Best Compact and Foldable Exercise Bikes for Small Spaces

Man riding a compact exercise bike in a modern home gym setting

TL;DR: The MarcyOpens in a new tab. NS-652 is the best all-around foldable bike for most people in tight spaces: it folds to 14 inches long, costs under $200, and is solid enough for daily use. If you want magnetic resistance and genuine quiet, step up to the Sharper ImageOpens in a new tab. Space Saving Bike ($349) or the YOSUDAOpens in a new tab. YB001R ($279). For under-desk pedalling, the DeskCycleOpens in a new tab. 2 ($199) has no real competition at its size. Skip friction-resistance bikes if noise matters to anyone in your household.

A compact exercise bike is a full-size stationary bike with a footprint small enough to fit in an apartment, a spare bedroom corner, or a living room without dominating the space. Most fall into two categories: folding upright bikes that halve their length when stored, and mini pedal exercisers that sit on the floor under a desk.

When I started looking for a bike for my flat, I genuinely didn’t realise how much variation existed at the sub-$400 end of the market. The average exercise bike measures 55 inches long and costs about $1,409, according to BarBend’s testing of small-space bikes (April 2025). Most compact options come in well under that on both counts. But “compact” covers everything from a sturdy 37-pound folder to a cube the size of a carry-on bag, and the difference matters depending on how you plan to use it.

Here’s what I evaluated across these bikes: folded dimensions, unfolded footprint, magnetic vs. friction resistance noise, flywheel weight (which affects ride smoothness), max user weight, and whether the bike actually folds easily. I also pulled ratings and common complaint patterns from Amazon and fitness forums, because lab testing only tells you so much.

The at-home fitness equipment market hit $9.34 billion globally in 2024 and is expected to reach $10.11 billion in 2025, according to Precedence Research (August 2025). A lot of that growth is coming from people with limited space who still want a proper cardio option at home. These bikes are a direct answer to that gap.

What Makes a Bike “Small Space” Worthy

Not every bike marketed as “compact” actually is. Here’s how I separated the genuinely small from the ones just missing a few inches from a full-size frame.

Folded vs. unfolded dimensions: The Marcy NS-652 goes from 32 inches long down to 14 inches when folded. Some bikes claim to be space-saving but shrink by only a few inches. Check both the in-use and folded measurements before buying.

Footprint in use: Under 10 square feet in use is the target for a small room. Folded dimensions matter for storage; in-use footprint determines whether you can actually work out without rearranging furniture every session.

Magnetic vs. friction resistance: Magnetic resistance is quieter, requires no maintenance, and doesn’t degrade over time the way friction pads do. If you live in an apartment with thin walls or a sleeping partner nearby, magnetic is the only sensible choice. Garage Gym Reviews confirmed in November 2025 testingOpens in a new tab. that magnetic belt-drive systems produce the quietest folding bike operation of any resistance type.

Flywheel weight: Heavier flywheels (30+ lbs) maintain momentum better and create a smoother pedalling feel. The budget folder range has lighter flywheels, which is fine for light use. The YOSUDA YB001R’s 35-pound flywheel creates a noticeably better ride feel than the entry-level folders.

Weight capacity: Most compact bikes support 270 to 300 pounds. Check this before buying. It’s in every spec sheet and non-negotiable if you’re near the upper end.

Quick Comparison: Top Compact Exercise Bikes

BikePrice (USD)Folded / Stored SizeWeightMax User WeightResistanceApp Compatible
Marcy NS-652$189.9914″ L x 18″ W x 51″ H37 lbs270 lbsMagnetic (8 levels)No
YOSUDA Folding X-Bike$139.99Approx. 70% space saved~35 lbs270 lbsMagnetic (8 levels)No
Sharper Image Space Saving Bike$34925.5″ x 7″ x 23″39 lbs300 lbsMagnetic (8 levels)No
YOSUDA YB001R$2796.11 sq ft (unfolded, stays set up)68 lbs270 lbsMagneticNo
Pooboo Folding X-Bike$159.99-$179.99Folds flat, X-frame~42 lbs300 lbsMagnetic (8 levels)No
DeskCycle 2$19910″ H x 10.24″ L x 24.02″ W23 lbs300 lbsMagnetic (8 levels)No
Schwinn IC4~$80048.7″ L x 21.2″ W x 51.8″ H106 lbs330 lbsMagnetic (100 levels)Yes
Home gym with exercise bike and fitness equipment in a compact basement space

Marcy Foldable Upright Exercise Bike NS-652

The Marcy NS-652 is the best overall folding exercise bike for most people who need something reliable, affordable, and actually storable. It folds from 32 inches long down to 14 inches, which means it fits along a wall, under most beds, or in a wardrobe with room to spare. When in use, it takes up about 4 square feet, roughly half the footprint of a Peloton.

