Smith Machine: Complete Buying Guide for Australia (2026)

Smith Machine: Complete Buying Guide for Australia (2026)

A Smith machine is a guided barbell that travels on fixed rails, letting you squat, press and hip thrust safely without a spotter. For most Australian buyers in 2026, the right choice comes down to four things: rail angle, bar and counterbalance weight, steel gauge, and whether you want a standalone unit or an all in one that adds cables and a rack. VERVE Fitness stocks Smith machines and combo trainers across home and commercial grades, so you can match the build to your space and budget rather than overpaying for stations you will not use.

What a Smith machine actually does

Unlike a free barbell, the bar is attached to vertical or angled rails, so the load only travels in one plane. A Smith machine is a guided barbell system that moves along fixed rails. The fixed path reduces balance demands, which can help lifters focus on controlled pressing, squatting, lunging, rowing and hip extension movements. The key difference from free weights is that the machine guides the bar path.

The trade off is straightforward. Free weights recruit more stabiliser muscles because you are responsible for controlling the bar path in three dimensions. A Smith machine removes that variable, the bar moves on a fixed plane, which reduces stabiliser demand but allows you to overload the primary muscles with more weight and less technical risk. For solo lifters, beginners, and anyone training around an injury, that control is a genuine advantage. You can perform flat, incline and decline bench press, shoulder presses, hip thrusts, squats, bent over rows, shrugs, calf raises and single leg deadlifts.

The specs that matter most

1. Rail angle: vertical vs angled

This is the first decision. Vertical rails keep the bar path straight up and down; angled rails, usually 7 to 12 degrees, mimic a more natural pressing motion. Both are effective, the right choice depends on your primary exercises. If squatting is your focus, an angled rail is generally preferred. Many commercial style machines use a 7 degree pitch to follow a more natural bar path for squats and bench.

2. Bar weight and counterbalance

Do not assume the bar weighs 20kg. Smith machine bars typically weigh between 6kg and 20kg depending on the model. Many home gym Smith machines use a counterbalanced bar, a spring or weight mechanism offsets part of the bar's mass, making it feel lighter than a standard 20kg Olympic barbell. Counterbalancing works in a similar way to a seesaw. With a 20kg bar and a 4kg counterbalance on either side for a total of 8kg, these counterbalances are constantly pulling against the bar, which is why it only takes an additional 12kg of resistance from the user to lift the bar up, even though it weighs 20kg.

Because there is no universal standard, track your Smith lifts separately from free weight lifts. Smith machine weight and free weight should be treated as related but separate training numbers. A 200 pound Smith machine bench press does not always equal a 200 pound free barbell bench press. Always check the product spec sheet for the exact bar or starting resistance of the model you are considering.

3. Steel gauge and welds

Frame steel is the clearest signal of long term durability. Reviewers consistently rate 11 gauge steel as the preference, assessing weld quality, pulley design and hardware finish; machines with flimsy frames or poor welds earn low ratings while those with 11 gauge steel and rock solid welds score top marks. Many quality commercial units use heavy duty all four side welded 11 gauge and 12 gauge 2 inch by 3 inch mainframe steel construction with a solid four point stance for stability. Budget all in ones often use thinner 12 or 14 gauge steel to keep price and shipping weight down, which is fine for lighter home use but worth knowing before you buy.

4. Footprint and ceiling height

Measure before you order. As a working guide, a standalone Smith machine needs about 220cm by 180cm of floor space and at least 220cm ceiling height, because the bar needs to travel its full range. Smith plus cable combinations need about 240cm by 200cm. Add 60cm in front for the bench and 60cm behind for cable rows. Tight ceilings under 220cm will not accommodate a standard Smith. If you plan to do pull ups on an all in one, remember you need extra headroom above the bar.

Standalone vs all in one trainers

A pure Smith machine is cheaper, simpler and takes less space. An all in one combines the Smith with a power rack, functional trainer cables and often a leg press or lat station in a single footprint. The rule of thumb: if you want everything in one footprint, go for a Smith plus cables combo. If you already have a separate cable station, save money on a basic Smith.

All in ones are popular in Australia because they replace several machines at once. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced lifter, a multifunctional Smith machine can provide a complete strength training solution in a single footprint, making it ideal for home gyms. Just be honest about which stations you will actually use, and do not pay for a leg press you will ignore.

Price bands in Australia (2026)

Smith machines span a very wide price range depending on frame strength, included attachments and extra stations. Here is roughly what the Australian market looks like:

  • Entry standalone Smith (approx $1,000 to $1,800): Basic guided bar, plate storage, home rated steel. Australian retailers list deluxe home Smith machines from around $1,499.
  • Smith plus cable combos ($2,000 to $3,500): Adds functional trainer pulleys and a rack, for example six in one power rack combos listed near $1,999 to $2,649.
  • Premium all in one trainers ($4,000 to $7,000+): Dual weight stacks, leg press, commercial grade frames. In Australia the Force USA G6 has sold around $4,999, the G15 around $5,999 and the G20 Pro around $6,499.
  • Full commercial floor units: Priced on quote, built for high traffic gyms.

How the main players compare

Warranty and steel gauge are the fairest ways to compare across brands. Note that many US brand warranties apply to US purchases, so always confirm the Australian warranty with your local supplier.

Brand / model type Frame steel Frame warranty Bar / counterbalance Format
Force USA G-series all in one Heavy gauge (11 gauge on G6) Lifetime frame, 2 yr parts, 90 day cables Counterbalanced Smith bar All in one (Smith, rack, cables, leg press)
Body-Solid Series 7 11 and 12 gauge 2x3 mainframe Lifetime frame and welds, 3 yr parts 25 lb (approx 11kg) bar Angled 7 degree Smith with add ons
REP Fitness Altitude (rack + Smith) 11 and 14 gauge Lifetime Smith bar rated to approx 400 lb load Modular rack with Smith and cable add ons
Bells of Steel Smith attachment Thick gauge steel Limited lifetime frame, 3 yr parts Built in or bring your own bar Rack attachment (space saving)
Spirit Fitness commercial Smith Heavy gauge steel 10 yr frame, 5 yr bearings/rods 6.6 lb (approx 3kg) counterbalanced bar Vertical standalone commercial

Sources: Force USA, Body-Solid, REP Fitness, Bells of Steel and Spirit Fitness product listings. Body-Solid's large diameter Smith bar weighs only 25 lbs. REP's rack platform is constructed with both 11 gauge and 14 gauge steel, with the Smith machine barbell supporting up to 400 pounds. Spirit's commercial unit lists a 10 year frame warranty and a 6.6 lb counterbalanced bar.

Where VERVE fits

VERVE Fitness supplies both standalone Smith machines and integrated strength gear across home and commercial grades. If you want a single guided unit, browse the Smith machines range. If your goal is a complete strength floor, VERVE also stocks commercial strength machines, plate loaded machines in stock, pin loaded machines in stock and Tori cable machines so you can build out a gym around the Smith rather than buying a single crowded all in one. The right pick depends on your space and how many lifters will use it: solo home users are usually best served by a well built standalone or a compact combo, while busy studios should prioritise 11 gauge frames and strong parts warranties.

Quick buying checklist

  • Confirm ceiling height is at least 220cm, more if you want pull ups.
  • Choose angled rails if squats are your priority, vertical for pure pressing.
  • Ask for the exact bar weight or starting resistance and whether it is counterbalanced.
  • Prefer 11 gauge steel and fully welded frames for heavy or shared use.
  • Check the Australian warranty, not just the overseas factory warranty.
  • Decide honestly between standalone, combo, or separate machines.