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Step-by-Step Guide · Gym & Personal Training · Canada

How to Start a Gym or Personal Training Business in Canada

Everything you need to start a gym or personal training business in Canada: certifications, business model selection, incorporation, municipal permits, equipment, lease negotiation, insurance, HST registration, client management, bookkeeping, tax planning and scaling from solo trainer to multi-location facility.

The Complete Guide to Starting a Gym or Personal Training Business in Canada

We work with personal trainers, gym owners, boutique fitness studio operators and online coaching businesses across Ontario. The fitness industry has one of the highest failure rates in the first 3 years, and the reason is almost never the training itself. It is the business structure, the lease terms, the cash flow management and the tax strategy. A personal trainer earning $120,000 who operates as a sole proprietor pays $15,000 to $20,000 more in tax per year than one who incorporates. A gym owner who signs a 10-year lease without a personal guarantee cap, a demolition clause or a rent escalation cap is one bad quarter away from losing everything.

This guide covers every step from certification to scaling, with the financial decisions explained at each stage so you keep more of what you earn.

Startup Costs by Business Model

Business ModelTotal Startup CostMonthly OverheadBest For
Mobile personal trainer (in-home or outdoor)$2,000 to $8,000$200 to $600New trainers building a client base. Lowest risk. No lease. Equipment fits in a car. Income is 100% profit after gas and insurance.
Online coaching / virtual training$1,000 to $5,000$100 to $400Trainers who want location independence. Software costs (Trainerize, TrueCoach), website, video equipment. Scalable beyond 1-on-1 hours.
Boutique studio (500 to 1,500 sq ft)$30,000 to $80,000$3,000 to $8,000Semi-private and small group training. Yoga, Pilates, CrossFit, boxing, cycling. Limited equipment, focused clientele, premium pricing.
Full gym facility (3,000 to 10,000 sq ft)$100,000 to $500,000$10,000 to $35,000Full-service gym with cardio, strength, free weights, group classes. Highest revenue potential but highest fixed costs. Requires significant capital.

Start Small, Scale With Revenue: The most successful gym owners we work with started as mobile or online trainers, built a client base, then opened a boutique studio, then expanded to a full facility. Each step was funded by the revenue from the previous stage. The trainers who signed a $300,000 gym lease with no existing client base are the ones who closed within 18 months. Build the revenue first, then build the space.

10 Steps to Start Your Gym or Personal Training Business

1

Get Certified

Canadian fitness certifications are not legally required in most provinces, but they are practically required: gyms will not hire you, insurance providers will not cover you and clients will not trust you without one. Choose a nationally recognized certification.

CertificationCostTimelineRecognition
canfitpro Personal Training Specialist (PTS)$700 to $1,2002 to 6 monthsMost widely recognized in Canada. Accepted at all major gym chains. Includes theory, practical and exam.
CSEP Certified Personal Trainer (CSEP-CPT)$800 to $1,5003 to 8 monthsCanadian Society for Exercise Physiology. Science-based. Highly respected. Requires kinesiology or related background preferred.
NSCA Certified Personal Trainer (NSCA-CPT)$500 to $800 USDSelf-paced (exam when ready)US-based but internationally recognized. Strong for strength and conditioning. Accepted in Canada.
ACE Certified Personal Trainer$500 to $900 USDSelf-paced (3 to 6 months typical)US-based, widely recognized in Canada. Good for general fitness and lifestyle clients.
Specialized certifications (yoga, Pilates, CrossFit)$1,000 to $5,0001 to 12 monthsRequired for teaching specific modalities. CrossFit Level 1 ($1,000), Yoga Teacher Training 200-hour ($2,000 to $5,000), Pilates Mat ($1,500 to $3,000).
2

Choose Your Business Model

Your business model determines your startup cost, risk level, revenue ceiling and daily lifestyle. The four models are: mobile personal training (in-home or outdoor), online coaching, boutique studio and full gym facility. Most successful gym owners start with mobile or online, build cash flow and a client base, then graduate to a physical location. Do not sign a lease until you have at least 30 to 40 committed clients or equivalent recurring revenue to cover the fixed overhead from day one.