BarBend tested this bikeOpens in a new tab. as part of their review of small-space exercise bikes (April 2025) and gave it a 5 out of 5 for durability and warranty, noting the 14-gauge steel frame was the most robust of the 10 folding bikes they tested. Its 8 magnetic resistance levels won’t challenge serious cyclists, and there’s no water bottle holder or phone shelf, which gets annoying on longer rides. For someone who wants 30 minutes of low-to-medium cardio and then wants the bike out of the room, this is the obvious choice.

At 37 pounds with built-in transport wheels, I can move it from the bedroom to the lounge without help. The LCD display covers the basics: time, distance, speed, and calories. Nothing fancy, but everything you need to track a session.

Best for: Anyone who needs to fold and store the bike after every session and doesn’t need connectivity or high resistance levels.

Watch out for: Eight resistance levels is a ceiling. If you’re a trained cyclist wanting to simulate hill efforts, you’ll hit the top level and stay there.

Price: ~$189.99 USD (approx. $310 AUD)

YOSUDA Folding X-Bike

The YOSUDA Folding X-BikeOpens in a new tab. ($139.99) is the cheapest magnetic-resistance folding bike I found that’s worth recommending. It has 1,031 ratings on Amazon at 4.4 stars as of late 2025, which is a meaningful sample. The consistent themes in reviews: easy to assemble, genuinely quiet, takes up very little space. The consistent complaints: the seat is uncomfortable for rides over 20 minutes, and the LCD screen occasionally stops working.

YOSUDA describes this as saving “70% storage space” compared to unfolded. What that means in practice is the X-frame collapses inward enough to lean against a wall in a corner. It’s not a cube. It’s a folded bike that’s meaningfully smaller than an unfolded one.

The 8-level magnetic resistance is smooth and quiet, which matters if you live with people who work from home or keep different hours. One Amazon reviewer with a 6-foot frame noted the bike was fine for their inseam but that the handlebars don’t adjust height. Only the seat moves. Check that against your measurements before buying.

My honest take: for $139.99, you’re getting a functional, quiet bike that will give you a decent workout and tuck away after. You’re not getting a machine that will last five years of daily hard riding. The plastic components and basic construction show at this price point.

Best for: Budget buyers who want a basic cardio option for light-to-moderate use.

Watch out for: The seat. Buy a padded seat cover at the same time. And check the handlebar height isn’t fixed at an awkward position for your measurements.

Price: ~$139.99 USD (approx. $230 AUD)

Sharper Image Space Saving Stationary Bike

This is the most genuinely compact bike in the group. When folded, the Sharper Image Space Saving Stationary BikeOpens in a new tab. becomes a 25.5 x 7 x 23-inch rectangle with rollaway wheels. Essentially a flat slab you slide into a wardrobe or stand behind a door. When set up, the seat pops up and the stabilising legs unfold. The whole process takes under a minute.

BarBend’s tester gave it a 5 out of 5 for footprint and portability, calling it “a 1.24 square-foot cube” when folded. The caveat: there are no handlebars. You balance on the seat with nothing to grip at the front. There are also zero tech features: no screen, no app connection, no heart-rate monitor. You pedal. That’s the product.

At $349, it costs more than the Marcy or YOSUDA, but it occupies genuinely less floor space than any other bike here. If your storage situation is the actual constraint, this is the bike that solves that problem most directly.

The 8 magnetic resistance levels cover a reasonable range for light to moderate workouts. Max user weight is 300 pounds. The seat adjusts to fit riders from 5 feet to 6 feet 4 inches. Verywell Fit named it “Best Compact” in their folding bike testing (September 2025), chosen specifically for the handlebar-free, cube-like storage profile.

Best for: People who genuinely have almost no storage space and are comfortable pedalling without handlebar support.

Watch out for: No handlebars means no stability surface for intense efforts. This is a low-to-moderate pace bike.

