How Much Does A Boxing Gym Owner Make? $907k EBITDA Model

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Description

A boxing gym owner can make money when memberships, classes, personal training, and youth programs cover rent, payroll, marketing, equipment upkeep, and reserves In the provided assumptions, first-year monthly revenue inputs total $21,900 before billable-day and occupancy logic: $6,000 basic memberships, $6,000 unlimited classes, $6,000 personal training, $2,400 youth programs, and $1,500 merchandise The core model output shows $907k Year 1 EBITDA, Month 1 breakeven, and a $879k minimum cash need in Month 2 Treat EBITDA as operating profit before taxes, debt service, reserves, and owner distributions, not as guaranteed owner salary



Owner income iconOwner income$907k to $34.3M
Net margin iconNet margin4.1% to 38.0%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$21.9k to $90.3k
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyMedium

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Estimate owner take-home and the target-pay gap from revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and target pay.

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92.5%
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18%
8%
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Planning note: This is a researched planning estimate only. It is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice. Actual owner income depends on revenue, margins, payroll, taxes, reserves, and debt.



Want to see the owner-income forecast for Boxing Gym?

Yes—open the Boxing Gym Financial Model Template to see revenue, EBITDA, cash, breakeven, and owner pay scenarios.

Owner-income model highlights

  • Tabs organize key assumptions
  • 210 to 690 members
  • Year 1 EBITDA: $907k
  • Minimum cash: $879k
  • Month 1 breakeven
  • IRR: 0.76%
  • ROE: 7,891%
Boxing Gym Financial Model dashboard summarizing key KPIs, runway, cash position and performance with a dynamic dashboard for investor-ready reporting and to surface cash-flow blind spots.

How much revenue can a boxing gym make?


For a Boxing Gym, monthly revenue can reach $21,900 in Year 1, $57,800 in Year 3, and $90,300 in Year 5. That is revenue, not profit or owner take-home, so costs still come off the top. The main inputs are memberships, unlimited classes, personal training, youth programs, and merchandise.

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Year 1 to Year 5

  • Year 1: $21,900 monthly
  • Year 3: $57,800 monthly
  • Year 5: $90,300 monthly
  • Revenue grows to 4.1x
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Main revenue drivers

  • Personal training: $6,000 to $25,200
  • Merchandise: $1,500 to $5,500
  • Basic memberships and class access
  • No separate fight camp line provided

How many members does a boxing gym need to be profitable?


A Boxing Gym should not use one universal member count; in this model, profitability starts around 210 active paid program spots in Year 1, with a Month 1 breakeven caveat. For the KPI behind that target, see What Is The Most Important Measure Of Success For Your Boxing Gym?.

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Profit Drivers

  • Start with 210 paid spots
  • Reach 690 spots by Year 5
  • Price by program and capacity
  • Match staffing to class load
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Quick Math

  • Revenue input: $21,900/month
  • Fixed overhead: $14,900/month
  • Pre-payroll spread: $7,000/month
  • Year 1 payroll listed: $2375k

Can a boxing gym owner make money without coaching?


Yes, a Boxing Gym can make money without coaching only if paid coaching and management are still covered. A lean owner-coach can cut cash payroll, but that only works when a real paid role is replaced; here’s the math: the model still carries a $65k gym manager, a $60k head boxing coach, a $45k boxing coach role scaling from 10 to 30 FTE, and a $50k personal trainer role scaling from 10 to 20 FTE.

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Payroll still matters

  • $65k gym manager cost
  • $60k head coach cost
  • $45k boxing coach role
  • $50k trainer role
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Where owners get tripped up

  • Semi-absentee needs higher revenue
  • Or lower owner distributions
  • Cutting labor can hurt safety
  • Retention and results can fall



Want the six main income drivers?

1

Active Members

210-690

More filled program spots spread the fixed lease and coach payroll, so EBITDA and owner distributions climb fast.

2

Membership Price

$60-$360

Higher monthly rates raise recurring cash from each member, which flows straight into EBITDA and owner take-home.

3

Coach Payroll

$238K-$395K

Coach staffing is the main labor cost swing, so tight scheduling protects margin when sales are soft.

4

Private Training

20-70

A bigger share of private sessions boosts revenue per coach hour, so EBITDA and distributions rise without much new rent.

5

Lease Cost

$10K/mo

The fixed facility lease is hard to cut, so every extra dollar above it drops faster to EBITDA and owner cash.

6

Retention Churn

40%-85%

Better retention keeps occupancy high and helps marketing ease from 8% toward 4%, which protects EBITDA and distributions.


