Skip to content
Cross Trainer Home

Best Cross Trainer for a Small Space

The Body Sculpture BE7312G is the only cross trainer here that folds away. It shrinks from 151 x 57.5cm in use to 110 x 57cm stored. Every other model needs its full footprint at all times. Check the numbers below before you order.

Cross trainers are consistently reported as bigger in the room than they look in product photos. This guide compares real published footprints. It covers the one folding option. It flags what manufacturers do not publish. Judge fit before you buy rather than after. The footprint numbers below apply whether you call the machine a cross trainer or an elliptical.

Compare by home type

Tap your home type. We re-rank the table and flag each machine green, amber or red for its fit in that setting. No manufacturer here publishes a verified decibel figure, so the table shows resistance type, the checkable spec that best predicts noise, see how we compare.

Cross trainers for small spaces sorted with the folding model first then by unfolded footprint and filterable by home type
Model Resistance Footprint Fit Buy
Body Sculpture BE7312G Foldable Magnetic Elliptical Cross Trainer
Body Sculpture
£290 to £300 Magnetic 151 x 57.5 cm Not published Fits well Check price
New Image FITT Strider
New Image
£369 to £399 Magnetic 105 x 65 cm 320 mm Fits well Check price
Bowflex Max Trainer M6
Bowflex
£999 to £1499 Motorised magnetic 117 x 66 cm 381 mm Fits well Check price
JLL CT300 Home Cross Trainer
JLL
£270 to £280 Magnetic 120 x 61 cm Not published Fits well Check price
JTX Strider-X8
JTX Fitness
£399 to £499 Electro-magnetic 130 x 70 cm 406 mm Fits well Check price
Dripex Elliptical Cross Trainer (16-Level, 8kg Flywheel, 15.3in Stride)
Dripex
£320 to £400 Magnetic Not published 389 mm Fits well Check price
ProForm Compact Sport
ProForm
£489 to £499 Magnetic Not published 410 mm Fits well Check price
ProForm Sport
ProForm
£599 to £699 Magnetic 150 x 65 cm 410 mm Fits well Check price

How much floor space do these models actually need?

Published unfolded footprints in this comparison run from 105 x 65cm to 151 x 57.5cm. That 46cm spread is the difference between fitting a box room and not.

The New Image FITT Strider has the smallest footprint with a published figure: 105 x 65cm on transport wheels. The Bowflex Max Trainer M6 (117 x 66cm) and JLL CT300 (120 x 61cm) both stay under 125cm long. The JTX Strider-X8 (130 x 70cm) and Body Sculpture BE7312G (151 x 57.5cm unfolded) take up more length.

Two models do not publish a footprint at all. Neither the Dripex Elliptical nor the ProForm Compact Sport has a length by width figure on the manufacturer's page or any UK retailer listing we checked. Treat both as unconfirmed until you measure a unit in person or ask the retailer directly.

Cross trainer footprint comparison for small UK spaces Horizontal bar chart comparing published footprint length in centimetres across the cross trainers in this guide, including the Body Sculpture BE7312G shown both folded and unfolded. All figures are manufacturer stated. Footprint length, folded and unfolded (cm) Body Sculpture BE7312G (folded) 110cm Body Sculpture BE7312G (unfolded) 151cm New Image FITT Strider 105cm Bowflex Max Trainer M6 117cm JLL CT300 120cm JTX Strider-X8 130cm ProForm Sport (flagged stop for flats) 150cm 0 50 100 150 Footprint length (cm)
Published footprint length in centimetres for each cross trainer, including the Body Sculpture BE7312G folded and unfolded. The ProForm Sport is the only model flagged stop for a flat in this comparison.

Measure your own space in centimetres before comparing it to any figure above. A tape measure beats a guess every time.

Why a cross trainer feels bigger once it is built than it looked online

UK forum owners regularly describe their cross trainer as deceptively large once assembled. One reviewer reported their model ended up another 1.5ft taller than they had expected from the listing photos.

This is not tied to one brand or price point. Product photography rarely includes a person or a doorway for scale. A flat delivery box gives no sense of the machine's real footprint once it is built in your room.

Trust footprint figures in centimetres over photos. Check them against your own tape measure reading before you order.

Folding models: what you actually get back

The Body Sculpture BE7312G is the only folding model in this comparison. It drops to a 110 x 57cm footprint when folded. It stands 169cm tall in that position. You need clear wall height to fold it flat.

That is real floor space back between sessions. Price checked at £290 to £300. The trade-off: Body Sculpture does not publish a stride length or flywheel weight for this model anywhere we found. You cannot judge fit-for-height or resistance feel from the spec sheet alone. If those terms are unfamiliar, see how to choose a cross trainer.

Folding only helps once folded. The BE7312G still needs its full 151 x 57.5cm unfolded footprint while in use. That is the same requirement as any fixed-frame model in this comparison.

