Ask ten gym owners what they pay for their software, and you’ll get ten different answers, even from owners on the same plan. That’s not because pricing pages lie. It’s because the subscription is just one line on a bill that also includes processing fees, app costs, SMS credits, and sometimes a locksmith.
Short answer: budget $99–$300/month for the software itself. Then add payment processing, apps, SMS, and, if you run a 24/7 facility, a door access stack. That second part is where most owners get surprised.
The number on the pricing page is never the number you pay
Here’s a scenario I see constantly: a gym owner spots “$99/month,” feels good about it, signs up, and three months later is paying $260 because CRM was an add-on, the branded gym moibile app was another $40, and nobody mentioned the card processing rate until the first statement arrived.
That’s not a scam. It’s just how this category of software is usually priced. The subscription is one line item in a bill that also includes:
- Payment processing (often the single biggest cost, and the one owners check last)
- Add-on modules, CRM, marketing automation, branded apps, SMS
- Access control hardware, if you run 24/7 or controlled entry
- Onboarding, data migration, and extra staff seats
- Whatever your team spends fixing things, the software should have handled it
The fitness market backing all this isn’t small, either; the Health & Fitness Association put U.S. gym and studio membership at 81 million people in 2025, and that climbs past 100 million once you count day passes and flexible access. More members mean more billing edge cases, more failed payments and more support tickets, which is exactly where software either earns its subscription or doesn’t.
What drives the real price
I think of gym software cost as five stacked layers. Vendors show you layer one and hope you don’t ask about the rest.
1. The base subscription. This is the number on the homepage: $75, $99, $199, or “book a demo.” It tells you where the conversation starts, not where the bill lands.
2. Payment processing. This one’s sneaky because it scales with revenue, not headcount. Stripe’s published U.S. card rate is 2.9% + 30¢ per transaction, a useful benchmark, though your actual rate depends on the platform, your country, and your volume. Run $20K/month through the gym, and a 1-point difference in processing rate is $2,400 a year, quietly, before you’ve even compared subscriptions.
3. Add-ons. CRM, lead management, marketing automation, a branded app, SMS/WhatsApp credits, workout programming, advanced reporting, API access. Some platforms bundle most of this in; others sell it piece by piece. PushPress is the clearest modular example; Core handles the base system, while Grow (CRM/marketing), Train, and the branded app are separate products with separate price tags.
4. Hardware and access control. If members badge in at 5 am with nobody at the desk, you need door controllers, readers, locks, maybe turnstiles or kiosks, plus installation. GymMaster and GymRoute both build access control into their pricing structure rather than treating it as a bolt-on, which matters a lot if you run 24/7.
5. Multi-location complexity. More sites mean location-level permissions, consolidated reporting, and often per-location pricing. International operators have an extra layer on top: currency handling, VAT/GST, and local payment rails. GoCardless, for instance, is built around bank-debit collection rather than a card-first US model, which fits UK and EU operators better than most American platforms do.
The formula I’d actually use before signing anything:
True monthly cost = subscription + processing + add-ons + hardware + messaging + onboarding + the staff hours you’ll spend working around gaps
What it costs depends on the kind of gym you run
Forget “starting at $X.” Think about which bucket your gym actually falls into.
| Your gym | Realistic monthly range | What pushes the number up |
| New studio, micro gym, solo PT | Under $100 | Support tier, CRM access, feature caps |
| Growing independent gym | $100–$300 | CRM, POS, marketing tools, staff seats |
| Established single-location gym | $300–$700 | Automation, apps, access control |
| 24/7 access facility | $300–$1,000+ | Doors, readers, locks, install labor |
| Multi-location operator | $500–$2,000+ | Per-site pricing, reporting, permissions |
| Franchise/enterprise chain | Custom | Implementation, dedicated support |
For most independent gyms, $199–$299/month is the sweet spot, enough to fold CRM, POS, and access control into one system instead of paying for four disconnected tools. Under $100 is fine for a genuinely small operation, but you’ll likely outgrow it faster than the sales page implies.
Fifteen platforms, side by side
Some vendors publish real numbers. Others make you sit through a demo to find out. That distinction alone tells you something about how the rest of the relationship will go.
Published pricing
| Platform | Starting price | Best fit | Watch for |
| GymRoute | $99 / $199 / $299 per mo | Gyms, studios, wellness, multi-location | Confirm processing rate & app costs |
| GymDesk | From $75/mo (by active member) | Martial arts, BJJ | SMS and branded app cost extra |
| PushPress | Free / $159 / $229 (Core tiers) | CrossFit, small gyms | Grow, Train, Branded App sold separately |
| Wodify | From $179/mo per location | CrossFit, martial arts | Per-location pricing multiplies fast |
| Vagaro | $23.99/mo (promo, 1 calendar) | Salon/spa/boutique fitness | Extra calendars and features add up |
| WellnessLiving | $69 / $199 / $349 per mo | Studios, wellness, boutiques | Promo price ≠ standard price |
| TeamUp | $119/mo (0–100 customers) | Class-based studios | Scales with active customer count |
| Kicksite | $49–$199/mo by student count | Martial arts schools | Processing runs through Basys |
| MyStudio | $79–$239/mo (annual) | Martial arts, youth programs | SMS, AI tools and branded app cost extra |
| GymMaster | $89–$209/mo | 24/7 access gyms | Hardware and install are separate |
| Zen Planner | From $99/mo | BJJ, martial arts, CrossFit | Branded app + EMV device: $39/mo each |
| Virtuagym | Per-location/package | Gyms, coaching, wellness | Modules vary heavily by region |
Quote-only pricing
| Platform | Style | Ask before comparing |
| Mindbody | From $99/mo/location, then sales-led | Marketplace fees, processing, contract terms |
| ABC Glofox | Fully quote-led | Processor, implementation, renewal terms |
| ClubReady | Demo-led | First-year total, implementation fee, support scope |
If a vendor won’t give you a number before a sales call, ask for the full first-year cost in writing before you go further. That’s a fair ask, and how they respond tells you something.
