Become a fitness provider

You are a fitness supplier if you are in the business of supplying fitness services.

You can be:

  • the owner of a fitness centre who receives income other than rent to provide fitness services
  • a fitness centre franchisee
  • a manager of a fitness centre’s day-to-day operations
  • a personal trainer.

You are not a fitness supplier if you:

  • do office work and get paid to work in a fitness centre’s office
  • get paid to teach aerobics classes at a fitness centre.

Fitness services

A fitness service can be:

  • an exercise consultation
  • a supervised or unsupervised individual fitness program
  • a group exercise program
  • fitness equipment used by clients at a fitness centre.

A fitness service is not:

  • a service supplied by:
    • a doctor
    • a registered physiotherapist
    • a sports club
    • a school, college or university as part of its curriculum
  • a spa bath, sauna, swimming pool or similar facility with no other fitness service
  • a hotel’s fitness equipment for patron use with no other fitness service
  • a fitness centre service for medical rehabilitation only
  • a service for an unsupervised outdoor activity
  • court hire or other facility hire for playing sport.

Code of practice

The fitness industry is regulated by a code of practice.

The code of practice:

  • maintains appropriate standards of trading in the fitness industry
  • promotes client confidence and safety in the fitness industry
  • ensures that fitness suppliers operate ethically, professionally and in clients’ best interests
  • details the rights and obligations of fitness service suppliers and their clients.

The code provides for:

  • compulsory contracts signed by you and the client
  • a 48-hour cooling-off period for new agreements
  • full fee disclosure in all membership agreements
  • a limit on up-front fees you can charge a client
  • a ban on new fitness centres collecting fees before they open for business
  • a client’s right to cancel an agreement.