How Much Women’s Gym Owners Can Make: $59k Year 1 Run-Rate

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Description

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Active members must reach about 579 to break even.
  • Pricing mix lifts revenue only if members stay.
  • Retention protects cash; replacing churn costs real money.
  • Payroll and rent drive the biggest fixed-cost hurdle.


Owner income iconOwner income$59k
Net margin iconNet margin59%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$998k
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyMedium

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Owner income calculator

Estimate owner take-home and the target-pay gap from revenue, gross margin, labor, overhead, marketing, reserves, and debt service.

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Planning note: This is a researched planning estimate only. It is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice.



Want to check owner income in the Women's Gym model?

This screenshot shows revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and owner take-home assumptions in the Women's Gym financial model template; open the model.

Owner-income model highlights

  • Owner take-home: $59k
  • Run-rate revenue: $9975k
  • Operating margin: 59%
  • Break-even: 579 members
  • Membership mix drives revenue
  • Test lean, base, high cases
  • Check capex and payroll
Women

How much can a women’s gym owner pay herself?


A Women's Gym owner could pay herself up to about $59k in Year 1 before taxes, reserves, debt service, and equipment spending if the gym holds 625 active customers at $133 monthly revenue per customer; for the key metric behind that, see What Is The Main Measure Of Success For Women's Gym?. Here’s the quick math: 625 × $133 × 12 = $997,500 annual run-rate revenue, but owner pay should come after cash needs are covered.

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Owner Pay Limit

  • $59k possible pre-tax owner pay
  • 625 active customers required
  • $133 monthly revenue per customer
  • $997.5k annual revenue run-rate
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Cash Rules

  • Salary means fixed owner wages
  • Distributions mean profit withdrawals
  • Keep cash for equipment and marketing
  • Replacing an $85k manager is labor

Is an owner-operated women’s gym more profitable than manager-run?


Yes—a Women’s Gym can show higher take-home when the owner handles sales, staff oversight, or classes instead of hiring a $85k club manager in Year 1. Here’s the quick math: replacing that role can lift cash from about $59k to about $144k before taxes, reserves, debt, and capex. Still, that $85k is pay for real work, so manager-run is cleaner for scale but usually lower on margin unless revenue covers the added payroll.

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Owner-run upside

  • $85k manager cost can be avoided
  • Cash may rise from $59k to $144k
  • Owner can cover sales and oversight
  • Classes can replace paid management hours
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Manager-run tradeoff

  • $85k is real labor cost, not waste
  • Cleaner for scale and delegation
  • Lower margin if payroll stays high
  • Needs enough revenue to absorb pay

How many members does a women’s gym need?


A Women's Gym needs about 579 members in Year 1 to cover $59,917 in monthly fixed payroll and marketing at $133 revenue per customer and a 78% contribution margin. If the owner also wants $100,000 annual pay, the target rises to about 658 members using ($59,917 + $8,333) / ($133 × 78%). Churn is expensive: replacing lost members costs $120 CAC in Year 1, so retention matters as much as new signups.

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Break-even members

  • 579 members covers core costs.
  • $59,917 fixed cost drives the target.
  • $133 revenue per member sets capacity.
  • 78% margin keeps the math tight.
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What changes the target

  • 658 members funds $100k pay.
  • $8,333 monthly owner pay raises the bar.
  • $120 CAC makes churn costly.
  • Rent, staffing, pricing, and size shift breakeven.



Want the six main income drivers?

1

Active Members

579-625

Every new member spreads fixed costs, and Year 1 needs about 625 acquired customers to get past the 579-member break-even line.

2

Pricing Mix

$85-$180

Moving more members into the $120 and $180 tiers lifts monthly revenue per head without adding much space.

3

Retention

10h/$120

At a $120 CAC and 10 hours of monthly engagement, better retention keeps reacquisition spend down and protects cash.

4

Add-ons

15%/10%

A 15% training attach and 10% event attach add higher-margin revenue from members you already have.

5

Payroll

$335K

Year 1 wages of $335K make staffing the biggest swing factor in EBITDA and payback.

6

Facility Overhead

$18K/mo

$18K a month in lease and CAM means occupancy has to ramp fast or owner income stays under pressure.


