BY MEDIA TREADMILL FACTORY
May 26, 2026
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NordicTrack 1750 Canada Review for Home Buyers

NordicTrack 1750 Canada Review for Home Buyers

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NordicTrack 1750 Treadmill in Canada

If you are shopping for a premium home treadmill in Canada, the NordicTrack 1750 deserves a serious look. It sits in a sweet spot for buyers who want more than a basic folding treadmill but do not necessarily need to jump to the highest-end NordicTrack models. On the current Canadian spec set, the 1750 offers a 16-inch pivoting touchscreen, 4.25 CHP motor, 22 x 60-inch running surface, -3% decline to 12% incline, and 400 lb user capacity, while Treadmill Factory lists it at $2,499 CAD with free shipping to most major Canadian cities and optional delivery and assembly. 

What makes the 1750 especially relevant for Canadian buyers is not just the hardware. It is the ownership context. Indoor training matters more when winter weather, ice, darkness, or poor air quality interrupt outdoor running. Treadmill Factory is also not selling this as an anonymous drop-ship product: the site positions itself as Proudly Canadian, promotes Flexiti financing, shows eight store locations, and has a long-running parts-and-service operation in Markham. That combination makes the 1750 more compelling in Canada than the same treadmill purchased with less local support around it. 

Why the NordicTrack 1750 stands out for Canadian homes

The biggest reason many buyers choose the 1750 over a cheaper treadmill is the workout experience. NordicTrack Canada’s current positioning is built around iFIT, guided coaching, terrain-based incline and decline changes, and a more immersive on-screen experience. If you are the type of buyer who gets more value from coach-led sessions than from just manually setting a speed and running straight, that matters a lot. In practical terms, the 1750 fits buyers who want a treadmill that feels like a training platform, not just a moving belt. 

The second advantage is versatility. The 22 x 60-inch deck is a strong standard for runners. The -3% decline is still relatively uncommon at this price point in Canada and gives the 1750 a more outdoor-like feel than many models that only incline. For buyers training through Canadian winters, that is not just a spec-sheet talking point. It helps break up monotony and creates more useful hill-and-terrain variety indoors. 

The third advantage is buyer confidence around capacity and warranty. NordicTrack Canada’s current C Series warranty page lists the C 1750 with Lifetime Motor, 10-Year Frame, 2-Year Parts, 1-Year Tablet, and 1-Year Labor and Repairs. That is more informative than the brief residential-use warranty language currently visible on the retailer page. If you are comparing one smart treadmill against another, real warranty detail is one of the fastest ways to separate marketing fluff from ownership reality. 

What to check before you order

Before you buy, check your room like a Canadian buyer, not like a product brochure writer. The current Treadmill Factory page lists a 77.3-inch length, 37-inch width, 59.5-inch height, and roughly 10-inch step-up height. That means you should measure not just floor area, but also ceiling clearance if the treadmill is going into a basement, condo den, or room with low bulkheads. The folding design helps with storage, but folding does not remove the need to think through day-to-day placement, sightlines, and whether you want curbside delivery only or paid setup help. 

You should also think through delivery and after-sales support before checkout. Treadmill Factory says delivery is curbside only by default, that optional delivery and assembly are available, and that free shipping applies to most major Canadian cities with additional fees possible in some areas. After purchase, the service department page is a real differentiator: Treadmill Factory says it began by repairing treadmills in 1988, works from a nearly 80,000-square-foot Markham facility, carries parts, and services the GTA with both internal technicians and trusted partners. If you value local support over pure lowest-price shopping, that matters. 

Financing is another practical advantage for Canadian buyers. The site banner currently advertises up to 12 months financing with Flexiti on orders above $450. For a treadmill in the mid-premium category, financed affordability is not a side issue; it is part of what makes this model realistic for families building a home gym in stages. In your copy, keep the financing language factual and current, and avoid hard-coding assumptions about approval or monthly payments unless those numbers are live and verified at publication time. 

