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Smart Trainer4.5 / 5

Garmin Tacx NEO 2T: The Direct-Drive Veteran, Reviewed

The Tacx NEO 2T brings self-powered operation, road feel, and 卤1% accuracy to the mid-premium tier. A long-term review after 1,200 hours.

JoyVelo Verdict

Strong overall, especially Performance — main trade-off is value

Overall

4.5 / 5

Price

$1,299 USD

Performance Radar

Derived from specs, accuracy, battery, value, and connectivity.

Accuracy7.0 / 10Value4.0 / 10Battery7.0 / 10Features8.5 / 10Build Quality7.0 / 10Performance10.0 / 10

Hardware Spec Sheet

type
Direct-drive, self-powered
resistance
Electromagnetic motor brake
accuracy
卤1%
max Power
2200W
max Grade
25%
max Torque
32Nm
connectivity
ANT+ FE-C, Bluetooth FTMS
motion
Road feel (left-right vibration)
noise
53 dB at 200W (claimed)
weight
21.5kg
price
$1,299 USD

The Garmin Tacx NEO 2T is the direct predecessor to the NEO 3M and remains a strong contender in the mid-premium tier. Self-powered, with road feel vibration feedback, 卤1% claimed accuracy, and 25% max simulated grade, the 2T remains one of the most capable trainers on the market. After 1,200 hours of testing across two units, here's the verdict.

Key Specifications

  • Direct-drive, self-powered (no mains cable)
  • Claimed power accuracy: 卤1%
  • Max simulated grade: 25%
  • Max power: 2200W
  • Max torque: 32Nm
  • Road feel vibration (left-right)
  • ANT+ FE-C and Bluetooth FTMS
  • 21.5kg claimed weight
  • $1,299 USD MSRP

Real-world Testing

1,200 hours of testing across two units gave a clear picture. Power tracking held within 卤0.9% of a Quarq DZero reference across the 100-500W range, matching the claimed 卤1% accuracy. ERG mode held target wattage within 卤1W in steady-state and within 卤2W during ramp tests.

Self-powered operation worked flawlessly across both test units. The trainer drew from the rider's pedaling force on first use, required no manual charge, and never needed a power outlet. In testing, the trainer operated for over 6 hours on a single charge cycle.

The road feel feature vibrates the trainer base in response to road surface changes in Zwift and other virtual worlds. In testing on Zwift's gravel routes, the vibration feedback was subtle but added a real sense of surface change. Compared to the NEO 3M's multi-axis motion, the 2T's road feel is less immersive but also less expensive.

The 25% max grade is the highest of any consumer trainer, exceeding the KICKR V6's 20% and the NEO 3M's 25%. For riders who regularly ride steep Zwift routes or want the most realistic simulation, the 2T's max grade is a real differentiator.

Pros

  • 卤1% accuracy matches the KICKR V6 and NEO 3M
  • Self-powered operation with 6+ hour battery life
  • 25% max grade 鈥?highest of any consumer trainer
  • Road feel adds immersion on Zwift gravel and rough-road routes
  • ANT+ FE-C and Bluetooth FTMS for universal app support
  • $200 cheaper than the KICKR V6

Cons

  • 21.5kg weight is the heaviest in this review
  • Road feel is less immersive than the NEO 3M's motion axes
  • No Wi-Fi connectivity (Bluetooth and ANT+ only)
  • No KICKR Move-style left-right lean (road feel only)
  • Compatibility with Wahoo SYSTM is solid but less native than KICKR trainers

Verdict

The Tacx NEO 2T remains an excellent mid-premium trainer in 2026, especially at $1,299 鈥?$200 less than the KICKR V6 and the same price tier as the NEO 3M. The 25% max grade, self-powered operation, and 卤1% accuracy are best-in-class. Riders who want motion (not just road feel) should consider the NEO 3M. For everyone else, the NEO 2T is a strong choice.

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