Pricing is one of the most consequential decisions you'll make — and one of the most often made by gut feeling. Underpricing attracts uncommitted clients; overpricing without a clear value proposition kills conversions. This article walks through a four-step method for building a defensible rate card.
Step 1 — Calculate your real hourly rate
The price of a session doesn't just cover the hour you spend with a client. It also has to cover preparation time, potential travel, session-related admin, fixed monthly costs, and non-billable periods like holidays or sick days.
List your fixed monthly costs
Estimate your truly billable hours
Define your target take-home pay
Step 2 — Choose your offer structure
Session packs
- Clear commitment over a defined period
- Controlled payment — upfront or staged
- Well suited to one-off goals (event prep, competition)
- Client controls their own pace
Monthly subscription
- More regular and predictable cash flow
- Often includes between-session support and portal access
- Encourages consistency through the cost of stopping
- Risk of 'unused gym membership' effect without clear accountability
A balanced rate card typically offers: a single session (highest per-session rate, intentionally less attractive), a 10-session pack (mid-range rate, moderate commitment), and a monthly subscription (best per-session rate, with automatic billing and the highest level of commitment). This structure naturally nudges clients toward more engaging formats.
Step 3 — Position your pricing
Your price sends a signal. Three coherent positioning strategies exist in independent fitness coaching:
- Accessibility — below the local market average, high volume, targeting beginners. Demanding model that requires strong visibility and retention.
- Premium standard — 110–130% of the local average, with quality of service as the differentiator (personalized programs, between-session support, client portal access).
- Specialist — 150–200% of the average, anchored in deep expertise (sport-specific conditioning, post-rehab, senior populations). Lower volume, comfortable margins.
Step 4 — Evolve your rates over time
A rate set once and never revisited will always drift below the value you deliver. An annual review, communicated clearly to existing clients with adequate notice, is a normal part of running a healthy practice. The increase can be phased: hold the existing rate for long-standing subscribers for 6 to 12 months, apply the new rate to new clients immediately.
The right price creates value without creating friction
Pricing too low attracts skeptical clients and strains your cash flow. Pricing too high without a clear positioning drags out the sales cycle. The coherence between your price, your promise, and your proof of results is what makes the difference.
What about invoicing?
A clear rate card means nothing without a clean billing process: partial payments tracked, balances monitored, reminders automated. See our practical invoicing guide for personal trainers for legal requirements and best practices.
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