The most obvious value alternative is the Horizon 7.4 AT. At the time of research, Treadmill Factory listed it at $1,999 CAD. It gives you a 22 x 60-inch deck, 15% incline, and app-friendly positioning at a noticeably lower price. If your main goal is to get a strong-running platform at the best value and you do not care as much about a fully immersive built-in smart-training ecosystem, the Horizon deserves a look. The tradeoff is that the 1750 offers the more premium “connected training” experience and includes decline capability. 

The SOLE F80 is the durability-first counterpoint. It is priced above the 1750 at Treadmill Factory and leans heavily on a strong folding frame, lifetime motor and frame coverage, and a more straightforward hardware-first identity. Buyers who want fewer software layers and more of a classic premium treadmill feel often lean SOLE. But if you are specifically shopping for a treadmill that feels more like a coaching platform than a traditional cardio machine, the 1750 has the stronger case. 

The Bowflex T16 is the entertainment-first comparison. It is also priced above the 1750 and gives you a 16-inch HD touchscreen, app integrations, a 22 x 60-inch deck, and 15% incline, but it does not offer the same decline story as the 1750. That makes Bowflex attractive for buyers who see the treadmill as a streaming-and-fitness screen first, while the 1750 remains the stronger choice for buyers who want outdoor-style terrain changes and the iFIT-led training identity. 

Who should buy the NordicTrack 1750

The 1750 makes the most sense for Canadian buyers who want a premium home treadmill for year-round consistency, especially if they are training through winter, prefer guided workouts, or want a machine that can flex between walking, jogging, intervals, and more structured incline work. It is also a strong fit for households that value local support, Canadian delivery options, and the ability to finance in CAD through a Canadian retailer. 

It is probably not the best fit if your top priority is the lowest possible price, if you prefer a simpler no-frills console, or if you want a treadmill that is primarily a value play rather than a connected-training purchase. In those cases, the Horizon 7.4 AT or SOLE F80 may line up better depending on whether your bias is toward value or durability. 

Final verdict for Canadian buyers

For the right buyer, the NordicTrack 1750 is one of the most balanced premium treadmills you can buy in Canada right now. Its strongest case is not “it has a lot of specs.” Many treadmills do. Its strongest case is that it combines a serious running deck, incline-to-decline training, a smart-screen coaching experience, and a Canadian retail environment that includes financing, shipping coverage, showrooms, and real service infrastructure. That is what makes it easier to recommend than a generic spec clone from a retailer with weaker support around the sale. 

CTA suggestion: If you want a treadmill for consistent indoor training through every season, start by comparing the NordicTrack 1750 with the SOLE F80 and Horizon 7.4 AT, then review delivery/setup options and financing before you place the order. From there, visit the NordicTrack 1750 product page or contact your nearest Treadmill Factory store for in-store availability. 

FAQ Q&A

Is the NordicTrack 1750 good for Canadian winters?
Yes. The 1750 is well positioned for Canadian buyers who need a reliable indoor running option during snow, ice, cold snaps, and darker winter months. Its incline/decline system and iFIT-led programming also make indoor training less repetitive. 

What is the current warranty on the NordicTrack 1750 in Canada?
NordicTrack Canada’s current C Series warranty detail for the C 1750 is Lifetime Motor, 10-Year Frame, 2-Year Parts, 1-Year Tablet, and 1-Year Labor and Repairs. Always verify the current warranty at the time of purchase. 

How much space do I need for the NordicTrack 1750?
The current Treadmill Factory listing shows a footprint of 77.3" L x 37" W x 59.5" H with a 10.01" step-up height. Measure floor area and ceiling clearance before ordering, especially for basement rooms or condo spaces. 

Does Treadmill Factory offer delivery and assembly in Canada?
The product page says shipping is free to most major Canadian cities, default delivery is curbside, and optional delivery/assembly is available. Additional fees may apply depending on location. 

Is the NordicTrack 1750 better than the SOLE F80 or Horizon 7.4 AT?
It is usually the stronger choice if you want a more immersive smart-training experience and decline capability. The SOLE F80 is the stronger durability-first alternative, and the Horizon 7.4 AT is the stronger value alternative. 

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