3

Incorporate Your Business

We recommend incorporating once your annual revenue exceeds $60,000 to $80,000. At that level, the corporate tax rate (12.2% on the first $500,000 via the SBD) produces meaningful savings compared to personal tax rates (up to 53.53% in Ontario). If you are opening a gym or studio with a lease and equipment, incorporate before signing the lease so the corporation (not you personally) is the tenant and equipment purchaser. This provides liability protection: if the gym fails, your personal assets are separate from the business debts.

Revenue LevelSole Proprietor Tax (Ontario)Corporation Tax (12.2%)Annual Savings
$60,000$11,400$7,320$4,080
$100,000$24,200$12,200$12,000
$150,000$42,300$18,300$24,000
$250,000$82,500$30,500$52,000
4

Get Your Permits, Zoning and Insurance

If you are opening a physical location (studio or gym), verify the zoning permits with your municipality before signing the lease. Fitness facilities require commercial zoning, may need a change-of-use permit, and must comply with building code requirements for occupancy, washrooms, accessibility, ventilation and fire safety. Insurance is non-negotiable regardless of your business model.

Insurance TypeCost (Annual)What It Covers
Professional liability (errors and omissions)$300 to $800Claims arising from your training advice or program design. A client injures themselves following your program and sues.
General commercial liability$800 to $2,400Slip-and-fall, property damage, third-party injury in your facility. Required by most landlords and gym chains for independent trainers.
Property and equipment insurance$600 to $2,000Covers your equipment (gym machines, free weights, sound system) against theft, fire and damage. Required for studios and gyms.
Business interruption insurance$400 to $1,200Covers lost revenue if you cannot operate due to fire, flood or other insured event. Critical for gyms with high fixed overhead.
Workers' compensation (WSIB Ontario)Varies by payrollRequired if you hire employees. Covers workplace injuries. Fitness industry WSIB rate approximately $1.50 to $2.50 per $100 of payroll.
5

Secure Your Location and Negotiate the Lease

For boutique studios and gyms, the lease is your largest fixed cost and your biggest risk. Negotiate these provisions before signing: tenant improvement allowance ($10 to $30/sq ft for fitness), rent-free period (2 to 4 months for build-out), personal guarantee cap (limit to 6 to 12 months of rent, not the full lease term), rent escalation cap (2% to 3% annual, not market-rate adjustments), early termination clause (if revenue drops below a threshold), demolition clause protection and renewal option at a predetermined rate. A 5-year lease at $25/sq ft on 2,000 sq ft is a $250,000 commitment. Negotiate every dollar.

6

Purchase Equipment

Equipment needs depend on your model. A mobile trainer needs $2,000 to $5,000 in portable equipment (resistance bands, kettlebells, TRX, battle ropes, agility ladder, yoga mats). A boutique studio needs $15,000 to $50,000 (specialized equipment for your modality). A full gym needs $60,000 to $300,000+ (cardio machines, strength machines, free weights, flooring, mirrors, sound system). Buy used equipment for the first 1 to 2 years: commercial-grade used equipment costs 40% to 60% less than new and lasts years. Claim Immediate Expensing (CCPC up to $1.5 million) on all equipment purchases in the year of acquisition for a full first-year tax deduction.

Equipment CategoryNew CostUsed Cost (Typical)CCA Treatment
Cardio machines (treadmill, bike, rower, elliptical)$3,000 to $10,000 each$1,200 to $5,000 eachClass 8 (20%) or Immediate Expensing
Strength machines (cable, smith, leg press)$2,000 to $8,000 each$800 to $4,000 eachClass 8 or Immediate Expensing
Free weights (dumbbells, barbells, plates, racks)$5,000 to $25,000 (set)$2,000 to $12,000Class 8 or Immediate Expensing
Rubber flooring$3 to $8/sq ft$1 to $4/sq ftLeasehold improvement (Class 13) or Immediate Expensing
Sound system and AV$1,000 to $5,000$400 to $2,000Class 8 or Immediate Expensing
7

Register for HST

Fitness services (personal training, group classes, gym memberships) are fully taxable for HST purposes at 13% in Ontario. You must register once revenue exceeds $30,000 in a 12-month period. We recommend voluntary registration from the start if you are opening a studio or gym so you can claim ITCs on all startup expenses: equipment, leasehold improvements, insurance, marketing, software and professional fees. On $50,000 in startup costs, the recoverable HST is $6,500. Without registration, that HST is a permanent cost.

