Free Tool
How should you price your gym memberships? This free calculator combines your operating costs, market positioning, and competitor pricing to generate data-driven membership price recommendations. Enter your numbers below to find the optimal price point that covers costs, stays competitive, and maximises profit.
Rent, utilities, insurance, staff wages, equipment leases
Cleaning, towels, consumables per member
Your desired net profit margin after all costs
How many members your facility can support
A three-tier structure maximises revenue capture. Here are suggested tiers based on your recommended price:
At each price point, how many members do you need to hit your revenue and profit targets?
| Price/Month | Members Needed | % of Capacity | Monthly Revenue | Monthly Profit |
|---|
Cost-based pricing starts with your expenses. You calculate the minimum price needed to cover fixed costs, variable costs per member, and your target profit margin. This ensures you never sell memberships at a loss, but it ignores what the market will actually pay.
Value-based pricing starts with the member. What is the perceived value of your facility, location, equipment, community, and coaching? A gym with premium equipment, group classes, and expert trainers can charge far more than the cost-based minimum suggests. The best pricing strategy combines both: use cost-based pricing as your floor, then position within the market based on the value you deliver.
Offering three membership tiers is the single most effective pricing strategy for gyms. Research consistently shows that when presented with three options, the majority of people choose the middle one. This is called the decoy effect or Goldilocks pricing.
Want dynamic pricing recommendations powered by your real data? VERVE Pulse analyses your member behaviour, churn patterns, and local market to recommend optimal pricing tiers and flag when it is time to adjust. No spreadsheets required.
The right gym membership price depends on your gym type, location, costs, and competitive landscape. Budget and 24/7 gyms in Australia typically charge $15–55 per month, mid-market gyms $35–75, CrossFit and functional fitness boxes $45–85, and boutique or premium studios $60–200. Use a cost-based approach to find your minimum viable price, then position within the market range for your segment. This calculator combines both approaches to give you a data-driven recommendation.
The average gym membership price in Australia is approximately $55–65 per month across all gym types. However, this varies significantly by segment: budget gyms average $20–30/month, mid-market gyms $50–65/month, boutique studios $80–120/month, and premium facilities $100–200/month. Location also matters, with metro CBD gyms typically 15–30% more expensive than regional equivalents.
Yes, offering three membership tiers is the most effective pricing strategy for maximising revenue capture. A three-tier structure (e.g., Basic, Standard, Premium) leverages the decoy effect, where the middle tier becomes the most popular choice. The basic tier attracts price-sensitive members who might otherwise not join, the standard tier captures the majority at a profitable price point, and the premium tier anchors value perception while generating the highest margin from members willing to pay more for extras like PT sessions, classes, or 24/7 access.
VERVE Pulse analyses member behaviour, churn patterns, and market benchmarks to recommend dynamic pricing strategies that maximise revenue — powered by AI, built for Australian gyms.