NordicTrack · Exercise Bike Review

NordicTrack GX LE Recumbent Review 2026

The NordicTrack GX LE Recumbent is the value way into comfortable, supported cycling. A reclined seat with lumbar support, 26 levels of magnetic resistance and the iFIT platform, currently reduced to £784. It skips the touchscreen of the GX10, but for low-impact, joint-friendly riding it covers the essentials well.

NordicTrack GX LE Recumbent bike

NordicTrack GX LE Recumbent

Value recumbent bike

4.0/5
FitRank
Very good
Performance3.9
Build4.2
Value4.0
Features3.9
£784£899
Save £115 Check price at Amazon

Price and availability via Amazon

The verdict

The GX LE Recumbent is built for comfort first. You sit low and reclined with full back and lumbar support and the pedals out front, which keeps the strain off your lower back, wrists and joints, and the 26 levels of magnetic resistance give a smooth, quiet stroke. Integrated handle controls let you adjust resistance from the supported position, and it arrives pre-assembled, so it is one of the easiest bikes in the range to get going.

Where it differs from the pricier GX10 is the display: a basic 5-inch LCD rather than a 10-inch touchscreen. You can still run iFIT, but on your own tablet rather than a built-in screen, which keeps the price down. With a high 159kg user limit it suits a wide range of riders, and the comfort-first design makes it a natural pick for older users, rehab or anyone who finds upright bikes uncomfortable. One note of caution: this is a newer model with only a handful of early Amazon reviews and a mixed 3.6-star average so far, so it is worth reading recent buyer feedback before you commit.

Strengths

  • Reclined, supported position, easy on the back and joints
  • 26 levels of quiet magnetic resistance
  • High 159kg user weight limit
  • Arrives pre-assembled
  • Reduced to £784, good value for a recumbent
  • Integrated handle resistance controls

Watch-outs

  • Basic 5-inch LCD, no built-in touchscreen
  • Only a few early reviews, with a mixed 3.6-star average
  • Best features still need an ongoing iFIT membership
  • A large, long bike that needs floor space

Ride feel and real-world experience

The GX LE Recumbent rides the way a comfort-focused recumbent should: smooth, quiet and undemanding on the body. You sit back into the supported seat with the pedals ahead of you, and the 26 levels of magnetic resistance deliver a fluid stroke that suits long, steady sessions. There is no athletic, forward-leaning intensity here; the appeal is being able to ride comfortably for a sustained period without strain.

The reclined, fully supported position is the whole point. With lumbar support and a cushioned seat, it removes the pressure points that make upright saddles uncomfortable, which is why recumbents are the standard choice for older riders, rehabilitation and anyone with back trouble. The integrated handle controls keep resistance changes within easy reach, and because it arrives pre-assembled, there is very little standing between delivery and your first ride.

Where you feel the lower price is the display. Instead of the GX10’s 10-inch touchscreen, you get a basic 5-inch LCD, so to follow iFIT workouts you prop your own tablet on the bike. That is no great hardship if you own a tablet, and it keeps several hundred pounds in your pocket. As a newer model the GX LE Recumbent has only a small number of early reviews and a mixed 3.6-star average, so we would suggest reading the most recent buyer feedback before purchase.

Comfort and accessibility

Like the GX10, the GX LE Recumbent earns its place on comfort and accessibility rather than intensity. The reclined seat with lumbar support spreads your weight across your back instead of a narrow saddle, the low step-through frame makes getting on and off easy, and the supported position keeps pressure off the lower back, hips and wrists. That makes it well suited to older riders, anyone recovering from injury, people with back pain, and heavier users, helped by the high 159kg limit. The pre-assembled delivery is a particular bonus for those who would struggle to build a heavy bike. The trade-off is the same as any recumbent: you cannot ride it out of the saddle or hit the peak intensity of a studio cycle, so it is a tool for comfortable, sustainable cardio rather than hard intervals.

Assembly, size and setup

This is the easiest bike in the range to get going, because it arrives pre-assembled. At 90kg it is heavy and long, so you will want a second person to help move it into place and position it, but there is no real build to do beyond unpacking and settling it. Allow room for the recumbent footprint, which is longer than an upright, and for comfortable access to step on and off. It runs off the mains, so place it within reach of a socket.

Living with it: noise, footprint and storage

The magnetic resistance keeps the GX LE Recumbent quiet in use, which suits a flat or shared home, and the comfortable, low-impact riding means it is the kind of bike people keep using rather than abandoning. Its length is the main practical point, as recumbents take up more floor space than uprights. Upkeep is minimal, with no friction parts to wear. The cushioned seat needs no breaking in, and the pre-assembled delivery means there are no fiddly adjustments to get right at the start.

