Gym Launch changed the fitness industry. That's not hyperbole , Alex Hormozi's system gave independent gym owners a repeatable playbook for filling their gyms with paying members. Thousands of gyms used it. Many scaled past $100k/month.
But it's 2026 now. Hormozi stepped away years ago. The price tag is still steep. And gym owners are asking a fair question:
Is Gym Launch still worth it?
This isn't a hit piece. We respect what Hormozi built. But you deserve an honest breakdown , the costs, the reality of execution, what's changed, and whether there's a better path forward for your gym today.
## What Gym Launch Actually Costs in 2026
Let's start with the number everyone wants to know.
Gym Launch pricing has shifted over the years, but here's the reality for most gym owners entering the program:
| Cost Component | Estimated Range |
|---|---|
| Initial enrollment / setup fee | $6,000 - $16,000 |
| Monthly licensing + coaching | $1,000 - $2,000/month |
| Annual total (Year 1) | $18,000 - $40,000 |
| Ad spend (recommended) | $1,500 - $3,000/month on top |
| Your time investment | 30-40 hours/week executing |
That's not a typo. When you factor in enrollment fees, monthly costs, and the ad spend you'll need to run the system, you're looking at $30,000-$65,000+ in total Year 1 costs , including your own labor.
For a gym doing $20k-$50k/month in revenue, that's a massive percentage of gross revenue going to one program.
## What You Actually Get With Gym Launch
Here's where we give credit. The Gym Launch system includes:
The Proven Playbook
- The 6-week challenge offer framework , a front-end offer structure that converts cold traffic into paying members
- Facebook and Instagram ad templates , tested creative and copy for gym lead generation
- Sales scripts , phone and in-person scripts for converting leads to trials and trials to memberships
- Nurture sequences , follow-up systems for leads who don't convert immediately
- Ascension model , how to move members from a low-ticket front-end to high-ticket recurring
The Coaching
- Group coaching calls (typically weekly)
- Access to a community of gym owners
- Accountability and support from coaches (not Hormozi himself , more on that below)
What's Good About It
The system works. Full stop. The Hormozi gym acquisition model , run paid ads to a challenge offer, convert via high-pressure consultative sales, ascend to recurring membership , has generated hundreds of millions in revenue across the gym industry.
The frameworks are battle-tested. The scripts convert. The offer math checks out.
If you have the time, energy, and marketing skill to execute everything yourself, Gym Launch gives you the blueprint.
## What's Changed Since Hormozi Left
Here's the part most people gloss over.
Alex Hormozi is no longer running Gym Launch. He moved on to Acquisition.com, where he invests in and scales companies across dozens of industries. Gym Launch is one portfolio company among many.
What does that mean for you?
- You won't be learning from Hormozi. The coaching comes from team members and licensed coaches, not the guy who built the system.
- The innovation has slowed. The core playbook hasn't fundamentally changed because the core playbook works. But the ad landscape has changed dramatically , iOS privacy updates, rising CPMs, Meta algorithm shifts , and the playbook hasn't always kept pace.
- Ad account bans are a real risk. Gym owners running aggressive challenge offers on Meta have seen ad accounts flagged, restricted, or permanently banned. This was always a risk, but Meta's enforcement has gotten stricter.
- The DIY burden is the same. You're still responsible for running your own ads, managing your own funnels, handling your own sales calls, and executing the entire system. The coaching tells you what to do , you still have to do all of it.
## The Real Problem: It's a DIY Program at a Premium Price
Let's be direct.
Gym Launch is a coaching program, not a done-for-you service. You're paying $18k-$40k/year for someone to tell you what to do. Then you go do it yourself.
That means:
- You're the media buyer. You set up the ad accounts, create the campaigns, manage the budget, troubleshoot when ads underperform, and deal with Meta's ever-changing policies.
- You're the funnel builder. You build the landing pages, set up the automations, connect the CRM, and fix things when they break.
- You're the copywriter. You write the ad copy, the follow-up texts and email sequences, and the social content.
- You're the sales closer. You make the calls, run the consultations, handle the objections, and close the deals.
- You're the gym owner. Oh right , you also have a gym to run. Members to coach. Staff to manage. A facility to maintain.
For some gym owners , especially those with marketing backgrounds or a strong operations manager , this works great. You get the playbook, you execute, you scale.
But for most gym owners? You're paying premium prices to add 30-40 hours of marketing work to your already full plate.
That's not a knock on Gym Launch. It's the reality of any coaching model. You're paying for knowledge transfer, not execution.
