Someone sent me a Reddit thread last night that felt more useful than half the polished “How to open a gym” advice online.
No one was debating the logo. No one cared about the wall color. The useful stuff was quieter: how much the build-out cost, how long the lease was, how fast equipment financing started to bite, and why pre-sales matter before a single dumbbell is racked.
One idea kept showing up.
A gym does not fail only because people do not want fitness. Sometimes it fails because the owner believed the room would sell itself.
I have seen that story play out in different ways. Two gyms can open in the same city, with similar equipment, similar rent, and similar ambition. One opens with paying members waiting at the door. The other opens with perfect flooring, new machines, and almost nobody on the floor.
The difference is not always the treadmills.
It is the numbers.
One owner knows how many members are needed to cover rent, payroll, utilities, gym software, marketing, and equipment payments. The other is hoping walk-ins will save the month.
That is where gym break-even analysis becomes interesting: it tells you whether your idea can survive real costs before opening day.
What is a gym break-even analysis?
A gym break-even analysis shows the point where your monthly revenue equals your monthly expenses. The SBA explains break-even as the point where total cost and total revenue are equal, meaning the business is not making a loss or a gain.
For a gym, that means memberships and other revenue cover rent, payroll, utilities, software, equipment, payments, and insurance.
But break-even is not a success yet. It is survival.
At break-even your gym may still have zero profit. You may still not be paying yourself properly. Cash reserves may still be thin. Debt may still be heavy.
I have seen busy gyms struggle because the model was too tight. Busy is not the same as being profitable.
Break-even helps you answer practical questions before opening: Can this rent work? How many members do I need? Can I pay myself?
If you are still estimating gym startup costs, calculate those alongside break-even. Startup costs show what it takes to open. Break-even shows what it takes to stay open.
Why gyms are financially exposed early
Gyms are exposed because major costs begin before membership revenue becomes predictable.
A gym has heavy fixed costs: rent, build-out payments, equipment financing, insurance, staff, utilities, fitness software, cleaning, and marketing.
A common mistake is building the plan around rent and equipment only. Once payroll, insurance, and payment processing are added, the break-even target usually jumps.
Startup costs and monthly costs are different, but connected. Your startup budget may include flooring, mirrors, locker rooms, HVAC work, signage, access control, cardio equipment, and strength equipment. The SBA startup cost guide recommends estimating startup costs early.
That is why asking how much does it cost to open a gym is only the first question. The better question is:
“What will this gym cost every month once open?”
A long lease can turn a weak model into a long problem. Before signing, check base rent, CAM fees, rent increases, exit options, parking, and local demand.
The gym break-even formula explained
The basic gym break-even formula is:
Break-even members = Fixed costs ÷ (Average revenue per member – Variable cost per member)
At first glance, the formula may look intimidating, but it is really answering a simple business question: How many paying members do I need each month to cover the cost of operating the gym?
To understand the calculation, it helps to break it into three parts.
Fixed costs: Expenses that stay consistent
Fixed costs remain relatively consistent regardless of whether you have 50 members or 500 members. Typical fixed costs include rent, nsurance, base payroll, equipment financing, software subscriptions, security, cleaning services, marketing, accounting, and legal fees.
Variable costs: Expenses that grow with membership
Variable costs increase as membership grows. These may include payment processing fees, towels, cleaning supplies, amenities, equipment wear and tear, trainer commissions, and class delivery costs.
Contribution margin: What each member contributes
Once you know both numbers, you can calculate your contribution margin, which represents how much revenue each member contributes toward covering your fixed costs after their direct expenses are paid.
Contribution margin = Average revenue per member – variable cost per member
For example, if your average member pays $109 per month and costs $10 per month to serve, your contribution margin is $99. That means each active member contributes $99 toward covering your gym’s fixed operating expenses.
Calculating your break-even revenue
With your contribution margin established, you can calculate how many members are required to reach break-even. You can also estimate the revenue needed to achieve that target using the following formula:
Break-even revenue = Break-even members × Average revenue per member
This gives you a clearer picture of both the membership volume and monthly revenue required to keep the business financially sustainable.
Every cost your calculation should include
Your break-even calculation should include every recurring cost needed to operate the gym, not just rent and equipment.