Boxing Gym Core Six Income Drivers



Active Members And Utilization


Active Members And Utilization

Active members are the paying spots that show up every month. In this model, they rise from 210 in Year 1 to 690 in Year 5, while occupancy climbs from 40% to 85%. That matters because the same $14,900 of monthly fixed overhead gets spread across more paying members, which lifts gross margin and the owner’s draw.

Here’s the quick math: fixed overhead per active spot drops from about $71 per month ($14,900 / 210) to about $22 ($14,900 / 690). Raw signups do not help if classes are full, poorly coached, or canceled fast, because utilization falls and churn rises. One clean metric: filled spots that stay filled.

Track Filled Spots, Not Just Leads

Measure active members, occupancy, class fill rate, and monthly churn by program. The key inputs are total class spots, paying members, coach hours, and the $14,900 fixed base. If demand is high but schedules are weak, utilization slips and cash flow stays tight even with strong signups.

Push utilization by matching class times to demand, keeping sessions coached, and blocking overbooking. If occupancy moves from 40% to 85%, more of each membership dollar covers rent and payroll instead of idle capacity. That’s the lever that turns steady membership volume into owner income.

  • Track occupied spots weekly.
  • Watch cancellations and no-shows.
  • Match coach hours to demand.
1


Membership Pricing And Revenue Per Member


Membership Pricing And Revenue per Member

Membership pricing sets the ceiling for monthly revenue per member. If basic rises from $60 to $80, unlimited classes from $100 to $120, personal training from $300 to $360, and youth from $80 to $100, the ceiling lifts by 20% to 33%. That only helps owner income if retention holds, because a price bump that speeds churn can shrink cash flow and profit.

Here’s the quick math: monthly revenue per member is the blended fee across tiers. The gain shows up in owner pay when the same member base pays more each month and fixed costs get spread over higher receipts. What this hides is mix, though: more unlimited and training members drive more revenue per head than a basic-heavy book.

Raise Rates Without Breaking Retention

Track tier mix, churn, and member outcomes before you change price. Watch 30-day and 90-day retention, class fill rate, coach feedback, and nearby competitor pricing. If classes are full, equipment is in good shape, and members see progress, a higher fee is easier to hold. If onboarding drags or classes feel crowded, the price lift can cut renewals and lower owner draws.

  • Track tier mix every month
  • Test one price change at a time
  • Compare churn before and after
  • Link raises to coach quality
  • Protect class access and equipment

A $20 jump on a $60 basic plan is a 33% increase, so even a small churn hit can erase the gain. Use pricing to support profit, not just to chase it. If the higher fee comes with better coaching, clearer class access, and visible member progress, the owner keeps more of the upside.

2


Private Training And Add-On Mix


Private Training Mix

Private boxing training pushes revenue beyond basic memberships. The model grows from 20 clients at $300 in Year 1 to 70 clients at $360 in Year 5, or about $6,000 to $25,200 in monthly input revenue. Youth programs add another $2,400 to $10,000 a month, so owner pay can rise fast if these slots stay filled.

This only helps if coach time is available. Add-ons also lift trainer payroll from $50k to $100k a year, so the real test is whether each new client covers labor and still leaves profit. If private sessions crowd group classes, retention can slip and the cash lift fades.

Protect Coach Capacity

Price add-ons against coach hours, not just demand. Here’s the quick math: 20 × $300 = $6,000 monthly in Year 1, and 70 × $360 = $25,200 in Year 5. Add youth revenue on top, but only after you map how many private slots and youth sessions one coach can cover without hurting group classes.

  • Track private-client count monthly.
  • Track youth enrollment by session.
  • Track trainer payroll as revenue share.
  • Watch open slots before raising sales.

What this estimate hides: add-ons can look strong on paper but still miss the mark if coach capacity is tight. If trainer payroll climbs toward $100k a year before add-on revenue is steady, owner cash gets squeezed fast.

3


Coach Payroll And Staffing Efficiency


Coach Payroll Efficiency

Coach payroll is the main labor lever in a boxing gym, but it has to match demand. With Year 1 payroll at $2375k and Year 5 at $395k, owner income depends on turning manager, head coach, boxing coach, administrative staff, and personal trainer hours into paid sessions. One clean rule: full schedules beat cheap schedules.

When coach hours are full and class times match member demand, labor takes a smaller bite of margin and cash flow stays steadier. Thin staffing can save money in the short run, but it can also hurt safety, member experience, and retention, which lowers recurring revenue and the owner’s take-home pay.

