Google Ads for gyms turns local search traffic into trial bookings and membership signups. This guide covers the January resolution spike, trial vs. membership campaigns, geo-radius targeting, call ads, YouTube for fitness, competitor conquesting, and how to allocate budget across 12 months of seasonal demand.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 12 min
“The real money in January isn’t just acquiring members. It’s keeping them past February. Every gym owner pours budget into January acquisition and then wonders why March revenue looks the same as last year. Build the retention campaign before you build the acquisition campaign.” Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Trial campaign: A Google Ads campaign specifically designed to convert searchers into first-time gym visitors through a low-commitment offer like a free day pass, 7-day trial, or discounted first month.
| Month | Budget % | Strategy focus |
|---|---|---|
| January | 15-18% | New Year’s resolution campaigns, trial offers, maximum acquisition |
| February | 10-12% | Retention remarketing, Valentine’s couples deals |
| March-April | 8-9% each | Spring fitness push, “summer body” messaging |
| May-June | 8-9% each | Summer prep, outdoor fitness classes promotion |
| July-August | 5-6% each | Low season. Reduce spend, test new campaigns |
| September | 9-10% | Back-to-school/back-to-routine, second enrollment spike |
| October-November | 7-8% each | Pre-holiday campaigns, annual membership deals |
| December | 5-6% | Gift memberships, January campaign prep |
| Metric | 2026 Benchmark | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CPC | $5.00 | Varies by city; NYC/LA run $7-10, smaller markets $2-4 |
| CTR | 7.2% | Below 5% signals ad copy or keyword problems |
| Conversion rate | 6.8% | Well-optimized campaigns hit 8-10% |
| Cost per lead | $62.80 | Compare against member lifetime value |
| ROAS | 4.5x | Minimum viable for most gym economics |
Geo-targeting, call campaigns, and lead generation for any business with a physical location. Read Guide →
Awareness, radius targeting, and lead gen for local businesses on Meta platforms. Read Guide →
47-point checklist to find waste and missed opportunities in any Google Ads account. Get Checklist →
Start with $1,250 to $3,150 per month to generate 20-50 leads, which is the minimum volume needed for meaningful optimization (PPC Chief, 2026). Scale from there based on cost-per-membership and lifetime value. During January, increase budget by 50-100% to capture New Year’s resolution demand.
The 2026 health and fitness benchmark is $62.80 per lead (PPC Chief, 2026). This varies significantly by location and competition. Urban gyms in competitive markets may see $80-120 CPL, while suburban and rural gyms often achieve $30-50 CPL.
Both, but they serve different functions. Google Ads captures people actively searching for a gym (high intent, lower volume). Facebook Ads builds awareness and targets people based on fitness interests who haven’t started searching yet (lower intent, higher volume). Most gyms should allocate 60% to Google for direct lead capture and 40% to Facebook for awareness and retargeting.
The 2026 health and fitness benchmark conversion rate is 6.8% (PPC Chief, 2026). Well-optimized campaigns can exceed this by 20-40%, reaching 8-10%. The conversion action should be a trial booking or phone call, not a form fill that requires follow-up.
Start preparing in December. Increase budgets by 50-100% for January. Launch dedicated New Year’s resolution campaigns with time-limited trial offers. Bid aggressively on “gym near me” and “fitness class” keywords. Then in mid-January, launch a second wave targeting people whose resolutions are fading with “it’s not too late” messaging. Build retention campaigns to keep January signups past February, since 50% typically drop off.
We build PPC campaigns for fitness businesses that generate trial bookings and membership signups, not just clicks. Seasonal strategy, geo-targeting, and call campaigns included. Get a PPC Audit →