Price: ~$349 USD (approx. $575 AUD)

YOSUDA YB001R Magnetic Exercise Bike

The YB001R sits in a different category from the folding bikes above. It’s not a folder. It’s a compact upright cycling bike with a 35-pound flywheel and magnetic resistance, designed to stay in one spot but take up as little of that spot as possible. At 6.11 square feet (40 inches long by 22 inches wide), it’s meaningfully smaller than average.

BarBend’s certified personal trainer tester said after riding it: “I thought it was so easy to move. It felt super compact compared to other bikes I’ve tried.” (BarBend, May 2025.) The transport wheels help: tilt the front up and roll it out of the way. At 68 pounds, it’s about half the weight of the average exercise bike.

The 35-pound flywheel with magnetic resistance makes for a smooth, quiet ride. No screeching belt, no mechanical clatter. If you live in a flat with thin walls and a downstairs neighbour, that matters more than almost any other spec. Indoor cycling puts real noise and vibration into the floor. Magnetic flywheel systems on a belt drive are as quiet as it gets without going to a purpose-built smart trainer.

The downsides are real: the seat cushion showed small tears in testing after just a few rides, there’s no dynamic programming, and the resistance levels aren’t labelled numerically, so you adjust by feel. For $279, those tradeoffs make sense.

If you’re serious about the calorie burn you can realistically get from a stationary bike, you need enough resistance range to actually push yourself. The YB001R covers that range for most recreational cyclists.

Best for: People who have space to keep a bike set up permanently and want a compact, quiet machine for real cardio sessions.

Watch out for: Seat durability. Buy a gel seat cover or plan to replace the seat within the first year if you’re riding frequently.

Price: ~$279 USD (approx. $460 AUD)

Pooboo Folding X-Bike

The Pooboo Folding X-BikeOpens in a new tab. (model X819) has 6,233 Amazon ratings at 4.5 stars. That’s the most-reviewed and highest-rated folding bike in this group by a significant margin. At $159.99 to $179.99, it lands between the YOSUDA folder and the Marcy on price, but brings a few extras: included resistance bands, a backrest cushion, and the ability to switch between upright and semi-recumbent positions.

The 6.6-pound flywheel is lighter than what you’ll find on the YOSUDA YB001R. The ride is less smooth at higher speeds. That’s a real compromise if you’re used to a proper spin bike. For interval training or light cardio, though, the difference is minimal and most people won’t notice.

Verywell Fit picked it as “Most Durable” in their folding bike roundup (September 2025), noting the thick steel X-frame design and a flywheel that’s resistant to dust, rust, and sweat. The built-in resistance bands give you a basic upper-body option while pedalling. Whether that’s useful or unnecessary depends entirely on your goals.

Amazon reviews consistently confirm “very quiet” and “takes up very little space.” One reviewer who used it in a small condo noted the seller replaced the entire unit when the pedal tension mechanism failed after four months. Useful data on both the failure rate and the support response.

Best for: Budget shoppers who want versatility (recumbent mode, resistance bands) and a strong review track record.

Watch out for: The seat and backrest received consistent comfort complaints. Get a padded seat cover.

Price: ~$159.99-$179.99 USD (approx. $263-$296 AUD)

DeskCycle 2 Under-Desk Pedal Exerciser

The DeskCycle 2Opens in a new tab. is not really a bike. It’s a pedal unit that sits on the floor under your desk and lets you cycle while you work. At 10 inches tall and 10.24 inches long, it fits under a standard 30-inch desk without any clearance issues. It weighs 23 pounds.

At $199, it’s more expensive than its dimensions suggest, but it’s the best-reviewed product in this specific category. BarBend gave it 5 out of 5 for desk-fitting dimensions (April 2025), and their tester noted the top two resistance levels were genuinely challenging for an under-desk unit.

This is the right product for people who want to move during work hours. You won’t hit a training heart rate zone with a desk pedaller. What you get is significantly more daily movement. The magnetic resistance is silent enough for a phone call. At 300-pound weight capacity, it handles most users. And the dimensions fit in a bag for occasional office use.

I’ve written separately about what regular low-intensity cycling does for cardiovascular health, and the case for daily movement in sedentary jobs is genuinely strong. The DeskCycle is the most practical tool I’ve found for people in that situation.

