It never affects our FitRank score. See our affiliate disclosure.

← Back to all JTX exercise bikes

JTX Exercise Bikes: The Full Range Compared

The JTX exercise bike range compared: Studio Pro, Cyclo-3M, Ignite AirX Rider and Mission Air

Brand Hub

JTX Exercise Bikes: The Full Range Compared

JTX makes some of the best-value home cardio kit in the UK, and its exercise bikes run from a £299 beginner spin bike to commercial-grade studio and air bikes. This is the full JTX exercise bike range, rated with FitRank and compared, so you can match the right bike to your training, your space and your budget.

JTX Fitness is unusual in being both the manufacturer and the retailer. It designs its bikes, sells them direct from jtxfitness.com, and handles its own warranties and servicing, with no middleman in between. That has three practical effects on what you pay and what you get. Prices are keener than equivalent branded machines sold through third parties. Warranties are registered automatically at the point of sale and include in-home repair, so an engineer comes to you rather than you crating up a heavy bike and shipping it back. And the returns position is generous, with a 28-day no-quibble money-back guarantee. It is the model that has built JTX a strong reputation for value in the UK, and it is the backdrop to every bike below.

The current JTX exercise bike line-up splits cleanly into two families. Magnetic spin bikes deliver a quiet, smooth, road-style ride for steady cardio and studio-style sessions. Air bikes use a fan for effort-scaled resistance that suits high-intensity intervals and full-body conditioning. We have grouped the range that way below, scored each bike with FitRank, and explained which rider each one suits.

Spin bikes

JTX Studio Pro
Spin · Performance

JTX Studio Pro

FitRank 4.6£799Summer Sale · 10% off

The flagship. Commercial-grade frame, 16kg flywheel, 32 magnetic levels and Zwift and Kinomap support. The pick for serious, structured riders.

JTX Cyclo-3M
Spin · Budget

JTX Cyclo-3M

FitRank 3.9£299Summer Sale · 10% off

The affordable entry point. A compact, quiet magnetic spin bike for beginners and casual riders who want a simple, reliable daily ride.

Air bikes

JTX Ignite AirX Rider
Air · Erg-style

JTX Ignite AirX Rider

FitRank 4.6£799Summer Sale · 10% off

A seated erg-style air bike with a freewheel and a performance console reporting drag factor, splits and history. Built for race and interval training, connects to Zwift.

JTX Mission Air
Air · Full body

JTX Mission Air

FitRank 4.3£799Summer Sale · 10% off

A full-body fan bike with moving handlebars and infinite air resistance. The tool for CrossFit-style and HIIT conditioning, no apps, just effort.

The rest of the JTX bike range

The four bikes above are the models we have reviewed in full, but the current JTX range has a few more options worth knowing about. The JTX Racer-M is a smart spin bike that sits between the Cyclo-3M and the Studio Pro, with app connectivity and a low-maintenance rear flywheel, often available around £449 in the outlet. The JTX Cyclo-Go X is an upright exercise bike with a step-through frame, the most accessible option in the range for older riders, anyone with limited mobility or those recovering from injury, typically around £299. And the JTX Ignite AirX Hybrid Trio bundles an air bike, a ski trainer and an air rower into a single conditioning station for buyers building a HYROX-style training zone at home. We will add full reviews of these as we work through the range.

What happened to the JTX Cyclo 6, Cyclo Studio and Cyclone?

Plenty of buyers still search for the JTX Cyclo 6, the JTX Cyclo Studio and the JTX Cyclone air bike, so it is worth clearing up where they have gone. JTX has refreshed its bike range, and those models have been succeeded rather than simply dropped. On the spin side, the older Cyclo and Cyclo Studio bikes are effectively replaced by today’s Studio Pro at the top, the smart Racer-M in the middle and the compact Cyclo-3M as the entry point. The popular mid-range JTX Cyclo 6 sits closest in spirit to the current Racer-M and Studio Pro. On the air side, the JTX Cyclone air bike has been succeeded by the Mission Air, the full-body fan bike, and the newer Ignite AirX Rider, the seated erg-style bike. If you have landed here after reading an older JTX Cyclo 6 review or a JTX Cyclo Studio review, the equivalent current models are the ones in the tables above, and they carry the latest consoles, connectivity and warranties.

JTX exercise bikes compared

ModelTypeResistanceMax userAppsPriceFitRank
Studio ProSpinMagnetic, 32 levels, 16kg flywheel135kgZwift, Kinomap£7994.6
Cyclo-3MSpinMagnetic, 6kg flywheel120kgNone£2993.9
Ignite AirX RiderAir (erg)Air, dynamic, freewheel160kgZwift£7994.6
Mission AirAir (fan)Air, infinite160kgNone£7994.3

How to choose a JTX bike

Spin bike or air bike?

This is the first fork. If you want steady cardio, studio-style rides or to follow virtual routes on Zwift, choose a spin bike. The magnetic resistance is quiet enough to use in a flat or a shared room, and the ride mimics an outdoor road bike. If you train in short, hard bursts and want resistance that climbs as fast as you can push, choose an air bike. Air bikes are louder, because the fan moves a lot of air, but they are unbeatable for conditioning and intervals, and the resistance never runs out. In short, spin bikes are for cycling, air bikes are for conditioning.

Budget or performance?

The Cyclo-3M at £299 is the sensible starting point for beginners and casual riders. If you train with structure, ride often, or share the bike across a household, the commercial-grade Studio Pro is worth the step up, with a heavier flywheel, more resistance levels and a stronger warranty. Among the air bikes, the Ignite AirX Rider suits cyclists and data-led training thanks to its freewheel and performance console, while the Mission Air suits full-body HIIT with its moving handlebars.