HST Exception: Memberships at Certain Non-Profit Fitness Facilities. If you operate as a non-profit organization, certain fitness memberships may be HST-exempt. For-profit gyms, studios and personal training businesses charge HST on all services. Most readers of this guide are starting for-profit businesses, so HST applies to everything you charge.

8

Set Up Client Management and Payment Processing

Choose a platform that handles scheduling, client tracking, payment processing and membership management. For personal trainers: Trainerize ($5 to $60/month, includes workout delivery and progress tracking), TrueCoach ($19 to $89/month), or My PT Hub ($30 to $60/month). For gyms and studios: Mindbody ($139 to $699/month), GloFox ($100 to $300/month), Gymdesk ($60 to $175/month) or WellnessLiving ($89 to $349/month). Payment processing: Stripe (2.9% + $0.30/transaction) or Square (2.65% per tap). Collect payments by pre-authorized debit or credit card. Do not invoice clients manually and wait for payment. Automate collection from day one.

9

Set Up Bookkeeping and Tax Compliance

Fitness businesses have unique bookkeeping needs: membership revenue is recurring (monthly or annual), package revenue is prepaid (recognized as you deliver sessions), drop-in revenue is per-visit, personal training income may be paid per session or as a monthly retainer and equipment purchases require CCA tracking. Your books must separate revenue by type, track prepaid packages as a liability until delivered and reconcile payment processor deposits against actual sessions completed.

Setup ItemWhat We Do
QBO configurationQuickBooks Online set up with fitness-specific chart of accounts: membership revenue, personal training revenue, group class revenue, package sales (deferred revenue), equipment CCA, lease costs, marketing, payroll and contractor payments.
Revenue recognitionMemberships recognized monthly. Prepaid packages recognized as sessions are delivered (deferred revenue tracked as a liability). Drop-in revenue recognized on the visit date. Ensures your P&L reflects actual earned revenue, not cash collected.
Payment processor reconciliationStripe, Square, Mindbody or GloFox deposits reconciled against actual bookings. Processing fees tracked separately. Chargebacks and refunds documented. Net deposits matched to bank.
HST filingHST return prepared and filed. ITCs claimed on all eligible expenses: equipment, lease, insurance, marketing, software, professional fees. Quick Method vs. Regular Method calculated annually.
Payroll (if hiring trainers as employees)CPP, EI and income tax deductions. T4 preparation. ROE filing. WSIB remittances. Contractor vs. employee classification reviewed for every trainer to avoid CRA reclassification risk.
T2 corporate tax returnFiled FREE for every bookkeeping client. Financial statements, T2, GIFI, all CRA schedules, e-filing and CRA audit support included.

Fitness Business Bookkeeping from $150/Month. T2 Filed FREE.

Membership tracking, session revenue, HST, payroll, monthly financials. Set up correctly from day one.

Fitness Business Services
10

Scale Your Fitness Business

Scaling paths include: hiring trainers (as employees or independent contractors), adding group classes (higher revenue per hour than 1-on-1), launching online coaching (no physical capacity limit), opening additional locations (with SBD allocation reviewed for associated corporations) and creating digital products (workout programs, nutrition plans, membership apps). The critical financial decision when scaling: are you hiring trainers as employees or contractors? Employees require payroll deductions, WSIB, T4s and vacation pay. Contractors invoice you, provide their own insurance and control their own schedule. CRA audits fitness businesses for worker misclassification frequently. We structure the relationship correctly from the start. Learn more about our fitness business services.

Fitness Business Startup: Real Client Results

Mobile Personal Trainer to Studio Owner (Toronto)

A mobile personal trainer earning $96,000 as a sole proprietor incorporated through us, registered for HST voluntarily, claimed $1,430 in ITCs on portable equipment and vehicle expenses and implemented a salary/dividend split that created $21,600 in RRSP room. After 14 months of building a client base of 38 recurring clients, the trainer signed a lease on a 900 sq ft boutique studio. We structured the lease through the corporation, claimed Immediate Expensing on $42,000 in equipment and transitioned the bookkeeping from mobile to studio model.

