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Price increases and expansion are driving growth in the European fitness sector, finds EuropeActive and Deloitte 2025 report
By Kath Hudson 09 Apr 2025
Waterland's acquisition of LifeFit Group was the biggest deal of 2024 Credit: LifeFit Group
EuropeActive and Deloitte unveil latest European market intelligence
The 2025 European Health and Fitness Market Report was presented today at EHFF in Cologne
Both business confidence and consumer interest are up on 2023
2024 was a record year for mergers and acquisitions
Memberships of health clubs in Europe increased by almost four million in 2024 and revenues by 10 per cent.

These are the findings of the 2025 European Health and Fitness Market Report (EHFMR) from EuropeActive and Deloitte, which were presented today at EHFF in Cologne, Germany.

The growth in memberships from 67.7 million in 2023 to 71.6 million in 2024, were driven in part by large increases in the UK, which now has 11.5 million members (an increase of 6.1 per cent); Germany (11.7 million, up 3.6 per cent) and Spain (6.2 million an 8.7 per cent rise.)

Total European revenues increased by around 10 per cent to €36 billion in 2024, including the UK (€6.7 billion, up by 11.8 per cent); Germany (€ 5.8 billion, a 7 per cent increase) and Spain (€ 2.6 billion, plus 11.1 per cent).

This increase was mainly driven by a combination of additional price increases that were implemented in response to ongoing inflationary pressures, along with expansion and a significant rise in memberships.

Business is good
There was a 2 per cent increase in the number of clubs, to 64,000. This upward trend is also evident in the positive business climate among European operators. In January 2025, 80 percent of all European operators surveyed for the report rated their current business situation as good, which is a 20 per cent improvement on January 2023.

In terms of membership, the top three operators remain Basic-Fit (4.2 million), PureGym (c 2 million) and RSG Group (1.8 million). Basic-Fit generated the most revenue (€1.2 billion), followed by David Lloyd Leisure (€1 billion) and then PureGym (€695 million).

The top 20 fitness operators collectively generated €7.4 billion in revenue in 2024 – a 15 per cent increase – with membership up by almost 1.5 million to 18.8 million (an 8 per cent increase).

A record number of merger and acquisition transactions were completed. The three largest deals by club volume included the acquisition of Germany’s LifeFit Group (140 clubs) by financial investor Waterland Private Equity; the sale of VivaGym Group (104 clubs) to Providence Equity Partners and the acquisition of Altafit (70 clubs in Spain) by VivaGym Group.

Overall the penetration rate was up by 0.5 per cent to 8.9 per cent of the total population, and 10.6 per cent of the population over the age of 15 (10.1 per cent in 2023).

Since the penetration rate in the US is 23.7 per cent of people over the age of six, these numbers illustrate the growth potential for the sector.

Consumer interest is growing
Consumer research conducted on a sample of 13,000 people in 19 countries in January 2025, confirmed that while participation in home and outdoor fitness among regular fitness practitioners has decreased by two and five per cent respectively, club-based exercise is up 2 per cent on the previous year.

This year location ranked as the most important factor when choosing a gym, ahead of price. This reverses last year's order and suggests consumers feel inflationary pressures are easing, or they have become accustomed to them.

More respondents without a regular fitness routine indicated a strong desire for improvement in their physical and emotional wellbeing and those who consider themselves to be in very good physical health scored 30 per cent higher on the wellbeing scale than those without a regular fitness routine.

A clear trend towards greater health awareness within the population can be observed, with the fitness industry increasingly valued for physical and also mental health and wellbeing. As a result, many chains are broadening their services to incorporate wellbeing options, reflecting a shift towards a more holistic approach.

New this year is the inclusion of an analysis for the major cities in Europe. The 150-page report includes a full description of key operators and key countries.

Herman Rutgers, EuropeActive ambassador and co-author of the report says: “The European Health and Fitness Market Report is the gold standard for market research in the fitness and physical activity sector. Based on the growth shown in our research and the outlook for 2025 and beyond as expressed by the operators we interviewed, we are confident to reach EuropeActive’s ambition of getting to 100 million members of health and fitness centres by 2030.”

