Egofit Walker Pro M1 Under Desk Treadmill
A truly tiny under-desk treadmill with a fixed 5% incline that fits where other walking pads can't.
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What we like
- Smallest footprint in its class — 38.4" × 21.9" slides under almost any desk
- Fixed 5% incline burns more calories at lower speeds
- Zero assembly — unbox, plug in, walk
- Quiet enough for video calls at low speeds
Could be better
- 220 lb weight capacity is lower than UREVO and most WalkingPad models
- Top speed of 3.1 mph is walking-only — no jogging
- Belt is short, so taller users need a deliberate stride
Full Review
The Egofit Walker Pro M1 is the walking pad you buy when nothing else fits. At 38.4 inches long and just under 22 inches wide, it slides under standing desks, tucks behind couches, and stores against a wall in studio apartments where a UREVO Strol 1 or WalkingPad C2 would still feel oversized.
Build and Footprint
The chassis is a single molded piece with a steel-reinforced deck — no folding mechanism, no hinge to wear out, no assembly. That tradeoff is the point: you lose the fold-flat storage of a WalkingPad P1, but you gain a more rigid deck that doesn’t squeak or flex underfoot. The included transport wheels make scooting it across hardwood easy, though at 36 pounds it’s lighter than most rivals.
Build quality sits between the budget UREVO Strol 1 (plasticky, but cheap) and a premium WalkingPad X21 (overbuilt, expensive). The plastic side rails feel utilitarian rather than refined, but the running surface is solid and the motor housing is well-sealed.
The Fixed 5% Incline
This is the M1’s real differentiator. Most walking pads sit flat — the M1 is permanently angled at 5%. Walking uphill at 2 mph burns roughly 30% more calories than walking flat at the same speed, and engages your glutes and calves in a way a flat pad never will.
The downside is you can’t level it for non-walking use. If you wanted to stand still on it occasionally, you can’t — your feet are always angled.
Daily Use
The LCD is basic but readable, the remote works at desk distance, and the motor noise is genuinely office-quiet at speeds under 2 mph. Above 2.5 mph the belt vibration becomes noticeable through the deck and on hardwood floors you’ll want a mat underneath. The 37-inch belt feels short — anyone over six feet will need to shorten their stride to avoid scuffing the back roller.
How It Compares
If you have the floor space, a UREVO Spacewalk gives you a longer belt and higher weight capacity for similar money. If you want to fold it flat for closet storage, the WalkingPad C2 is the better pick. The M1 wins specifically on permanent-deployment-in-tiny-spaces and on the calorie-burn advantage of its fixed incline.
Who Should Buy This
Buy the Egofit Walker Pro M1 if you live in a small apartment, work from a compact desk, and need a treadmill that disappears under your workspace. It’s also the right pick if you specifically want the calorie-burn bump from incline walking. Skip it if you’re over 220 pounds, taller than 6’1”, or want the option to fold and store it vertically.