Best for: People who sit at a desk for most of the day and want a low-intensity movement option during work hours.

Watch out for: This is not a cardio training tool. If you’re hoping to replicate a 45-minute spin class, buy an actual bike.

Price: ~$199 USD (approx. $327 AUD)

When to Spend More: Schwinn IC4

Everything above is under $400. If you can stretch to $800, the Schwinn IC4Opens in a new tab. changes the conversation. At 48.7 x 21.2 x 51.8 inches and 106 pounds, it’s not foldable and not particularly portable. But it’s a proper cycling machine with 100 magnetic resistance levels, dual-sided pedals (SPD clips and toe cages), and connectivity to Peloton, Zwift, TrainerRoad, and JRNY.

The IC4’s footprint is comparable to many of the compact bikes above, but it weighs three times as much, so you’re committing to a location. What you get in return is a ride that genuinely replicates training on a road bike: smooth 100-level magnetic resistance, no resistance ceiling, and the ability to use structured training platforms.

NYT Wirecutter (February 2026) named the IC4 their top overall exercise bike pick. The Cycling Weekly team (March 2026) listed it as their pick for riders who want reliable resistance adjustability. For serious cyclists constrained by apartment living rather than budget, this is the bike that doesn’t compromise on the training side.

The 48.7-inch length is shorter than most bikes in its class. But at $800 and 106 pounds, it belongs in a different budget category than the others here.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the smallest folding exercise bike available?

The Sharper Image Space Saving Stationary Bike folds to approximately 25.5 inches long, 7 inches wide, and 23 inches tall, or about 1.24 square feet of floor space. That’s the smallest of any full bike tested by BarBend (April 2025). The DeskCycle 2 is technically smaller overall at 10.24 x 24 inches, but it’s a pedal unit rather than a bike with a seat.

Is a folding exercise bike worth it for serious training?

For recreational cyclists doing 20 to 45 minutes of low-to-moderate cardio, yes. For anyone doing structured training with specific power targets, no. The resistance ceiling on budget folders (typically 8 levels) isn’t granular enough for proper intervals. The Schwinn IC4 is the exception: 100 magnetic resistance levels and third-party app connectivity make it usable for real training, but it’s not a folder.

How quiet are magnetic exercise bikes in an apartment?

Magnetic belt-drive exercise bikes produce very little mechanical noise, typically under the level of a television at normal volume. The main noise in an apartment comes from pedalling vibration transmitted through the floor, not the bike’s resistance mechanism. A rubber mat under the bike reduces floor transmission significantly.

What’s the difference between a folding bike and a mini bike pedaller?

A folding exercise bike has a seat, handlebars, and pedals. It’s a full bike that compresses for storage. A mini bike pedaller like the DeskCycle 2 is just a pedal mechanism with no seat or handlebars, designed to sit on the floor under a desk. Folding bikes are for cardio training sessions; mini pedallers are for low-intensity movement during work or TV time.

Where to Start

For most people in a small space: buy the Marcy NS-652 at $189.99. It folds to 14 inches, it’s durable, and it does what a basic cardio bike needs to do. If the seat bothers you (it will), add a padded cover for $15 and you’re done.

If storage is the real constraint: the Sharper Image Space Saving Bike folds flatter than anything else and comes fully assembled. Pay the extra $160 over the Marcy and stop worrying about where to put it.

If you want a compact bike that doesn’t compromise on ride quality for daily sessions: the YOSUDA YB001R at $279 is the step up worth taking. The 35-pound magnetic flywheel makes real cardio sessions feel like actual cycling rather than spinning your legs in the air.

If you work at a desk and want to move more during the day: the DeskCycle 2 is the only under-desk pedaller worth the money. It won’t replace a proper session, but if you clock eight hours sitting down, it’s a meaningful change.

The thing I’d avoid across all of these: friction-resistance bikes in apartments. They’re cheaper, but they’re louder, the pads wear out, and you’ll either replace the bike or stop using it within a year. If you’re going to spend anything, spend it on magnetic. And if you’re still unsure whether an exercise bike is worth buying at all, I covered what the evidence actually says about indoor cycling’s health benefits in a separate post.

Adam Johnson

As a middle-aged, 40-something cyclist, my riding goals have changed over the years. A lover of all things retro, and an avid flat bar cyclist, I continue to live off past triathlon glories.

Recent Posts