Where GymRoute fits in this picture
GymRoute is worth a closer look because it’s built around a different bet than most of the platforms above: instead of a cheap core plan with a shelf of paid add-ons, it prices three tiers that each try to be a complete operating system.
- Excel — $99/mo. Bookings, scheduling, membership management. A reasonable starting point for a small studio that just needs the basics running cleanly.
- Exceed — $199/mo. Adds lead management, POS, and premium access control, aimed at gyms that are actively selling and don’t want to bolt on a separate CRM yet.
- Ultimate — $299/mo. Marketing automation, staff management, inventory, loyalty, POS, built for single- or multi-location operators who want one system instead of five.
It’s not positioned as the cheapest option, and it shouldn’t be compared that way. The pitch is different: if your gym is currently juggling separate tools for billing, CRM, POS, staff, and access control, GymRoute’s value case is that $299, replacing four subscriptions, beats $99 plus four more bills you haven’t added up yet. A martial arts school focused purely on attendance and billing will probably do better with GymDesk or Kicksite. A CrossFit box obsessed with workout programming leans on PushPress or Wodify. But for a hybrid gym-plus-wellness operation, or anyone running more than one location, GymRoute earns a spot on the shortlist.
The costs nobody puts on the pricing page
Payment processing. Card rate, ACH rate, chargeback fees, and whether you’re even allowed to bring your own processor. This is worth interrogating harder than the subscription price, it scales with revenue, and revenue is the thing you’re trying to grow.
“Member app” vs. “branded app.” A member app lets people book classes inside the vendor’s own app. A branded app puts your gym’s name and icon in the App Store. Vendors routinely charge for the second thing even when the first is included. Vagaro, for one, treats extra calendars and app branding as separate line items from its base plan.
Messaging. Renewal reminders, trial follow-ups, birthday offers, SMS and WhatsApp are often usage-based even when the subscription includes “some” messaging.
Access control. Ask specifically: does the door lock automatically on a failed payment? Does staff have an override? Who do you call when the reader dies at 6 am on a Sunday, the hardware vendor or the software company? That last question separates a real integrated system from two products awkwardly wired together.
Migration. Moving member records, payment profiles, attendance history, and waivers to a new platform is real work. The cost isn’t just the new subscription; it’s the risk of losing billing continuity mid-switch.
Cancellation friction. Monthly or annual? Notice period? Can you actually export your data when you leave? A $99 plan with a punishing exit clause isn’t actually a $99 plan.
When free software stops being free
Free plans (PushPress Core Free is the clearest example, and it isn’t alone) make sense for a genuinely new gym testing an idea with fifteen members and light payment volume. The catch is that “free” is usually subsidized by a higher processing rate or a hard feature ceiling. PushPress’s free tier, for instance, carries a noticeably higher card rate than its paid tiers.
The question isn’t whether free software is a trap. It’s: at what member count does free stop being the cheap option? For most gyms, that inflection point arrives somewhere between 50 and 150 members, once CRM, reporting, and processing volume start to matter more than the $0 line item.
What to ask before you sign anything
Get these in writing, not verbally, on a sales call:
- Total monthly cost at 50, 150, and 300 members, not just the entry tier
- Full processing rates for card, ACH, and Direct Debit
- Whether CRM and marketing automation are included or sold separately
- Whether the branded app is extra, and how much
- Whether access control is native or requires a third-party vendor
- Hardware and installation costs, if relevant
- Data migration cost and process
- Contract term, auto-renewal terms, and cancellation notice
- Whether you can export your data if you leave
A vendor that answers all nine plainly is telling you something. One that keeps redirecting you back to “let’s hop on a call” is telling you something, too.
The question that actually matters
Not “how cheap is the plan”, “what does this software stop me from paying for somewhere else?”
If a $299/mo system replaces separate billing software, a CRM, a POS terminal, access control, and a marketing tool, the subscription price is only one part of the math. A $99 plan that still leaves your front desk manually chasing failed payments and exporting spreadsheets every Friday might be the more expensive option; you’re just paying for it in staff hours instead of a bigger invoice.
FAQ
How much does gym management software cost in 2026?
Most independent gyms land between $99 and $300/month before processing and add-ons. 24/7 facilities and multi-location operators often land between $500 and $2,000+.
What’s a realistic average?
Budget around $199–$299/month for the subscription itself, then layer on processing, messaging, and any hardware you need.
Why is my actual bill higher than the advertised price?
The advertised number is almost always the bare subscription. CRM, branded apps, SMS, access control, and onboarding are frequently priced separately.
Is free gym software actually free?
For a very small, very new gym, often yes. Past a certain member count, the higher processing rate or missing features usually cost more than a paid plan would.
