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Home / Cardio / Schwinn 430 Elliptical Review – The Best Elliptical Under $800?

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Review – The Best Elliptical Under $800?

By Olivier Poirier-Leroy, NASM-CPT

The Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer is a budget-friendly machine that includes a lot of features seen in more expensive ellipticals. Here’s a full look and review of how the Schwinn 430 rides so you can see if it is the one for you.

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer Review

Schwinn is one of the best names in the game when it comes to making killer cardio equipment.

They were the ones who invented and popularized the Airdyne (one of the best air bikes on the market), and their line of elliptical trainers are some of the sturdiest and most budget-friendly available.

The Schwinn 430 Elliptical, Schwinn’s mid-range elliptical, is a sturdy, 20” stride length elliptical that is easy on the wallet.

It’s also got some snazzy features like a manual incline, a simplified console, and a surprisingly smooth stride.

But is the 430 the one for you?

In this review, we will find out!

We will examine the main features and benefits of the 430, where it falls a little bit short, and compare it to both the other ellipticals in Schwinn’s line as well as other ellipticals in its price class.

Let’s jump in and get to striding!

In this Schwinn 430 Elliptical Review

  • The Key Specs
  • The Pros
  • The Cons
  • Schwinn 430 vs. Other Schwinn Ellipticals
  • Schwinn 430 vs Nautilus E616
  • The Final Verdict
Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer - Key Specs

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer – The Key Specs

  • Price: $799
  • Flywheel: 20lbs
  • Stride length: 20”
  • 20 resistance levels
  • Incline (6 levels, manual)
  • Machine weight: 168lbs
  • Max user weight: 300lbs
  • Dimensions: 70” L x 28” W x 63” H
  • Two LCD screens
  • Two user profiles
  • In-home assembly: $249
  • Warranty: Frame (10 years), Parts (2 years), Electronics (1 year), Labor (90 days)
  • Financing available (no interest if paid in full within 18 months)
  • Return policy: 6- week 100% satisfaction guarantee

Schwinn 430 Elliptical – The Pros

Let’s start off with the things that really stick out (in a good way) with the Schwinn 430.

They include:

✅ Sturdy ride for a budget elliptical

When you are looking to buy an elliptical machine, things can get a little tricky…

After all, you want to balance the budget with quality. The goal is an elliptical machine that is studio-grade in the sense that you don’t have to think about it rattling and wobbling without paying studio-grade prices.

With the Schwinn 430, you actually get a shockingly sturdy ride when you consider how not expensive it is (relatively speaking, obviously).

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer - The Pros

It is not rare to see ellipticals in this price range wobble and teeter quite a bit, but the Schwinn 430 has none of that.

It’s got a 20lb flywheel that uses magnetic resistance, punching above its weight for this price range. The dual rail system is as smooth as it is quiet, and even when hammering away at my favorite HIIT elliptical workouts… no wobble.

After months of nearly daily use, the Schwinn 430 continues to stride quietly and without a trace of wobbling. Impressive considering that I am towards the top end of the recommended weight range (290ish pounds).

Win!

✅ Full-stride length for a budget-friendly elliptical

Elliptical stride length is the distance between the two pedals on the elliptical when they are the furthest away from one another.

The right stride length is crucial. Too short, and your stride is cramped, knees banging on the console. Too long, and the hips twist uncomfortably to extend the legs through the full range of motion.

The Schwinn 430 has a 20” stride length that is perfect for most users, including taller users. I’m 6’4, and the 20” stride length on the 430 worked comfortably.

Typically, with budget-friendly ellipticals, the stride length is shortened to reduce overall costs (cheaper ellipticals typically have a stride length of 13” to 16”).

The Schwinn 430 is a budget-friendly elliptical with a stride length and large cushioned footplates that generate a comfortable striding experience.

✅ Simplified console

Call me old-fashioned, but I appreciate a cardio machine that you can jump on, hit a preprogrammed workout, and go to work.

Having tested countless ellipticals over the years, I’ve noticed that many of the new machines designed for home use, inspired by Peloton, have huge and glossy screens and trainer-led classes.

(Side note and a personal diatribe: A recurring monthly subscription fee for online, trainer-led programming voids the whole “this machine will pay for itself with a canceled gym membership” justification for buying cardio equipment for a home gym).