The iFIT app and subscription

The GX LE Recumbent runs iFIT, but on your own tablet rather than a built-in screen, with a basic 5-inch LCD showing your core stats. An iFIT Pro membership unlocks the workouts, scenic routes and SmartAdjust automatic resistance, with a 30-day trial included and the membership sold separately thereafter. It needs Wi-Fi, and data syncs to Strava, Garmin, Google Fit and Apple Health. Without a membership it works as a manual recumbent, which for many comfort-focused riders is perfectly adequate.

Is the iFIT subscription worth it?

Because the GX LE Recumbent has no built-in screen, the iFIT question is softer here than on the screen-equipped bikes. You can happily ride it as a manual recumbent for steady, self-directed sessions and never pay a penny in subscription, using the handle controls and the LCD. If you do want guided workouts and scenic routes, you add iFIT on your own tablet on your own terms, on a free trial first. That flexibility is part of what makes it good value: the subscription is genuinely optional rather than central to getting your money’s worth.

How it compares

The obvious comparison is the pricier GX10 Recumbent, which shares the same supported comfort and 159kg limit but adds a 10-inch built-in touchscreen for considerably more. If you own a tablet and want to save, the GX LE is the sensible choice; if you want everything on a built-in screen, the GX10 is the upgrade. Recumbents are a less crowded market than studio cycles, and at £784 the GX LE Recumbent is competitively priced for a supported bike from an established brand. If you want intensity rather than comfort, a studio cycle or upright is a different tool.

Who it is for

Buy the GX LE Recumbent if you want comfortable, supported, low-impact cycling at a sensible price and are happy to run iFIT from your own tablet, or to ride it manually. It suits older riders, rehab, those with back trouble and heavier users, helped by the 159kg limit and the pre-assembled delivery. If you want a built-in touchscreen, step up to the GX10. If you want high-intensity training, an upright or studio cycle is the better fit. Given the small number of early reviews, read recent buyer feedback before buying.

Specifications

Bike typeRecumbent
Resistance26 levels magnetic
DriveBelt
Console5-inch LCD, tablet shelf
ControlsIntegrated handle resistance controls
SeatCushioned with lumbar support
Maximum user weight159kg
Machine weight90kg
Assembled size171 x 59 x 132 cm
AssemblyArrives pre-assembled
PowerMains
ConnectivityiFIT (own device), syncs Strava, Garmin, Apple Health
WarrantyRegistered NordicTrack cover, confirm term at checkout

Warranty and after-sales

NordicTrack’s bikes are backed by cover that typically extends when you register within 28 days of purchase, so register promptly and confirm the exact term at checkout. The GX LE Recumbent is sold through Amazon with the usual 30-day return rights on top. Given it is a newer model with limited owner feedback so far, the warranty and Amazon’s returns policy are worth understanding before you buy, and keeping your proof of purchase matters for any future claim.

FitRank breakdown

Performance 3.9

Smooth, quiet magnetic resistance across 26 levels in a supported, low-impact position. A comfortable bike for steady riding rather than intensity.

Build quality 4.2

A sturdy 90kg frame with a high 159kg user limit and a supportive cushioned seat, and it arrives pre-assembled. Well built for its purpose.

Value 4.0

At £784, and reduced from £899, it is good value for a supported recumbent from an established brand, especially as iFIT is optional rather than essential.

Features 3.9

The basics are well covered, with handle controls and iFIT support, but it loses ground to the GX10 on the display, which is a basic LCD rather than a touchscreen.

Frequently asked questions

Is the GX LE Recumbent good for a bad back?
Recumbents are generally much easier on the back than upright bikes, thanks to the reclined seat and lumbar support that remove pressure from the lower back and joints. The GX LE Recumbent is built around that supported position.
Does it have a screen?
It has a basic 5-inch LCD for your stats, not a touchscreen. To follow iFIT workouts you prop your own tablet on the bike. The GX10 Recumbent has a built-in 10-inch touchscreen if you want one.
Does it need an iFIT subscription?
No. It works well as a manual recumbent, and iFIT is optional, run from your own tablet if you want the workouts. A 30-day trial is included.
Is it easy to assemble?
Yes, it arrives pre-assembled, so there is little to do beyond unpacking and positioning it, though at 90kg it is heavy and best moved with two people.
Why does it have a low star rating?
It is a newer model with only a handful of early Amazon reviews, which makes the average less reliable than for a long-established bike. It is worth reading the most recent buyer feedback before deciding.
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 NordicTrack bikes