Worth it?

How much is a used treadmill worth?

Most used treadmills resell for about $150–$500. A clean, working name-brand machine (NordicTrack, Sole, Peloton Tread, ProForm) can bring $400–$900+, and a high-end commercial unit can clear $1,000. Old, basic, or non-folding department-store treadmills usually go for $75–$200 — or get given away free because they're heavy and nobody wants to move them. The biggest driver by far is does it actually run, and is it a known brand.

Here's how to judge a free treadmill before you and a friend haul 200 pounds down a flight of stairs.

Used treadmill value range

Type / condition Est. resale range
Old / basic, working $75–$200
Mid-range brand (ProForm, Horizon), good $200–$400
Name-brand, clean (NordicTrack, Sole) $400–$700
Smart / Peloton Tread / high-end $600–$1,000+
Commercial-grade (Life Fitness, Precor) $800–$1,500+

Estimates only — actual resale depends on brand, working condition, age, and local demand. Not guaranteed.

What drives a treadmill's resale value

  • Working condition. This is everything. A treadmill that powers on, runs smoothly, and inclines is worth real money; a dead motor or grinding belt is worth scrap. Always test before you commit.
  • Brand. NordicTrack, Sole, Peloton, ProForm, and commercial names (Life Fitness, Precor) resell strongly. No-name and discontinued department-store machines barely move.
  • Belt & deck condition. A worn, frayed, or slipping belt is a costly repair and a buyer red flag. A smooth deck signals a cared-for machine.
  • Folding design. Folding treadmills sell faster — they fit more homes and are easier to move.
  • Smart features. A working touchscreen, incline, and app connectivity (iFit, Peloton) add a premium when functional, but a dead screen is a liability.
  • Age & weight capacity. Newer and higher weight ratings appeal to more buyers.

Is a treadmill worth flipping?

A free working name-brand treadmill is a strong flip — if you can move it. A clean NordicTrack or Sole picked up free can net $400–$700, which is among the best dollar returns on this whole list. The catch is logistics: treadmills are heavy, often live in basements or upstairs rooms, and need two people and a truck.

What to grab: powers on, runs and inclines without grinding, known brand, foldable if possible. What to skip: won't turn on, frayed belt, burning smell, dead smart screen, or a non-folding 250-pound unit you can't realistically transport. A broken treadmill is just an expensive thing to get rid of twice.

How to flip a free treadmill

  1. Test it on the spot. Plug it in, run the belt, try the incline. Listen for grinding and watch for belt slip. If it won't start, walk away.
  2. Plan the move before you say yes. Confirm it folds (or measure doorways), and bring a second person and a hand truck. Logistics is the real cost here.
  3. Clean it up. Wipe down, vacuum under and around the belt, lubricate the deck if it's squeaky. A clean machine photographs and sells far better.
  4. Look up the model and price from sold listings — name-brand + "treadmill" in your area; list just under the cheapest working comp.
  5. List with a short video of it running. Proof it works is what closes treadmill sales. Charge or arrange delivery; cash on pickup.

Where free treadmills come from

Treadmills are one of the most-abandoned big items there is — bought with good intentions, used twice, then in the way. People give them away free constantly just to reclaim the floor space, especially during moves and cleanouts. They show up on curbs, in Buy Nothing groups, and under marketplace "free" filters. The hard part is knowing whether a given free treadmill is a $500 working NordicTrack or a dead $0 doorstop — and being ready to move fast when a good one drops.

Freebox surfaces free finds near you with an estimated resale value attached, so you only chase the treadmills worth chasing.

Find free treadmills worth flipping near you

Freebox shows free stuff being given away near your ZIP, each with an estimated resale value and profit, plus alerts when a high-value find drops. See what free treadmills and fitness gear near you are worth before you load up.

Freebox is a paid app. Resale figures are estimates, not guarantees.

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FAQ

How much is a used treadmill worth? Most used treadmills resell for about $150–$500. Clean, working name-brand machines (NordicTrack, Sole, Peloton) can fetch $400–$900+, while old or basic treadmills often sell for $75–$200 or go free.

Is it worth flipping a free treadmill? Yes, if it's a working name-brand machine and you can move it. A free working NordicTrack or Sole can net $400–$700. Skip dead motors, frayed belts, and heavy non-folding units you can't realistically transport.

How do I know if a used treadmill is worth buying or grabbing? Test it before you commit: it should power on, run the belt smoothly without grinding or slipping, and incline if it has that feature. A known brand and a clean, intact belt are the key value signals.

Which treadmill brands resell for the most? NordicTrack, Sole, Peloton Tread, and commercial names like Life Fitness and Precor hold value best. No-name and discontinued department-store machines resell poorly.

Why do people give away treadmills for free? They're big, heavy, and easy to stop using — so owners often give them away just to reclaim the space, especially when moving. Apps like Freebox aggregate these free listings and add an estimated resale value so you know which are worth the effort.


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