HG Home Gym DB

Rowing Machines

A rower is the rare cardio machine that trains your whole body and stores small, but the resistance type changes everything about how it feels and sounds. Air rowers scale with effort and dominate competition gyms; magnetic rowers run near-silent for apartments; water rowers chase the feel of the real thing with a soothing swoosh. Filter by resistance to match feel and noise to your space, by foldability if storage is tight, and by max user weight and height to be sure it fits everyone who will use it.

Buying guides

Rowing Machines — frequently asked questions

Air vs magnetic rower — which is quieter?
Magnetic rowers are much quieter because resistance comes from magnets near a flywheel with no air being moved, making them the better choice for apartments or rowing while others sleep. Air rowers produce a noticeable whooshing fan noise that gets louder the harder you pull. Water rowers fall in between, with a swishing sound many people find pleasant but that is still audible in a quiet room.
Which resistance type gives the most realistic rowing feel?
Water rowers most closely mimic on-water rowing because the resistance builds through the stroke as the paddles move water. Air rowers also scale with effort and are the standard in competition gyms, so they translate well if you train for erg benchmarks. Magnetic rowers feel smooth and consistent but the resistance is more static and less dynamic than air or water.
How much space does a rower need, and can it be stored upright?
Most rowers are roughly 7 to 8 feet long and 2 feet wide in use, so you need a clear floor area plus room to extend your legs at the catch. Many models fold or separate at the rail and can be stood vertically against a wall, which cuts the footprint dramatically. Check the folded dimensions and whether it has transport wheels if you'll be moving it between sessions.
What max user weight and height should I check before buying?
Manufacturers publish a max user weight, commonly between 250 and 500 pounds, and exceeding it risks the rail and seat wearing or failing. Just as important is the rail length, since taller users (over about 6'3") can run out of slide on shorter machines. If anyone using the rower is tall or heavy, confirm both numbers before buying rather than assuming one size fits all.