Choosing by training goal

If you are matching a bike to a goal rather than a budget, the quick version is this. For general fitness and weight loss on a budget, the Cyclo-3M. For structured indoor cycling and app-based training, the Studio Pro or the Racer-M. For HIIT, CrossFit and metabolic conditioning, the Mission Air. For race preparation and interval training with detailed data, the Ignite AirX Rider. And for easy step-through access, whether for older riders, limited mobility or rehabilitation, the Cyclo-Go X upright.

Is JTX Fitness a good brand?

On the evidence, yes. JTX is one of the most established home-fitness names in the UK, its reviews are collected independently through Trustpilot, and the direct-sale model means the company owns the whole experience from sale to servicing. The bikes are well built for their prices, the warranties are genuinely useful rather than nominal, and customer service and in-home repair come up repeatedly as strengths in owner feedback. No brand is flawless, and the trade-off with JTX is that you buy direct rather than browsing the bikes in a high-street shop, although the company’s Sussex showroom exists for anyone who wants to try a bike before buying. For most home buyers, the combination of price, build quality and after-sales support makes JTX an easy brand to recommend.

Warranties, delivery and returns

Every JTX bike comes with an in-home repair warranty, which means that if something goes wrong during the cover period, JTX arranges for a specialist engineer to visit and fix the bike at your home rather than asking you to dismantle and return it. Cover length varies by model: the commercial-grade Studio Pro carries a 3-year in-home warranty, the air bikes carry 2 years, and the entry-level Cyclo-3M carries 1 year, with a 10-year motor and frame parts warranty across the range. Warranties are registered automatically when you order, with no extra paperwork. Delivery is free on orders over £99 through a two-person service, and there is a 28-day no-quibble returns policy, so if the bike is not right you can send it back for a refund, minus collection costs. For a large, heavy purchase like an exercise bike, that after-sales position is a real part of the value.

JTX versus Peloton, Echelon and the rest

The key difference is the subscription. Peloton, and to a lesser extent Echelon, build their experience around a paid membership and a built-in touchscreen. JTX takes the opposite approach. Its smart bikes, including the Studio Pro and the Ignite AirX Rider, connect to third-party apps such as Zwift and Kinomap using your own account, with no compulsory JTX subscription. You provide the screen, usually a tablet on the device holder, and you ride the apps you choose. That makes a JTX bike considerably cheaper to own over time, since there is no monthly fee, at the cost of the all-in-one polish of a Peloton. If you want studio-style training without a locked-in membership, JTX is one of the strongest value answers in the UK.

JTX beyond exercise bikes

JTX is known for its cardio range as a whole, not just its bikes. Alongside the exercise bikes it makes cross trainers, rowing machines and a well-regarded line of treadmills, plus strength kit such as the Elevate multi gym. If you are building a home gym rather than buying a single machine, it is worth looking at the range together, since the same warranties and direct-sale value apply across it. For treadmills specifically, our sister site HomeTreadmill.co.uk covers the JTX treadmill line in full depth.

Getting the best price on a JTX bike

Looking for a JTX discount code? JTX runs regular promotions rather than relying on third-party voucher codes, and at the time of writing there is a Summer Sale offering 10% off across the range, applied automatically at checkout on jtxfitness.com. Because the company sells direct, the on-site sale price is usually the best available, and stacking an extra code on top is rarely possible. The sensible approach is to buy during one of the seasonal sales, check the outlet section for ex-display and refurbished stock at a further discount, and make use of the free delivery over £99. We flag the current offer on each bike above.

Frequently asked questions

Are JTX exercise bikes any good?
Yes. JTX has a strong reputation for value in the UK, helped by selling direct as both manufacturer and retailer. The bikes are well built for their prices, come with in-home warranties, and span beginner to commercial-grade. The Studio Pro and Ignite AirX Rider are the standouts in the current range.
Is JTX Fitness a good brand?
It is one of the most established home-fitness brands in the UK, with independently collected Trustpilot reviews and a direct-sale model that includes in-home servicing. Owner feedback consistently praises the build quality and after-sales support, which makes JTX easy to recommend for home buyers.
Which JTX bike is best for beginners?
The Cyclo-3M at £299. It is compact, quiet and simple, with no apps to set up, which makes it the easiest way into home cycling. You can step up to the Studio Pro or Racer-M later if you outgrow it.
Do JTX bikes need a subscription?
No. JTX bikes work fully on their own consoles. Models like the Studio Pro, Racer-M and Ignite AirX Rider can optionally connect to apps such as Zwift and Kinomap using your own accounts, with no compulsory JTX subscription.
What replaced the JTX Cyclo 6 and Cyclo Studio?
The older Cyclo and Cyclo Studio spin bikes have been succeeded by the current Studio Pro, the smart Racer-M and the compact Cyclo-3M. The JTX Cyclone air bike has been succeeded by the Mission Air and the Ignite AirX Rider.
Is there a JTX discount code?
JTX tends to run on-site seasonal sales rather than voucher codes. At the moment there is a Summer Sale with 10% off the range, applied automatically at checkout. The outlet section is also worth checking for ex-display and refurbished stock.
What is the difference between the Mission Air and the Ignite AirX Rider?
Both are air bikes. The Mission Air is a full-body fan bike with moving handlebars and no app support. The Ignite AirX Rider is a seated erg-style bike focused on the legs, with a freewheel, a performance console and Zwift connectivity.

For exercise bikes beyond JTX, see our main best exercise bikes guide, and read how we score every product on the FitRank page.

Chris Linford, fitness equipment reviewer
Chris Linford · Fitness equipment reviewer
Chris writes the home fitness reviews across our sites, including our sister site HomeTreadmill.co.uk. He compares every machine against its rivals on UK pricing and specs, and scores each one with FitRank.

← All exercise bikes