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer - Console

The Schwinn 430 has all of the basics covered when it comes to programs, including beginner and advanced workouts, quick start, fitness tests, heart rate programs, and more. The one-touch controls allow you to change resistance within the built-in workout programs quickly.

While testing and reviewing the Schwinn 430, I was pleased with the variety of workouts (22 in total, including HIIT, manual, heart rate training, etc.) already programmed into the console, which means you can spend more time working out and less time messing around with the online programming.

✅ Incline for extra sweat

Elliptical machines are designed to mimic the horizontal stride and gait of running (versus a stationary bike, which has a strictly circular footpath).

While this can be challenging enough for many users, I love adding an element of incline to the striding experience to crank up the difficulty and sweat.

The Schwinn 430 Elliptical features an incline option which instantly increases the difficulty, making it perfect for shorter, harder workouts (and HIIT sessions, in particular). Increasing the incline (up to six levels of incline) you can better target different muscle groups in the lower body.

Schwinn Fitness Elliptical Trainer - Manual Incline

Although it’s a manual incline (i.e. you will have to set it up before your workout or dismount the machine mid-workout to adjust the degree of incline), it’s a feature not seen often with machines at this price range.

The only exception is the Nautilus E616, which, at the same price as the Schwinn 430 features a motorized power incline.

Later, we will cover a more detailed analysis of how the Nautilus E616 and Schwinn 430 compare.

✅ Media tray for my smartphone and tablet

One of the absolute essentials for cardio equipment, and especially elliptical machines as they are the best cardio machine for weight loss, in my opinion, is a tray or ledge to park your smartphone, tablet or book.

My preferred method of using my elliptical is for longer, steady-state fat burning sessions (lasting up to an hour), and I really like being able to stream the football game, podcast, or a movie on my device to help pass the time.

Having a place to park my device is therefore crucial, and the Schwinn 430 has a little ledge halfway up the console where I can put them, without blocking some of the more essential data metrics on the smaller LCD screen below, like time elapsed, heart rate, and RPM.

✅ Highly functional

The Schwinn 430 is an entry-level elliptical, but that doesn’t mean you need to be punished for a lower price point with decreased functionality and comfort features.

The Schwinn 430 has many of the same comfort features as more expensive ellipticals, including an ergonomic design and lots of ways to stay plugged in when working out:

Large water bottle holder– Store a smartphone, bottle of water, protein shake, keys, whatever else you can think of. The extra large water bottle holder has tons of storage space and will keep you hydrated when working out.

Two speakers for bumping tunes – While the Schwinn 430 does not have Bluetooth functionality, you can listen to tunes through an audio jack on the 430 to crank up your favorite workout playlist.

USB port – keep your devices charged up while you torch calories and workout.

Dual-action handles – The 430 has two sets of handles. The moving handlebars are smartly shaped to give you a range of grip options. The fixed handles, which have heart rate sensors on them, are perfect for isolating the lower body.

Being comfortable when exercising on the elliptical is crucial (“comfortable” = more likely to workout longer and more often), and the Schwinn 430 has the creature comforts for extended, calorie-busting workouts.

✅ Easy to move

The Schwinn 430 is relatively light for a cardio machine, weighing just 168lbs (commercial-grade ellipticals can often weigh over 500lb in comparison).

The lightweight frame and transport wheels make it easy to tuck out of the way between workouts, or when you need to wheel it closer to a wall to plug it in (it plugs into a standard electrical outlet, using 110V-120 volt circuit).

The combination of the light frame and wheels make the Schwinn 430 an excellent choice for multi-use rooms and spaces in your home.

✅ Fast and simple assembly

Investing in an elliptical machine, or any cardio machine, really, means putting the thing together when it shows up on your doorstep.

Over the years I’ve assembled more cardio machines and gym machines than I can count, and the Schwinn 430 is among the easiest to put together.

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Review

The assembly manual is very clear and simplified, with each step of assembly clearly explained and illustrated.

One of my absolute pet peeves is getting an instruction manual that is one page with the whole machine exploded with instructions in tiny font.

Not so with the Schwinn 430, which took a little over 40 minutes to assemble on my own.

Schwinn 430 Elliptical – The Cons

Although there are a lot of things that I really, really like about this elliptical machine, there is room for improvement.

The big ones include:

The incline is manual.

