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Powerlifting Gym Revenue From Apparel: A Margin Math Walkthrough

March 26, 2026 7 min read By Andre Rollins
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Table of Contents
  1. The Baseline: Membership Apparel Purchases
  2. Event-Driven Apparel Spikes
  3. Revenue Math by Gym Size
  4. Why the No-Inventory Model Multiplies Margin
  5. The Stretch Path: Apparel Plus Affiliate Income
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

Powerlifting gyms run on tight margins. Member dues cover rent and equipment maintenance; everything else is the operator gaming the gross margin. Apparel is one of the cleanest add-on revenue streams because the no-inventory print model has zero dead-stock risk. Here is the real margin math at different gym sizes.

The Baseline: Membership Apparel Purchases

The steady baseline is members buying apparel for themselves. Most powerlifting gyms see 50-70 percent of active members buy at least one apparel piece per year. The annual purchase rate per buying member is 1.5-2.5 pieces (a tee plus a hoodie, or a tank plus a hat).

For a 50-member gym with 60 percent buying rate, 30 buyers × 2 pieces × $15 average margin = $900 in annual membership apparel margin. That is the floor.

Event-Driven Apparel Spikes

Total event-driven apparel margin for a 50-member gym: $1,400-$3,000 per year on top of the steady baseline.

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Revenue Math by Gym Size

Gym sizeBaseline marginEvent-driven marginTotal annual
30 members$540$800-$1,500$1,340-$2,040
50 members$900$1,400-$3,000$2,300-$3,900
100 members$1,800$3,000-$6,000$4,800-$7,800
200 members (multi-affiliate)$3,600$6,000-$12,000$9,600-$15,600
500 members (lifting collective)$9,000$15,000-$30,000$24,000-$39,000

The numbers scale linearly with member count but multiply faster when event programming is robust. A 100-member gym running 4 local meets, a state qualifier event, a holiday drop, and a founding anniversary celebration can outperform a 200-member gym that only runs one meet per year.

Why the No-Inventory Model Multiplies Margin

Traditional wholesale apparel buys lock the gym into $3K-$8K in opening inventory. 20-30 percent of that becomes dead stock at clearance, eating realized margin. The no-inventory model eliminates the loss entirely. Every dollar of retail revenue minus the base price flows to gym margin.

The economics also support trying new designs without commitment. A new tee design, a one-time event hoodie, a niche cut (womens leggings, junior tee) — all are testable single-piece. If the design moves, the gym leans in. If it does not, no inventory burned.

The Stretch Path: Apparel Plus Affiliate Income

Beyond direct apparel revenue, the gyms head coach can earn affiliate commission by referring other gym owners to the same platform. The Bear Grips affiliate program pays 10 percent recurring on referred subscriptions plus $1 per unit sold by referred gyms. Five referrals at typical volume add $300-$700/month in passive affiliate income.

For an owner managing a powerlifting gym with multiple other coach friends across the region, this stack (direct apparel margin + event programming + affiliate referrals) often clears $8K-$15K per year on top of base gym revenue.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much can a powerlifting gym make from apparel?

A 50-member gym typically clears $2,000-$5,000/year in apparel margin. Larger gyms (100+ members) clear $5K-$10K. Lifting collectives and multi-affiliate clubs (200+ members) can reach $15K-$25K when running active event-driven apparel programming.

What is the biggest cost most gyms miss?

Dead stock from wholesale buys. 20-30 percent of a wholesale apparel order typically clears at markdown, eroding realized margin. A no-inventory print-on-demand model eliminates the dead-stock loss entirely.

How long until a new powerlifting gym sees apparel revenue?

Most gyms see meaningful apparel orders within 60-90 days of launching the merch shop, especially if the gym is actively running meets and posting on social. The first state meet or major event accelerates the order volume substantially.

Can apparel be a primary revenue stream for a gym?

No. Membership dues remain the primary stream. Apparel is a high-margin supplemental stream that typically represents 5-15 percent of total gym revenue. The value is the high margin per dollar and the brand-building effect, not the absolute revenue.

Andre Rollins
Andre RollinsBoutique Gym Owner

Andre owns a boutique strength facility and personal training studio in Atlanta. He has been a personal trainer for 15 years and writes about gym branding, member retention, and how independent owners can compete with chain studios.

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