$96,000 to $168,000 revenue in 14 months + $42,000 first-year equipment deduction

CrossFit Box Startup (Mississauga)

A CrossFit Level 2 coach opened a 3,200 sq ft box in Mississauga. Total startup: $142,000 (leasehold improvements $68,000, equipment $48,000, lease deposits $12,000, marketing $8,000, working capital $6,000). We incorporated the business before the lease was signed, registered for HST, claimed $7,800 in ITCs on startup costs, set up QBO with membership revenue tracking (160 members at $185/month) and delivered monthly financials from month one. Break-even reached at month 5 with 92 members.

Break-even at month 5 (92 members) + $7,800 startup ITCs recovered

Online Coaching Business (Virtual, Ontario)

A certified trainer launched an online coaching business with $3,200 in startup costs (website, Trainerize subscription, video equipment, marketing). We incorporated at $273, registered for HST and set up bookkeeping for digital service revenue. The trainer scaled from 12 to 85 online clients in 10 months using Instagram and YouTube content marketing. Revenue: $127,000 in the first full year. Overhead: under $800/month. Net margin: 82%. We implemented a 55/45 salary-dividend split and established a holdco plan for when retained earnings reached $200,000.

$127,000 revenue on $3,200 startup + 82% net margin

Full Gym Facility (Brampton)

A gym owner opened a 6,500 sq ft facility in Brampton. Total investment: $380,000 (financed 70% through a commercial loan). We incorporated, negotiated the lease terms (2-month rent-free, personal guarantee capped at 12 months, 2.5% annual escalation cap), claimed Immediate Expensing on $165,000 in equipment, set up payroll for 6 staff and 4 contract trainers and delivered monthly P&L with membership revenue, personal training revenue, group class revenue and supplement sales tracked separately. The gym reached 420 members by month 8.

420 members by month 8 + $165,000 first-year equipment deduction

10 Most Common Mistakes New Gym and Personal Training Business Owners Make

#MistakeConsequenceHow to Avoid It
1Signing a gym lease before building a client base$5,000 to $25,000/month in fixed costs with zero revenue. Most gyms that fail do so because they signed the lease first and tried to fill the space after. Cash runs out in 6 to 12 months.Build 30 to 40 committed clients or equivalent recurring revenue before signing a lease. Start mobile or online first.
2Not incorporating before signing the leasePersonal liability for the full lease term. A 5-year lease at $10,000/month is a $600,000 personal obligation. If the gym fails, the landlord comes after your personal assets.Incorporate before signing the lease. The corporation is the tenant. Negotiate a personal guarantee cap of 6 to 12 months.
3Not registering for HST at startupHST paid on equipment, leasehold improvements, marketing and professional fees is not recoverable. On $50,000 in startup costs, the lost ITCs are $6,500.Register for HST before your first purchase. Claim ITCs on every startup expense.
4Misclassifying trainers as independent contractorsCRA reclassifies them as employees. You owe CPP, EI, income tax withholdings, employer contributions and penalties for the entire period. 3 trainers over 2 years: $40,000 to $80,000 reassessment.Review the CRA two-factor test for every trainer. If you set their schedule, require them to be on-site and they work exclusively for you, they are likely employees. Structure correctly from day one.
5Not tracking prepaid package revenue correctly10 clients buy 20-session packages ($2,000 each). You record $20,000 in revenue immediately. But only 4 sessions have been delivered. Real earned revenue: $4,000. The remaining $16,000 is a liability. Your P&L is wrong. Your tax return is wrong.Record prepaid packages as deferred revenue (liability). Recognize revenue as sessions are delivered. We track this monthly.
6Mixing personal and business bank accountsCRA audit risk. Cannot prove business expenses. Bookkeeping costs double.Dedicated corporate bank account from day one. Every business expense through this account only.
7Not negotiating the lease properlyNo TI allowance. No rent-free period for build-out. Full personal guarantee for the entire lease term. No early termination clause. No demolition protection.Hire a commercial lease lawyer. Negotiate every provision. The landlord expects negotiation. Walking in and signing the standard lease is the most expensive mistake.
8Buying all new equipment at startup$200,000 in new equipment when $100,000 in commercial-grade used equipment would serve the same purpose. The extra $100,000 depletes working capital and increases debt load.Buy used commercial-grade equipment for the first 1 to 2 years. Upgrade to new as revenue justifies it. Used equipment costs 40% to 60% less and lasts years.
9No working capital reserveMembership revenue takes 2 to 4 months to build. Fixed costs (rent, payroll, insurance, loan payments) start immediately. Without 3 to 6 months of working capital, the gym runs out of cash before reaching break-even.Budget 3 to 6 months of total overhead as working capital before opening. Arrange a line of credit as backup.
10Not having a CPA who understands fitness businessesPrepaid revenue not tracked. Trainer classification not reviewed. Equipment CCA missed. HST not optimized. Membership metrics not reported. Tax planning is generic.Work with a CPA who serves fitness businesses, tracks prepaid revenue correctly, structures trainer agreements and builds a fitness-specific tax plan. Fitness Business Services →

