UREVO SpaceWalk E4W Walking Pad
A wood-grain walking pad that disappears into your home office instead of screaming gym equipment, with a quiet 2.5HP motor and 265lb capacity.
Price may vary. As an affiliate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
What we like
- Wood-grain finish actually looks at home in a real office or living room
- Quiet 2.5HP motor — no audible motor whine at typical desk-walking speeds
- 265lb weight capacity is generous for the price
- App and remote both work; no need to bend over to change speed
- Slim under-12cm profile slides under a couch or bed when not in use
Could be better
- No incline — flat-only walking
- Top speed is too slow for jogging despite the motor rating
- Wood-grain panel is a printed finish, not real wood
Full Review
The walking pad category has been stuck in a visual rut for years — black plastic slabs with LED screens that look like rejected gym equipment. The UREVO SpaceWalk E4W is the first one I’ve used that I wouldn’t hide before a video call. The wood-grain top panel is the entire point.
Build and Aesthetics
The wood finish is a printed laminate, not actual veneer, but it reads as warm and intentional rather than cheap. Next to a wooden desk or a rug, it blends in instead of shouting “exercise device.” The chassis is matte off-white instead of the usual black, which helps it disappear in a home office.
Build quality is solid for $300. The deck feels rigid, the belt tracks straight out of the box, and the 8-point silicone shock absorption noticeably softens footfall compared to cheaper pads. At under 12cm thick, it slides under a couch when guests come over.
Motor and Daily Use
The 2.5HP motor is the headline spec, but in practice the top speed caps around a brisk walk — don’t expect to jog on this. What you get instead is genuinely quiet operation. At 2 mph under a desk, I can take calls without anyone asking what that noise is. That’s the bar a walking pad needs to clear, and the E4W clears it.
The remote is a small handheld unit that works from the desk, so you’re not bending down mid-call to bump the speed. The companion app tracks steps, distance, and time, and includes a MIIT interval mode if you want structured walks.
How It Compares
The WalkingPad P1 folds in half for storage but uses the same boring black-plastic look. The DeerRun Q1 Mini is cheaper at around $200 but feels noticeably flimsier and has a louder motor. The E4W splits the difference: more refined than budget pads, more attractive than the P1, and priced where impulse-buyers actually pull the trigger.
If you want incline or jogging speeds, look at a foldable treadmill instead — this is a walk-only device by design.
Who Should Buy This
Buy the SpaceWalk E4W if your home office doubles as a living space and you don’t want a piece of gym equipment in the frame of every video call. It’s also the right pick if quiet operation matters more than top speed — this is a device for walking through emails, not for cardio sessions. Skip it if you need incline, want to jog, or genuinely don’t care what your walking pad looks like — the cheaper DeerRun Q1 Mini will save you $100.