Women's Gym Core Six Income Drivers



Active Member Volume


Active Member Volume

Active member volume is the number of paying members still active in the month. For this gym, it is the main revenue lever because fixed costs are heavy and Year 1 break-even is about 579 active members. At $133 monthly revenue per active member, more actives lift cash fast; fewer actives push owner pay down because rent and payroll do not shrink with every lost member.

Here’s the quick math: 625 acquired customers from $75k marketing at $120 CAC can work only if enough stay active. After 22% variable costs, each active member contributes about $103.74 a month, so retention, class capacity, sales timing, and onboarding decide how much of that revenue stays on the books. Signups are not pure profit.

Track Weekly Active Count

Measure active members, churn, and new-member activation every week. Compare acquired customers to active members, because the gap shows how much paid traffic turns into recurring income. If onboarding takes too long or classes fill up, the business loses contribution before it reaches fixed-cost coverage. One clean rule: above 579 active members, the model can start funding owner pay.

  • Track active members by month.
  • Watch churn against CAC.
  • Check class capacity weekly.
  • Fix onboarding delays fast.
1


Pricing And Membership Mix


Pricing and Membership Mix

When the mix tilts toward premium tiers, revenue per active member rises without adding more floor traffic. The Year 1 weighted monthly revenue is $133 per member, built from $85 Essential, $120 Elevate, $180 Empower, plus $150 personal training and $60 workshops at the stated mix and attachment rates.

That extra revenue helps cover rent, payroll, and owner draw faster. But pricing power only works if members feel the value, stay subscribed, and do not trade down; otherwise, a higher sticker price just masks churn and weakens cash flow.

Track Mix, Not Just Headcount

Use weighted revenue per active member as the main KPI. Here’s the quick math: if the average member is worth $133 a month, then every mix shift toward higher tiers, training, or workshops lifts gross cash before fixed costs.

  • Track tier mix each month.
  • Watch upgrade and downgrade rates.
  • Measure add-on attach rates.
  • Test price changes by cohort.

Raise prices only after usage, class fill, and retention support it. If premium members do not stay longer than basic members, the model gets weaker, because higher price then comes with higher churn and more replacement marketing.

2


Retention And Churn


Retention That Protects Recurring Revenue

Retention is the share of members who keep paying month after month. For this gym, it protects owner income because every lost member can trigger new $120 CAC (customer acquisition cost), so losing 50 members can burn $6,000 before staff time. One clean rule: churn turns recurring dues into a marketing bill.

The real risk is weaker cash flow and more pressure on fixed payroll and rent. Retention improves when onboarding helps members use the gym, classes stay consistent, and women-focused programming makes visits feel worth the price. Engagement rising from 100 hours a month in Year 1 to 130 by Year 5 supports this only if those hours create repeat visits.

Track Churn Before It Hits Profit

Track cohort churn, meaning cancellations by signup month, plus first-30-day visit rate, class attendance, and reasons for canceling. If members join but do not use the gym, you pay $120 CAC and then lose the monthly dues, so payback stretches and owner draw gets squeezed. The key question is simple: are new members building a habit or just trying one class?

  • Measure 30-day retention weekly.
  • Flag low-use members fast.
  • Test onboarding and class flow.
  • Document cancel reasons by cohort.

Use the data to protect margin: if onboarding or class consistency keeps members longer, it lowers replacement spend and keeps fixed costs covered by recurring dues. If churn spikes after month one, fix the first two weeks, not the ads. Better retention is cheaper than buying the same member twice.

3


Personal Training And Small-Group Add-Ons


Personal Training Add-Ons

Women’s gym add-ons can raise revenue per member fast, but only if coach time and room slots are full. Year 1 assumes 15% personal training attachment at $150 and 10% workshop attachment at $60, which adds about $2,850 in monthly revenue per 100 members; Year 5 rises to $6,120.

These add-ons include one-on-one training and small-group workshops. The key inputs are member count, attachment rate, price, trainer fees, material cost, and room capacity. If conversion stays weak or trainers sit idle, the extra revenue shows up in sales but not in owner pay.

Track attachment, not just bookings

Measure add-on take rate by cohort and by coach. A simple check is add-on revenue ÷ active members; that tells you whether the upsell is lifting revenue per member or just creating busy schedules.

Test pricing, session size, and workshop calendar together. Keep enough open slots for high-margin sessions, and subtract coach pay, supplies, and room time before you forecast cash flow. If a package fills quickly but margins shrink, it’s not helping owner income.