While I absolutely love the fact that the 430 has an incline option, the fact that it is manual is kind of a pain in the ass.

After all, if you plan on doing some intervals alternating hard, uphill-centric efforts with easy, horizontal rest intervals, getting off the interval to manually adjust the incline simply isn’t in the cards.

Fan isn’t that powerful.

The Schwinn 430 has a little fan at the bottom of the console, which generally blows light, dusty air.

As a larger fella, who sweats a lot when doing cardio, the fan is basically like someone lightly blowing air from across the room.

Which means that I won’t get rid of my gym fans quite yet.

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer vs Other Schwinn Ellipticals

Schwinn 430 vs. Other Schwinn Ellipticals

At the time of this writing, Schwinn makes three ellipticals for home users.

There is the Schwinn 411, which has an exceptionally small footprint, with just 53” of depth, making it an excellent choice for people that are on a space budget at home.

It also doesn’t have a flywheel, instead using magnetic resistance to generate, err, resistance, thereby helping it achieve such a small footprint.

(If you want to learn more about the 411, we fully reviewed the Schwinn 411 here.)

The Schwinn 430 is the mid-range option.

And the Schwinn 470 is the top-tier elliptical, with a motorized incline, increased resistance levels (25, vs 20 on the 430), and more options for workout programs.

Here is a quick look at how the Schwinn 430 compares to its siblings:

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer vs Other Schwinn Ellipticals
Schwinn 411Schwinn 430Schwinn 470
Price$549$799$1,099
Stride Length18”20”20”
InclineNone6 levels (manual)5 (motorized)
FlywheelMagnetic20lbs20lbs
Depth53”70”70”
Resistance Levels162025

Schwinn 430 vs Nautilus E616

The Nautilus E616 is in the same weight class cost-wise as the Schwinn 430 and the two compete tightly for our choice as the best elliptical for under $800.

The main differences between the two machines include the E616 having five additional resistance levels (25, total), a heavier flywheel, and perhaps most crucially, the incline is motorized, which means the E616 can adjust incline mid-workout.

(Another under-$800-elliptical is the ProForm Carbon EL Elliptical, but it lacks in comparable features when lined up against the Schwinn 430 and Nautilus E616.)

Besides that, they are almost identical.

Here is how the two machines stack up against one another.

Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer vs Nautilus E616
Schwinn 430Nautilus E616
Price$799$799
Stride Length20”20”
Incline6 levels (incline)6 levels (motorized)
Flywheel20lbs22lbs
Depth53″70″
Max User Weight300lbs300lbs
Machine Weight168lbs173lbs
Resistance Levels2025
In-home assembly$249$249

The Final Verdict

The Schwinn 430 is one of my favorite budget-friendly ellipticals on the market.

The 430 doesn’t wobble, has a get-on-and-go interface, and although annoying to adjust the incline manually, this may just encourage you to do the whole workout at a greater degree of difficulty.

It’s a lot sturdier and has a smoother striding experience compared to the super budget options like the Sunny Health E905 (it’s around $200, but has a tiny stride length—just 11”—and is not designed for “enthusiastic” use).

While not a commercial-grade ride, it does come close, and at just $799, that’s about as much as you can ask for.

To sum up my experience with the Schwinn 430:

✅ PROS❌ CONS
Studio-grade striding experience on a budgetIncline is manual
20” stride lengthFan is a bit weak
Simplified console with one-touch controls 
Functional features to workout in comfort 
Easy to move 
Simplified assembly 
Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer
Schwinn 430 Elliptical Trainer
4.5
$999
Shop Now @ Schwinn

More Elliptical Reviews and Guides

How Much Do Ellipticals Cost? (44 Different Models Compared). Ellipticals can be a costly investment in your workout goals. Here is a look at how much each type of elliptical costs and how much to spend on one.

Elliptical Buying Guide – Everything You Need to Know to Buy with Confidence. Want to buy an elliptical but don’t know where to start? Arm yourself with the knowledge to choose the perfect elliptical for you and your workout goals.

Filed Under: Cardio, Ellipticals, Reviews

About the Author

Olivier Poirier-Leroy, NASM-CPT, is a former national-level athlete, Olympic Trials qualifier, certified personal trainer, and complete workout nerd. He has been featured on NBC Sports, Muscle & Strength, BodyBuilding.com, and more.

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