Frequently Asked Questions: Starting a Gym or Personal Training Business

How much does it cost to start a personal training business?
Mobile personal trainer: $2,000 to $8,000. Online coaching: $1,000 to $5,000. Boutique studio: $30,000 to $80,000. Full gym: $100,000 to $500,000. The lowest-risk path is starting mobile or online, building a client base and scaling to a physical location once recurring revenue covers the fixed overhead.
Do I need to incorporate my fitness business?
Once revenue exceeds $60,000 to $80,000, the tax savings justify incorporation. At $100,000, you save approximately $12,000/year. At $150,000, you save $24,000/year. If opening a gym with a lease, incorporate before signing so the corporation is the tenant and your personal assets are protected.
Do personal trainers charge HST?
Yes. Personal training, group classes and gym memberships are fully taxable at 13% in Ontario. You must register for HST once revenue exceeds $30,000. Register voluntarily from the start to claim ITCs on startup expenses. Fitness Business Services →
Should I hire trainers as employees or independent contractors?
Depends on the relationship. If you set their schedule, require them to be on-site, provide their equipment and they work exclusively for you, CRA will classify them as employees regardless of what the contract says. Employees require payroll deductions, WSIB, T4s and vacation pay. Independent contractors set their own schedule, have their own clients and provide their own insurance. We review the classification for every trainer to avoid CRA reclassification.
How do I track prepaid training packages?
Prepaid packages are recorded as deferred revenue (a liability on the balance sheet). Revenue is recognized only as sessions are delivered. A client buys a 20-session package for $2,000: you record a $2,000 liability. Each session delivered recognizes $100 in revenue and reduces the liability by $100. This is the correct accounting treatment and prevents overstating income on your tax return.
What certifications do I need?
canfitpro PTS ($700 to $1,200) is the most widely recognized in Canada. CSEP-CPT is the most science-based. NSCA-CPT and ACE are US-based but accepted in Canada. Specialized modalities require additional certifications: CrossFit Level 1, Yoga 200-hour, Pilates Mat. Insurance providers typically require at least one recognized certification.
How long until a new gym breaks even?
Boutique studios typically break even in 3 to 6 months with 40 to 80 members depending on pricing. Full gyms take 6 to 12 months with 200 to 400 members. Break-even depends on rent, payroll, loan payments and membership pricing. Budget 3 to 6 months of total overhead as working capital.
Can I claim Immediate Expensing on gym equipment?
Yes. CCPCs can claim Immediate Expensing on up to $1.5 million in eligible property per year. A $165,000 equipment purchase can be fully deducted in the year of purchase rather than depreciated at 20% over many years. This creates a significant tax reduction in the first year of operation.
What gym management software should I use?
Personal trainers: Trainerize, TrueCoach or My PT Hub ($5 to $89/month). Gyms and studios: Mindbody, GloFox, Gymdesk or WellnessLiving ($60 to $699/month). Choose based on your model: 1-on-1 trainers need workout delivery tools, studios and gyms need scheduling, membership management and payment processing.
How much does fitness business bookkeeping cost?
From $150/month. Includes membership revenue tracking, prepaid package management, payment processor reconciliation, HST filing, payroll (if applicable), monthly financial statements and T2 filed FREE. CRA audit support included for bookkeeping clients. Know Your Exact Fee →

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