Staff to Demand, Not Ego

Track class fill rate, coached hours, private-training slots, and admin load by daypart. The inputs are simple: members, sessions, coach hours, and payroll dollars. If a slot stays empty for two weeks, merge it or cut it; if peak classes are full, add labor there first. That keeps payroll tied to real revenue.

  • Track fill rate by class and hour.
  • Separate safety coverage from admin work.
  • Move staff to peak demand first.
  • Cut weak off-peak sessions fast.

Use a safety floor so the gym never runs too lean. Tie extra shifts and raises to paid occupancy, not just hours worked. That protects the member experience, supports retention, and keeps cash available for owner pay instead of wasted labor.

4


Facility Cost And Lease Burden


Lease Burden And Facility Cost

$14,900 a month in facility overhead hits before the first member joins: $10,000 rent, $2,000 utilities, $1,000 cleaning, $750 insurance, $400 software, $600 accounting and legal, and $150 office supplies. That is $178,800 a year, so the space has to clear this fixed load before owner pay starts to show up.

This only works if the location, parking, and layout support enough members and class flow. Cheap rent helps, but a weak site can cap pricing power and stall growth, which makes the lease feel bigger every month.

Match Rent To Capacity

Track facility cost per usable class spot, not just total rent. Compare $14,900 in monthly fixed space cost against filled spots, monthly dues, and add-on revenue so you can see when the lease is too heavy for the room’s real output.

Before you sign or renew, test whether the site can hold demand. If parking is tight, access is awkward, or the floor plan limits class size, the lease can cut margin even when the rent looks fair on paper.

5


Retention, Churn, And Recurring Revenue


Retention Keeps Cash Recurring

Retention is the share of members who stay month to month. In this model, recurring revenue strengthens as active program spots rise from 210 in Year 1 to 690 in Year 5, while marketing drops from 8% of revenue to 4%. That keeps more cash in the business, so owner draws can start sooner and stay steadier.

Here’s the quick math: fewer churned members means less replacement selling. If churn rises, ad spend has to fill the gap before profit shows up. Track retention rate, active spots, class fill, and marketing as a percent of revenue, because those four inputs decide how much income reaches the owner.

Measure Churn By Signup Month

Measure renewal by signup month group, not just total headcount. Watch active spots, monthly churn, marketing % of revenue, and cash collected per member. If onboarding is weak or members stop seeing progress, churn rises and owner pay gets pushed back.

Use the retention levers that matter most: better onboarding, coach feedback, class programming, community, youth scheduling, and visible progress tracking. The goal is simple: keep more of the 210 to 690 spots filled without buying every new member through ads.

  • Track churn by start month
  • Review fill rate weekly
  • Test progress milestones
  • Match class times to demand
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Compare low, base, and high owner income scenarios

Scenario table

Owner income shifts with membership fill, class mix, pricing, and staffing. These three cases show how occupancy and fixed costs change what the owner can take after the gym stabilizes.

Compare downside, core, and upside income cases.
Scenario Low CaseDownside case Base CaseBase case High CaseUpside case
Launch model Lower earnings path with slower fill and thinner margins in the opening year. Modeled middle-case earnings path as the gym scales into steadier membership and class demand. Stronger earnings path with deeper utilization and tighter marketing spend.
Typical setup About 210 active program spots, 40% occupancy, roughly $21,900 monthly revenue inputs, about $237.5k payroll, $14.9k fixed overhead, and 8% marketing. About 490 spots, 70% occupancy, roughly $57,800 monthly revenue inputs, about $350k payroll, and 6% marketing. About 690 spots, 85% occupancy, roughly $90,300 monthly revenue inputs, about $395k payroll, and 4% marketing.
Cost drivers
  • 210 spots
  • 40% occupancy
  • 8% marketing
  • $237.5k payroll
  • $14.9k fixed overhead
  • 490 spots
  • 70% occupancy
  • 6% marketing
  • $350k payroll
  • balanced class mix
  • 690 spots
  • 85% occupancy
  • 4% marketing
  • $395k payroll
  • higher utilization
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves $907kLow path $12.2MBase path $34.3MHigh path
Best fit Use this to stress-test cash flow if sign-ups run slow or pricing stays under pressure. Use this as the main planning case once the gym is operating at a steadier cadence. Use this to test upside if retention is strong and the schedule stays near full.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions. Owner pay still depends on reserves, taxes, debt, and reinvestment.

Frequently Asked Questions

A boxing gym owner’s pay depends on operating profit, not gross sales In this model, first-year monthly revenue inputs total $21,900, while the core output shows $907k Year 1 EBITDA and Month 1 breakeven Owner take-home should be modeled after reserves, debt service, reinvestment, and taxes