Verdict
Head-to-head · Best Ellipticals Under $1000

Horizon EX-59 vs Schwinn 430

Which is the better buy? Side-by-side on rating, price, strengths, and watch-outs — with the published ratings we averaged to get there.

The short answer

Horizon EX-59 comes out ahead by a clear margin (4.0 vs 3.6). The gap is mostly about Beginners and budget buyers who prioritize a stable, simple, no-incline elliptical over features and don't need a long stride. — read the strengths below before deciding.

Horizon EX-59
Higher ratedRanked #3 in Best Ellipticals Under $1000
Horizon EX-59
$799as of Jun 7

The Horizon EX-59 is the stability-first budget pick, named Garage Gym Reviews' top budget elliptical and a BarBend favorite for beginners. At around $699 it trades features for a locked-down, stable feel that reviewers say beats pricier machines on steadiness. The trade-offs are real: no incline, just 10 resistance levels, a shorter 18 in stride, and only 5 basic programs. It is the choice for beginners who value a solid, simple machine.

Strengths
  • Garage Gym Reviews' top budget elliptical pick, with a locked-down, stable feel
  • Bluetooth speakers and app compatibility
  • 18 in stride with 10 resistance levels, simple and beginner-friendly
Watch-outs
  • No incline at all, the only machine here without it
  • Only 10 resistance levels and 5 basic programs
  • 18 in stride is shorter than the 20 in rivals
Schwinn 430
Ranked #4 in Best Ellipticals Under $1000
Schwinn 430
$799as of Jun 7

The Schwinn 430 is the budget pick, usually around $649 and the cheapest elliptical here. BarBend praised its value at 4/5, noting it is rare for ellipticals at this price to offer incline at all. It has a 20 in stride, 20 resistance levels, and 22 programs. The compromises, reflected in Garage Gym Reviews' 3.2/5 score, are a manual 6-level incline, no Bluetooth, and a simpler build than the step-up machines.

Strengths
  • Cheapest pick here, typically around $649
  • Offers incline at all, which is rare at this price (6 manual levels)
  • 20 in stride and 20 levels of magnetic resistance
Watch-outs
  • Garage Gym Reviews scored it 3.2/5; FitRated 75.3%
  • Incline is manual and limited to 6 positions
  • No Bluetooth; audio is via AUX cord only

How they stack up

Horizon EX-59

The stability-first budget option versus the feature-rich Schwinn 470 and Schwinn 430, which both offer incline and more resistance levels but, per reviewers, less locked-down stability per dollar. Simpler than the iFIT-equipped ProForm Carbon EL and lighter-spec than the heavy-duty Sole E25.

Schwinn 430

The budget counterpart to the Schwinn 470, sharing the 20 in stride and 20 resistance levels but with a manual 6-level incline instead of the 470's motorized incline and fewer programs. Cheaper than the Sole E25, ProForm Carbon EL, and Horizon EX-59, with a correspondingly simpler build and no Bluetooth.

Specs side-by-side

SpecHorizon EX-59Schwinn 430
Stride Length18 in20 in
Resistance10 levels (magnetic)20 levels (magnetic)
InclineNone6 levels (manual)
Flywheel14.3 lb20 lb
Weight Capacity300 lb300 lb
Programs5 presets22 presets
Machine Weight~145 lb
WarrantyLifetime frame, 1-year parts/labor10-year frame, 2-year parts, 1-year electronics, 90-day labor
DisplayDual LCD
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