- Start with occupancy costs. Rent is rarely just rent. Include base rent, CAM fees, property tax pass-throughs, parking costs, security deposits, and rent increases
- Equipment also keeps costing money after opening day. Include financing, leasing, maintenance contracts, repairs, and replacement reserves
- Staffing is easy to underestimate. Include front desk staff, trainers, managers, sales staff, cleaners, payroll taxes, and benefits. I have reviewed gym models that looked profitable until realistic staffing was added
- Technology belongs in your break-even model because it supports billing, scheduling, sales, and retention. This is where gym management software becomes part of the financial conversation. Good systems do not fix a weak model, but they help track revenue, payments, attendance, leads, and retention
- Do not forget hidden costs: merchant fees, music licensing, pest control, legal support, accounting, repairs, permits, cleaning supplies, software add-ons, and marketing tools
- Finally, add owner salary. Run the numbers twice: first without owner salary, then with it included
A complete gym break-even example
If a gym has $26,000 in monthly fixed costs and earns $99 per member after variable expenses, it needs about 263 members to break even.
Let’s use a fictional neighborhood gym with a 5,000-square-foot facility, strength training, cardio, small group classes, personal training upsells, and monthly memberships.
| Cost category | Monthly cost |
| Rent and CAM | $8,000 |
| Payroll | $7,500 |
| Equipment financing | $3,500 |
| Utilities | $1,500 |
| Insurance | $900 |
| Software and billing tools | $600 |
| Cleaning and maintenance | $1,200 |
| Marketing | $1,800 |
| Miscellaneous overhead | $1,000 |
| Total fixed costs | $26,000 |
Now add variable costs.
| Variable cost | Monthly cost per member |
| Payment processing | $3 |
| Supplies and amenities | $4 |
| Wear and tear allowance | $3 |
| Total variable cost | $10 |
Assume average monthly revenue per member is $109, variable cost is $10, contribution margin is $99, and fixed monthly costs are $26,000.
Formula:
$26,000 ÷ $99 = 263 members
So this gym needs around 263 active paying members to break even.
That target is not the finish line. It is the first safety line. The owner still needs to consider salary, profit, taxes, debt, churn, slow sales months, and cash reserves.
Validate demand before trusting the math
A spreadsheet can tell you what number you need. It cannot prove the market will give it to you.
Before pricing anything, define who you want to serve: beginners, busy professionals, strength athletes, women-only training, older adults, families, or high-touch personal training clients.
Then study the local market. The SBA market research guide recommends using market research to understand customers, reduce risk, and confirm whether your business idea has demand.
Visit local competitors. Look at pricing, contract terms, amenities, parking, hours, reviews, and member experience. Do not copy pricing blindly, but understand what future members will compare you against.
A premium model can work if the experience supports it. If the offer feels the same as a cheaper competitor, premium pricing becomes hope. If your break-even depends on charging $189 per month, validate that through pre-sales, waitlists, paid trials, surveys, or founder memberships.
How pricing changes your break-even point
Membership pricing directly changes how many members your gym needs to break even. Lower prices require more volume. Higher prices require stronger value, service, and retention.
| Model | Price | Variable cost | Contribution margin | Members needed |
| Budget | $49 | $8 | $41 | 635 |
| Mid-tier | $109 | $10 | $99 | 263 |
| Premium | $189 | $35 | $154 | 169 |
The budget model needs volume, low staffing costs, and tight control. The mid-tier model works well for neighborhood gyms. The premium model lowers member count, but raises expectations.
Pricing should follow value, not panic. Do not raise prices only to make the spreadsheet look better.
Why membership fees alone rarely tell the full story
Additional revenue streams can lower the number of members needed to break even, but only if those revenue streams are realistic and validated.
Average revenue per member, or ARPM, gives you a fuller picture than membership dues alone. A gym charging $109 per month may earn more per member if some members also buy training, retail, recovery services, or nutrition coaching.
Useful revenue streams include personal training, group coaching, recovery services, nutrition coaching, retail, corporate wellness, day passes, and workshops.
These can improve gym ROI when they solve real member needs, not when they are added randomly.
Avoid inflated projections. Do not assume 50% of members will buy personal training unless you have proof. Model 10%, 20%, and 30% scenarios instead.
Capacity, churn, and cash flow change the real target
Your real break-even target is affected by facility capacity, member cancellations, and cash flow.
If your gym needs 400 members to survive but comfortably supports only 450, the model is risky. Think about peak-hour crowding, parking, locker room limits, class capacity, equipment bottlenecks, and check-in flow.
Churn also raises the sales target. If your break-even target is 263 members and monthly churn is 5%, you lose about 13 members each month. That means you need around 13 new members monthly just to stay at break-even.
Cash flow is not the same as break-even. A gym can technically reach break-even and still run out of cash when deposits, delayed payments, repairs, seasonal dips, debt payments, or slow membership growth hit before reserves recover.
