1Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR)
Monthly Recurring Revenue is the total predictable revenue a gym earns each month from active memberships, recurring PT packages, and subscription-based services. MRR excludes one-off sales like merchandise or day passes and represents the financial baseline your gym can rely on every 30 days.
Formula
MRR = Total Active Members × Average Membership Price + Recurring PT/Add-on Revenue
Australian Benchmark
A single-site gym with 800 members at $65/month ARPM generates approximately $52,000 MRR. Mid-market gyms with 1,200+ members typically target $80,000–$150,000 MRR. Boutique studios with premium pricing can exceed $200,000 MRR with fewer members.
Why It Matters
MRR is the heartbeat of your gym's financial health. It determines your ability to cover fixed costs, plan investments, and weather seasonal dips. A gym that doesn't know its MRR is flying blind.
Calculate your MRR →
2Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR)
Annual Recurring Revenue is the annualised value of all recurring membership and subscription revenue, calculated by multiplying MRR by 12. ARR gives gym owners a long-range view of financial trajectory and is the primary metric used when valuing a gym business for sale or investment.
Australian Benchmark
A gym with $80,000 MRR has $960,000 ARR. Gym businesses in Australia are typically valued at 1.5–3.5x ARR depending on growth rate, churn, and market position. Multi-site operators targeting $2M+ ARR attract institutional buyer interest.
Why It Matters
ARR is the number buyers and lenders care about. Growing ARR year-over-year is the clearest signal that your gym business is increasing in value.
Forecast your ARR →
3Average Revenue Per Member (ARPM)
Average Revenue Per Member is the average monthly income generated from each active member across all revenue streams including memberships, personal training, retail, and ancillary services. ARPM reveals how effectively a gym monetises its member base beyond the base membership fee.
Formula
ARPM = Total Monthly Revenue ÷ Total Active Members
Australian Benchmark
Boutique/PremiumMid-MarketBudget/24-7
Why It Matters
Two gyms with 1,000 members can have wildly different revenue if one has $65 ARPM and another has $140 ARPM. Increasing ARPM through PT, retail, and ancillary services is often easier than acquiring new members.
Model your ARPM scenarios →
4Revenue Per Square Foot / Square Metre
Revenue Per Square Foot (or per square metre) is total monthly or annual revenue divided by the gym's usable floor area. This metric benchmarks spatial efficiency and helps gym owners evaluate whether their floor plan and equipment layout are generating adequate returns relative to rent costs.
Formula
Revenue/m² = Total Monthly Revenue ÷ Usable Floor Area (m²)
Australian Benchmark
$30–50 per m² per month for well-performing gyms. Boutique studios with small footprints and high pricing can exceed $80/m². Large 24/7 facilities may sit at $15–25/m² but compensate with lower rent per square metre.
Why It Matters
Rent is typically 8–15% of gym revenue. Revenue per square metre tells you whether your space is working hard enough. Low numbers signal underutilised areas that could be repurposed for higher-value uses like PT zones or functional training areas.
Track spatial efficiency in Pulse →
5Gross Profit Margin
Gross Profit Margin is the percentage of revenue remaining after subtracting direct costs such as rent, equipment leases, utilities, and staff wages. Gross profit margin shows how much of every dollar collected is available for marketing, reinvestment, debt repayment, and owner profit.
Formula
Gross Margin = ((Revenue − Direct Costs) ÷ Revenue) × 100
Australian Benchmark
Boutique/PremiumMid-MarketBudget/24-7
Why It Matters
Gross margin determines your operating leverage. A gym at 35% gross margin has almost no room for marketing or growth. A gym at 60% can invest aggressively in acquisition while still generating healthy owner returns.
Calculate your gross margin →
6Net Profit Margin
Net Profit Margin is the percentage of total revenue remaining after all expenses including rent, wages, marketing, insurance, equipment, software, and taxes have been deducted. Net profit margin is the ultimate measure of whether a gym is financially sustainable and rewarding its owner.
Formula
Net Margin = (Net Profit ÷ Total Revenue) × 100
Australian Benchmark
A well-run gym targets 10–15% net profit margin. Top performers achieve 18–22%. Below 8% leaves minimal buffer for unexpected costs. Many new gyms operate at 0–5% net margin in their first 18 months while building membership base.
Why It Matters
Net profit margin is the bottom line. A gym generating $1.2M revenue at 5% net margin keeps $60K. The same gym at 15% keeps $180K. Small margin improvements translate into massive cash flow differences.
Benchmark your net margin →
7Average Order Value (AOV)
Average Order Value is the average dollar amount spent per transaction in a gym's pro shop, retail area, juice bar, or online store. AOV helps gym owners evaluate merchandising strategy, pricing effectiveness, and upsell success for non-membership revenue streams.
Formula
AOV = Total Retail/Pro Shop Revenue ÷ Number of Transactions
Australian Benchmark
$25–45 for supplements and apparel. $8–15 for juice bar/cafe. $80–150 for equipment-focused retail. Gyms with bundled product packages (e.g., starter kit with shaker, towel, supplements) typically achieve 30–50% higher AOV.
Why It Matters
Retail revenue has 50–70% gross margins when done right. Increasing AOV by even $5 across hundreds of monthly transactions adds meaningful secondary revenue without acquiring a single new member.
Track retail sales in Pulse →
8Secondary Revenue Per Member
Secondary Revenue Per Member is the average non-membership income generated per member per month from sources like personal training, nutrition coaching, retail sales, supplement bars, vending machines, and facility hire. This metric measures how well a gym diversifies beyond base membership fees.
Formula
Secondary Rev/Member = (Total Revenue − Membership Revenue) ÷ Total Active Members
Australian Benchmark
$15–40 per member per month for well-diversified gyms. Budget gyms often sit below $10. Premium facilities with strong PT culture and retail achieve $40–60+. The Australian average is approximately $18–22.
Why It Matters
Gyms relying solely on membership fees are fragile. A 1,000-member gym increasing secondary revenue by $10/member/month adds $120,000 annual revenue with zero acquisition cost.
Analyse revenue mix in Pulse →