Xenjoy Cube Cycle Luxury Exercise Bike
A hand-finished walnut exercise bike under 3.2 sq ft that reads as furniture, with quiet magnetic resistance and app support.
The reason most exercise bikes end up unused is that they are ugly and you hide them, then forget them. The Xenjoy Cube Cycle attacks that directly: a hand-finished, FSC-certified walnut frame under a 3.2 square foot footprint that reads as living-room furniture rather than gym equipment.
Price: $599 · Verified: 2026-07-09 · Editor score: 8.0/10 (how we rank)
The reason most exercise bikes end up unused is that they are ugly and you hide them, then forget them. The Xenjoy Cube Cycle attacks that directly: a hand-finished, FSC-certified walnut frame under a 3.2 square foot footprint that reads as living-room furniture rather than gym equipment.
The design thesis is that a bike you leave out in a nice room is a bike you actually ride. The Cube Cycle pairs the walnut cabinet with a quiet magnetic belt drive and an 8.8 lb flywheel, 8 levels of manual magnetic resistance, a 10-level adjustable seat, and dual-sided pedals with massage rollers. Bluetooth lets it pair with Zwift, Kinomap, and Merach, so you can bring your own class content rather than pay a proprietary subscription.
The specs are honest about what this is: a compact, design-first bike for steady indoor cycling and Zone 2, not a Peloton-class performance machine. It supports users up to 6 foot 5 and 300 lb, weighs 52 lb, and ships fully assembled. The 8.8 lb flywheel and 8 resistance levels are enough for a real sweat, not for heavy interval sprints against a huge flywheel.
At $599, down from a $799 launch price, it is priced as a design object that happens to be functional, with a 1-year warranty.
Buyers who want an exercise bike attractive enough to leave out in a living space, with quiet magnetic resistance and app compatibility, and who will actually use it because it is not hidden away.
You want a high-performance interval bike with a heavy flywheel and built-in classes (a Peloton-class machine fits better), or you do not care about looks and want the cheapest functional bike.
Pros
- Hand-finished FSC walnut, genuinely furniture-grade
- Under 3.2 sq ft footprint, ships fully assembled
- Quiet magnetic belt drive; Bluetooth for Zwift, Kinomap, Merach
- No forced subscription; bring your own app
Cons
- 8.8 lb flywheel and 8 levels suit steady riding, not heavy intervals
- No built-in screen or class library
Specifications
Where this fits
Xenjoy Cube Cycle cross-shops across several editorial surfaces - the full brand catalog, the buyer-intent tags this item carries, the price band it qualifies for, and any execution playbook that uses it, plus the in-depth guides that cover it.
Xenjoy Cube Cycle - buyer FAQ
How much is the Xenjoy Cube Cycle?
The Cube Cycle is $599, down from a $799 launch price, verified from Xenjoy listings in July 2026, with Klarna financing available from about $150 a month. It launched in the US in October 2025 and ships fully assembled with a 1-year warranty.
Is the Xenjoy Cube Cycle a good workout bike?
It is built for steady indoor cycling and Zone 2 cardio, with 8 levels of magnetic resistance and an 8.8 lb flywheel. That is enough for a real sweat, but it is not a heavy-flywheel interval bike, so serious sprint or performance training is better served by a Peloton-class machine.
Does the Cube Cycle need a subscription?
No. It has no proprietary screen or forced membership. It uses Bluetooth to connect to third-party apps like Zwift, Kinomap, and Merach, so you bring your own class content, or just ride it without any app. That avoids the recurring fee of connected bikes.
What makes the Cube Cycle different from a normal exercise bike?
The frame is hand-finished, FSC-certified walnut designed to look like furniture, so it fits in a living room instead of being hidden. It is compact (under 3.2 sq ft), ships fully assembled, and adds touches like dual-sided pedals with massage rollers. The bet is that a bike you leave out gets used.