Plan for at least 6 months of operating runway. A safer target is 9 to 12 months, especially in competitive markets.
Break-even should not be your final target. If break-even is 263 members, an operational target of 325 members gives you a cushion against churn, seasonal dips, unexpected expenses, and weaker sales months.
Red flags that your numbers do not work yet
If your break-even number is too close to capacity, depends on hopeful pricing, or leaves no cash runway, the model needs work before opening.
Red flags include break-even being too close to full capacity, pricing built on hope, heavy startup debt, no retention plan, no acquisition plan, owner salary missing from the model, and no 6 to 12-month cash runway.
If members cancel quickly, the gym has to keep selling just to stand still. Build retention around onboarding, progress tracking, automated follow-ups, community, and win-back campaigns.
A gym may need 263 members to break even, but it also needs a plan to attract those members. Use pre-sales, referrals, local SEO, paid ads, trial passes, partnerships, and lead follow-up.
How to build a gym break-even spreadsheet
A gym break-even spreadsheet should include fixed costs, variable costs, membership pricing, projected members, extra revenue, churn, owner salary, and profit targets.
SCORE offers a useful break-even analysis template and recommends gathering fixed costs, variable costs, and sales forecasts before using the model.
For your own gym financial planning, include rent and CAM, payroll, equipment financing, software, insurance, utilities, cleaning, marketing, variable cost per member, price, extra revenue, projected members, owner salary, churn, and profit target.
Essential formulas include contribution margin, break-even members, break-even revenue, projected profit, churn-adjusted sales target, and break-even with owner salary.
Build three scenarios. The conservative scenario assumes slower pre-sales, higher costs, lower ARPM, and higher churn. The realistic scenario uses your best estimate. The aggressive scenario assumes strong pre-sales, better retention, and higher secondary revenue. Use it for upside planning, not lease decisions.
Your first spreadsheet is a forecast. After opening, it should become a monthly operating dashboard. This is where Wellyx can help track memberships, billing, attendance, revenue, and retention from one place.
Pre-opening financial checklist before you sign the lease
Before signing a gym lease, validate costs, pricing, demand, capacity, runway, and break-even target.
Checklist:
- Confirm rent and CAM fees
- Get equipment quotes and financing terms
- Obtain insurance quotes
- Build realistic payroll projections
- Choose gym management software
- Estimate utilities and cleaning costs
- Research local competitors
- Test pricing assumptions
- Build conservative, realistic, and aggressive scenarios
- Estimate monthly churn
- Validate peak-hour capacity
- Calculate owner salary break-even
- Secure 6 to 12 months of cash runway
- Pre-sell memberships if possible
- Build a member acquisition plan
If this checklist exposes weak numbers, that is the model protecting you before your money is locked in.
FAQs
How many members does a gym need to break even?
It depends on rent, payroll, pricing, equipment payments, software, marketing, and variable costs. A small studio may need 100 to 250 members. A larger gym may need several hundred. Use your formula, then add churn and owner salary.
What is a good break-even point for a gym?
A good break-even point sits below realistic operating capacity. Ideally, the gym should break even around 60% to 75% of comfortable capacity, not when every machine, class, and parking space is stretched.
Should I include my salary in gym break-even calculations?
Yes. First, calculate basic break-even without your salary. Then add your salary as a fixed cost. That shows whether the gym can support you as an owner.
Can a gym break even on memberships alone?
Yes, but it is often harder. Membership-only models depend heavily on volume, pricing, retention, and capacity. Training, coaching, retail, recovery services, and corporate packages can reduce pressure.
What is the difference between break-even and profitability?
Break-even means revenue equals expenses. Profitability means revenue is higher than expenses after all costs are covered, including owner salary, taxes, debt, and reinvestment needs.
Open a gym with numbers, not guesswork
Go back to that empty space.
The racks are not installed yet. The front desk is still an idea. The first members have not walked through the door.
That is exactly when your numbers matter most.
A gym owner does not need to lose the excitement of opening. They just need a financial model strong enough to carry it.
Break-even is the first milestone. Profitability comes later. Cash flow matters. Capacity matters. Churn matters. Conservative assumptions win.
Once your break-even number is clear, the next step is tracking it every month. Wellyx helps gym owners manage memberships, automate billing, monitor revenue, improve retention, and keep operations connected.
If you want to see how those systems fit into a real gym operation, you can contact us and explore the next step with a clearer view of your numbers.
The best time to find a problem in your gym model is before the lease is signed, before the equipment is installed, and before the first rent payment is due.