How to measure your space before buying a cross trainer Three-step checklist diagram: measure your floor space against the published footprint range, check ceiling clearance for folding models using the Body Sculpture BE7312G's 169cm folded height, then measure your own doorway and stairs since no model publishes a delivery box size. Measure your space before you buy 1 Measure your floor space Footprints here run 105 x 65cm to 151 x 57.5cm unfolded. Measure your own spot before comparing it to any figure above. footprint 2 Check ceiling clearance if it folds The Body Sculpture BE7312G stands 169cm tall folded upright. Measure the wall height you would fold it against. 169cm 3 Measure your doorway and stairs None of these eight models publish a delivery box size. Measure your doorway and any staircase turn before you order.
Three steps for measuring a small UK room for a cross trainer: floor footprint, folded ceiling clearance and doorway width.

The real cost of buying one too big for your home

The most common regret in owner threads is not the price. It is the size. Several forum posters describe an oversized cross trainer becoming a clothes horse within a few months. The machine did not stop working. There was never enough clear floor space to make using it easy.

The ProForm Sport's 150 x 65cm footprint earns a stop flag for flats in our own comparison. The machine itself is not bad. Its 41cm stride and Silent Magnetic Resistance system are genuinely good. A typical flat rarely keeps 150 x 65cm of floor clear day to day. That is the real reason for the flag.

The JTX Strider-X8, Dripex Elliptical, ProForm Compact Sport and Bowflex Max Trainer M6 all carry a warn flag for flats in the table above. Each row explains why: footprint, unpublished dimensions or resistance type. Check the flag for your own home type before you commit floor space to one for good.

Where manufacturers' numbers stop and your own tape measure should start

None of the eight models here publish a delivery box size or a required doorway width. Measure your own doorway and any staircase turn before you order. Do not assume a flat-packed box will get through.

Most cross trainers ship in one or two flat-pack boxes and are assembled in the room they will live in. The assembled footprint above matters for daily use far more than the box size does on delivery day.

The Body Sculpture BE7312G's folding footprint only helps if you also measure the wall height you would fold it against. 169cm is taller than a lot of skirting-to-picture-rail wall space in an older UK flat.

Space is not the only constraint in a shared building. See quietest cross trainers for flats for the noise side of the same decision.

Which of these actually fits a small UK home?

The Body Sculpture BE7312G is the strongest pick if floor space matters most. It is the only model here that folds down. It is also the cheapest of the eight: £290 to £300 checked.

The New Image FITT Strider suits you best if you would rather not fold anything away. Its fixed 105 x 65cm footprint is the smallest published figure in this comparison. It also sits on transport wheels for repositioning against a wall.

Avoid the ProForm Sport for a flat. Its 150 x 65cm footprint is flagged stop in our own comparison. A machine that size is the one most likely to end up as a clothes horse in a shared building.

How we compare

We don't run a testing lab and we don't pretend to. Every noise figure on this site is the manufacturer's stated decibel rating, labelled as such: we never present a spec-sheet number as something we measured ourselves. Footprint and stride length come from the same published specifications, cross-checked against retailer listings and real UK owner reviews where the numbers disagree.

We then match each machine to a home type (flat, terrace or house) based on how much noise and floor space that setting can realistically absorb. Where a figure isn't published anywhere we can source it, we say "not published" rather than estimate. We earn affiliate commission on some links, but it never decides which machine is flagged as the best fit. Read our full method.

Frequently asked questions

How much floor space does a cross trainer actually need?
Published unfolded footprints in this comparison run from 105 x 65cm (New Image FITT Strider) to 151 x 57.5cm (Body Sculpture BE7312G). Two models do not publish a footprint figure at all: the Dripex Elliptical and the ProForm Compact Sport. Confirm those two in person before ordering.
Do folding cross trainers actually save floor space?
Yes, once folded. The Body Sculpture BE7312G is the only folding model here. It drops from 151 x 57.5cm in use to 110 x 57cm stored. It stands 169cm tall when folded. You need wall clearance to fold it flat. It still needs the full unfolded footprint while in use. That is the same requirement as any other model here.
Why do cross trainers feel bigger once they are built than they looked online?
One reviewer reported their machine ended up another 1.5ft taller than expected once assembled. The complaint that cross trainers are deceptively large recurs across independent UK forum threads. It is not tied to any single brand or price point.
What happens if I buy a cross trainer that is too big for my flat?
It is the most common regret in owner threads. An oversized machine becomes what several forum posters call a clothes horse within months. The machine did not stop working. There was simply no comfortable floor space to use it. The 150 x 65cm ProForm Sport is flagged stop for flats in our own comparison for exactly this reason.
Will a cross trainer fit through a standard door and up a staircase?
None of the eight models we cover publish a delivery box size. Measure your own doorway and any staircase turn rather than assume. Most cross trainers ship flat packed and are assembled in the room you will use them in. The assembled footprint matters more day to day than the box did on delivery.

← Back to the full comparison