Gym for Sale in North Carolina
Nationally, similar businesses sell at 1.5x to 3.0x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.
Market Snapshot
National transaction benchmarks for gym businesses.
Median revenue$269k
Median cash flow$68k
Median sale price$135k
Multiple range1.5x - 3.0x
Median revenue$1.18m
Median cash flow$307k
Median sale price$748k
Multiple range2.3x - 3.0x
Directional only. Small sample may not represent the broader market.
A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.
What to know about buying Gyms Fitness Centers
Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating gyms fitness centers acquisitions.
Membership Quality Over Membership Count
The most common mistake in gym and fitness center due diligence is focusing on total registered memberships rather than active, paying members with current billing relationships. Many gyms carry hundreds or thousands of "members" on paper who have long since stopped attending; some with contracts that have lapsed, others who were never properly deactivated. Request a verified active membership report: members who have charged successfully in the last 30 days, separated from those on freeze, those in cancellation notice periods, and those who are technically contracted but not billing. The delta between registered members and active paying members determines actual monthly recurring revenue and that delta can be substantial. Active, billing membership is the asset you are buying; everything else is a number.
How Gyms Are Valued
Gym and fitness center valuations nationally range from 1.5x to 3.5x SDE depending on business type, membership model, location quality, and equipment condition. Smaller owner-operated gyms with high owner dependency and aging equipment trade at the low end; established multi-location or boutique concepts with strong brand identity, high member retention, and diversified revenue (personal training, group classes, retail, corporate wellness) command the upper range. Larger operations with strong margins and diversified revenue reach the upper end of the range; owner-dependent gyms with aging equipment and high churn typically transact at the lower end. Tupelo's own research on gym valuation confirms member retention rates and lifetime value as among the highest-impact valuation levers in the category.
Member Churn and the Retention Problem
Gyms have among the highest customer churn rates of any subscription business. Industry averages suggest 30–50% of gym members cancel or stop coming within 12 months of joining. The businesses that command premium multiples are those that have solved this problem through programming, community, coaching quality, and onboarding design. Ask for member lifetime value data, monthly churn rate, and the percentage of membership revenue that is month-to-month versus contract-based. Contract-based memberships with cancellation fees provide more durable revenue than month-to-month arrangements, but in many states gym membership contracts are heavily regulated and cancellation protections favor consumers. Be sure to understand your state's specific requirements before valuing the contract book.
Equipment: Owned vs. Leased, and Replacement Cost
Gym equipment like cardio machines, strength equipment, free weights, specialty rigs, amongst others is expensive, depreciates quickly, and is essential to member experience. Before closing, obtain a complete equipment inventory distinguishing between owned and leased equipment. Leased equipment carries monthly payment obligations that become your responsibility at closing and may have early termination penalties that affect the economics of the acquisition. Owned equipment should be assessed for age and condition. A cardio floor full of machines averaging 6–8 years old with deferred maintenance represents meaningful near-term CapEx. Budget 3–5% of annual revenue annually for equipment maintenance and replacement in a well-run fitness operation. Buyers who underestimate this are consistently surprised in year two and three of ownership.
Trainer Retention and the Boutique Model
In boutique fitness facilities (such as CrossFit boxes, yoga studios, cycling studios, and functional training gyms), personal trainers and class instructors are frequently the primary reason members stay Instructor departure post-acquisition is one of the most common causes of boutique gym member attrition, and it can be rapid. Before closing, identify which instructors are most member-critical and what their current compensation and contractual status is. Non-compete and non-solicitation agreements with key instructors are standard in well-structured boutique gym transactions. In franchised fitness concepts, franchise transfer fees, training requirements, and territory restrictions add additional deal complexity that requires review of the franchise disclosure document (FDD) and direct communication with the franchisor.
The Lease and the Location Are Inseparable
Gyms require large, specific commercial spaces. Floor loading capacity, ceiling height, ventilation, parking ratios, and electrical capacity are all operational requirements that limit relocation options. A gym whose lease expires in 18 months without clear renewal rights faces existential risk regardless of how strong the membership base is. Review the full lease document: remaining term, renewal options, rent step-ups, permitted use language (some commercial leases restrict fitness or specific gym formats), and assignability conditions. Confirm the space meets all current and anticipated operational needs and that the landlord relationship is stable. Gym relocations typically cost $100,000–$500,000 depending on fit-out requirements and should be treated as a deal-ending risk rather than a manageable variable.