4


Staffing And Payroll Efficiency


Staffing And Payroll Efficiency

Payroll is a direct hit to owner take-home in this gym model. Year 1 wages total $335k across the club manager, trainer lead, group instructors, front desk, and cleaning staff, so labor is already a major fixed cost before rent and marketing. If active members and pricing do not rise faster than payroll, the owner’s draw gets squeezed.

The mix changes fast. Year 2 adds a $70k fitness director, and wages reach $530k by Year 5. The driver includes headcount, shifts, overtime, and owner labor. Owner work can save cash, but it is not free, and burnout can hurt sales and retention. One missed manager shift can cost more than the saved wage.

Measure Labor by Member, Not by Habit

Track wages by role, hours per class, and labor per active member. That shows whether staff growth is keeping up with member volume or just adding overhead. Full-time equivalent (FTE) staffing should move with attendance and class fill, not with a fixed schedule. Payroll should follow demand, not habit.

Test one change at a time: trim low-fill shifts, use owner coverage only where it saves real cash, and protect peak-hour service. If a $70k hire raises retention or sell-through on add-ons, keep it; if not, it weakens profit and lowers what the owner can pay themselves. The question is simple: does each labor dollar bring in more recurring revenue?

5


Facility Overhead


Facility Overhead

Facility overhead is the monthly bill the gym pays before it sells a single membership: lease and CAM, utilities, equipment maintenance, insurance, software, and professional services. The disclosed fixed facility and admin cost is $25,750 per month, with $18k lease and CAM alone, so rent quality sets the break-even floor from day one.

Here’s the quick math: if each active member contri butes about $103 a month after variable costs, overhead alone needs roughly 250 active members ($25,750 ÷ $103) before payroll, marketing, or owner pay. If the location is too large or underfilled, cash flow gets tight fast and profit disappears even when sales look healthy.

Track the Occupancy Hurdle

Measure this monthly as occupancy cost per active member and use the lease to test the site. A strong location can support higher rent only if capacity, traffic, and retention keep the room full; otherwise, the rent just raises the hurdle and pushes payback out.

  • Monthly lease and CAM
  • Seasonal utility bills
  • Maintenance and repair contracts
  • Insurance premiums and renewals
  • Software and admin fees
  • Capacity versus active members

Track these inputs, then tie every overhead item to a per-member target. If the site cannot support the expected active base, resize the footprint or renegotiate before opening, because fixed costs hit owner income long before the first class feels full.

6



Compare lean, base, and high-performing owner income scenarios

Owner income scenarios

Owner income swings with how fast memberships, training, and classes cover a heavy lease and payroll base. The first two years run negative, then profit starts in Year 3.

Low, base, and high cases show how the gym moves from cash strain to profit.
Scenario Low CaseDownside Base CasePlanning case High CaseUpside
Launch model This is a lower-earnings path where the gym stays under break-even through the early ramp. This is the modeled path where the gym reaches positive earnings by Year 3. This is the stronger path where earnings scale well above the early ramp.
Typical setup Year 1 EBITDA is -$382k and Year 2 is -$143k, so the owner is still carrying a large lease, payroll, and launch marketing load. Year 3 EBITDA turns positive at $193k as the fixed base is already staffed and marketing rises to $180k. Year 4 EBITDA reaches $830k and Year 5 reaches $1.64M as the same platform carries more revenue over a fixed cost base.
Cost drivers
  • Negative Year 1 EBITDA
  • Year 2 still negative
  • $75k marketing budget
  • $719k fixed overhead
  • early staffing ramp
  • Year 3 EBITDA turns positive
  • $180k marketing budget
  • $959k fixed overhead
  • training and class revenue
  • lower variable cost load
  • Year 4 to Year 5 EBITDA scales
  • $250k-$320k marketing budget
  • larger trainer and instructor teams
  • operating leverage
  • fixed costs spread
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves -$382,000Below break-even $193,000Modeled profit $830,000 to $1,640,000Strong upside
Best fit Use this to test cash burn and whether you can fund the first two years. Use this for budgets, lender talks, and hiring plans. Use this to test upside if retention, upsells, and class fill stay strong.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Under the Year 1 run-rate assumptions, owner take-home is about $59k before taxes, reserves, debt service, and launch capex That comes from 625 acquired customers, $133 monthly revenue per customer, and about $9975k annual revenue The margin is thin at 59%, so small misses in retention, payroll, or rent can erase pay