Abonow Foldable Treadmill for Home with Incline Review

Foldable Treadmill for Home with Incline - Extra Large Dual LED Screen, 8.5MPH Max Speed, Bluetooth Speaker, 280LBS Capacity, 3HP Home Office Treadmills for Running Jogging Walking
Abonow
- Professionally Engineered Treadmill with Preset Programs: The Abonow Treadmill features an 8% incline and 12 preset workout programs, offering versatile training from power walking to intensive runs. This treadmill with incline system adapts to your fitness goals, providing a dynamic home gym experience that supports both steady endurance and challenging intervals. Perfect for users seeking professional versatility, these treadmills for home adapt to every stage of your fitness journey
- Powerful & Quiet Drive System: Powered by an upgraded 3HP brushless motor, this folding treadmill delivers strong, consistent performance while operating below 45 dB—ideal for home offices or shared living spaces. Built to support users up to 280 lbs and designed for long-term reliability, these treadmills for home small balance power, quiet operation, and durability
- Dual-Screen Interactive Experience: Stay engaged and in control with our innovative dual-screen setup. The main 13.3″ touchscreen clearly displays real-time metrics like speed and calories, while the 10.2″ secondary screen gives you quick program access and responsive speed adjustments. This integrated system creates an organized, motivating interface that elevates every session on this foldable treadmill
- Compact Yet Spacious Running Belt: Engineered for stability and natural movement, this running machine for home offers a 41.34″ L × 15.35″ W running belt with extended protective borders. The multi-layer textured surface ensures reliable grip and reduced slip, making this threadmills machine for home both safe and responsive for walking, jogging, and sprint intervals—all within a space-efficient design ideal for home use
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Dual LED screen setup makes tracking pace and calories genuinely easy mid-run
- 8% incline adds meaningful resistance without dominating the motor or your knees
- 3HP brushless motor stays under 45 dB — quiet enough for early morning or late-night sessions
- 90% pre-assembled: I was running within 20 minutes of opening the box
- 6 shock absorbers and dual-layer cushioning noticeably reduce joint impact on longer sessions
- Folds flat and fits under a bed or against a wall when not in use
Cons
- 15.35-inch belt width feels narrow during faster sprints — wider feet may clip the edges
- No built-in fan, which matters more than I expected once you break a real sweat
- Incline tops out at 8% — enough to feel it, but not a substitute for serious hill work
Quick Verdict
The Abonow foldable treadmill for home with incline fills a specific gap in the market: you want incline training without dedicating an entire room to gym equipment. The 8% incline, 3HP motor, and dual-screen interface are genuinely useful — not just spec-sheet padding. After three weeks of daily use, I can say it holds up to real training. That said, the belt width is the honest limitation here. If you're planning on sprint intervals, measure your stride first. Overall score: 4.1 out of 5.
What Is the Abonow Foldable Treadmill?
It landed on my doorstep in two boxes — the main unit and a separate console arm — and within twenty minutes of cutting the packing tape, I was on the belt at a slow walk. That's not a typo. The Abonow comes 90% pre-assembled, which is exactly what you want when you're excited to start and the last thing you want is a DIY nightmare.

At its core, this is a compact treadmill built around a 3HP brushless motor, an 8% adjustable incline, and a dual-screen console. The main 13.3-inch touchscreen displays speed, time, distance, and calories in large, readable digits. The secondary 10.2-inch screen handles program selection and quick speed/incline adjustments. The deck folds vertically using a hydraulic piston and locks in place when not in use.
Key Features
- 8% adjustable incline with manual or program-driven control for progressive training
- 12 preset workout programs cycling through varied speeds and inclines automatically
- 3HP brushless motor delivering up to 8.5 MPH with noise kept below 45 dB
- 41.34 × 15.35 inch running belt with multi-layer textured surface for grip
- Dual-screen console: 13.3-inch main display + 10.2-inch secondary control screen
- 6 shock absorbers and dual-layer cushioning under the belt for joint protection
- Bluetooth connectivity with built-in speaker for audio during workouts
- Folds vertically with hydraulic assist; supports users up to 280 lbs
Hands-On Review
I started on Day One with a 20-minute power walk at 3.0 MPH on a flat surface. The belt felt stable, not bouncy, and the cushioning absorbed the heel-strike impact more noticeably than the basic treadmill I had been using. By Day Five, I bumped the speed to 4.5 MPH and gradually worked the incline up to 5%.

What surprised me was how quickly the dual-screen setup became second nature. The main display never dims mid-session, and the secondary screen lets you change programs without hunting through a menu. Most treadmills at this price make you pause and scroll — this one doesn't. I had a playlist running through the Bluetooth speaker while doing intervals, and the console stayed readable even when I was genuinely out of breath.
After the first week, I tested the 12 preset programs. Programs 1 through 6 follow a progressive intensity curve — they ease you in and ramp up both speed and incline. Programs 7 through 12 are interval-focused, alternating between flat running and incline bursts. The incline tops out at 8%, which isn't a mountain, but it's enough to shift load onto your glutes and hamstrings instead of just quads. You feel it by minute ten.

Two things I noticed that the listing doesn't shout about: the motor runs noticeably quieter than expected for a budget-friendly unit, and the folding mechanism is genuinely stable once locked. The folded unit sits flat enough to slide under a standard bed frame — I measured 7 inches of clearance, and it cleared mine with an inch to spare. That's the difference between a treadmill that stays in your life and one that becomes a coat rack.
Will I keep using it? Yes — but with a caveat. If you're a serious runner logging 20+ miles per week on a standard belt, the 15.35-inch width will eventually feel cramped. For everyone else — walkers, joggers, and casual runners — it's perfectly adequate.
Who Should Buy It?
- Home office workers who want to add movement to remote workdays without a full gym setup
- Walkers and light joggers under 280 lbs looking for incline variety without commercial equipment
- Apartment dwellers who need a quiet treadmill that won't disturb neighbors or roommates
- Beginners building a home gym who want preset programs to guide structured training
Skip this treadmill if you're an experienced runner with long strides who regularly trains at 7+ MPH — the belt width will hold you back, and you'd be better served by a commercial-grade model with a wider deck. Also skip it if you need an incline above 8%; this machine simply doesn't go steeper.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Egofit Walker Pro — Under-desk treadmill with no incline, but significantly more compact and better suited for purely sedentary office use
- Sunny Health & Fitness SF-T7874 — Higher max incline (15%) and wider belt, but larger footprint and heavier — better if incline training is your priority
- Urevo 2-in-1 Under Desk treadmill — Budget option with walking and light jogging capability, folds flat under furniture, but lacks incline and preset programs entirely
FAQ
The 3HP brushless motor runs below 45 dB. From my testing in an apartment with thin walls, it didn't disturb a roommate watching TV in the next room. It's not silent, but it's well within what most people consider apartment-friendly.
Final Verdict
The Abonow foldable treadmill for home earns its place by delivering where it counts: quiet operation, a genuinely useful incline, and a console that doesn't get in your way mid-workout. The preset programs add real variety, and the folding mechanism solves the space problem that stops most home gyms from ever getting built. It's not a commercial machine, and I won't pretend the 8% incline replaces a steep hill. But as a daily-use training tool for walking, jogging, and moderate running, it works. The belt width is the honest trade-off at this price point — know your stride length before you buy.