The report was sponsored by Basic-Fit, FIBO, Matrix, Myzone, Perfect Gym, Purpose Brands and Technogym. The report can be ordered here.

The launch of the European report follows the publication last week of the 2025 UK Health and Fitness Market Report, from UK Active in partnership with Deloitte, 4Global and Sport England.




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NEWS
Price increases and expansion are driving growth in the European fitness sector, finds EuropeActive and Deloitte 2025 report
POSTED 09 Apr 2025 . BY Kath Hudson
Waterland's acquisition of LifeFit Group was the biggest deal of 2024 Credit: LifeFit Group
EuropeActive and Deloitte unveil latest European market intelligence
The 2025 European Health and Fitness Market Report was presented today at EHFF in Cologne
Both business confidence and consumer interest are up on 2023
2024 was a record year for mergers and acquisitions
Memberships of health clubs in Europe increased by almost four million in 2024 and revenues by 10 per cent.

These are the findings of the 2025 European Health and Fitness Market Report (EHFMR) from EuropeActive and Deloitte, which were presented today at EHFF in Cologne, Germany.

The growth in memberships from 67.7 million in 2023 to 71.6 million in 2024, were driven in part by large increases in the UK, which now has 11.5 million members (an increase of 6.1 per cent); Germany (11.7 million, up 3.6 per cent) and Spain (6.2 million an 8.7 per cent rise.)

Total European revenues increased by around 10 per cent to €36 billion in 2024, including the UK (€6.7 billion, up by 11.8 per cent); Germany (€ 5.8 billion, a 7 per cent increase) and Spain (€ 2.6 billion, plus 11.1 per cent).

This increase was mainly driven by a combination of additional price increases that were implemented in response to ongoing inflationary pressures, along with expansion and a significant rise in memberships.

Business is good
There was a 2 per cent increase in the number of clubs, to 64,000. This upward trend is also evident in the positive business climate among European operators. In January 2025, 80 percent of all European operators surveyed for the report rated their current business situation as good, which is a 20 per cent improvement on January 2023.

In terms of membership, the top three operators remain Basic-Fit (4.2 million), PureGym (c 2 million) and RSG Group (1.8 million). Basic-Fit generated the most revenue (€1.2 billion), followed by David Lloyd Leisure (€1 billion) and then PureGym (€695 million).

The top 20 fitness operators collectively generated €7.4 billion in revenue in 2024 – a 15 per cent increase – with membership up by almost 1.5 million to 18.8 million (an 8 per cent increase).

A record number of merger and acquisition transactions were completed. The three largest deals by club volume included the acquisition of Germany’s LifeFit Group (140 clubs) by financial investor Waterland Private Equity; the sale of VivaGym Group (104 clubs) to Providence Equity Partners and the acquisition of Altafit (70 clubs in Spain) by VivaGym Group.

Overall the penetration rate was up by 0.5 per cent to 8.9 per cent of the total population, and 10.6 per cent of the population over the age of 15 (10.1 per cent in 2023).

Since the penetration rate in the US is 23.7 per cent of people over the age of six, these numbers illustrate the growth potential for the sector.

Consumer interest is growing
Consumer research conducted on a sample of 13,000 people in 19 countries in January 2025, confirmed that while participation in home and outdoor fitness among regular fitness practitioners has decreased by two and five per cent respectively, club-based exercise is up 2 per cent on the previous year.

This year location ranked as the most important factor when choosing a gym, ahead of price. This reverses last year's order and suggests consumers feel inflationary pressures are easing, or they have become accustomed to them.

More respondents without a regular fitness routine indicated a strong desire for improvement in their physical and emotional wellbeing and those who consider themselves to be in very good physical health scored 30 per cent higher on the wellbeing scale than those without a regular fitness routine.

A clear trend towards greater health awareness within the population can be observed, with the fitness industry increasingly valued for physical and also mental health and wellbeing. As a result, many chains are broadening their services to incorporate wellbeing options, reflecting a shift towards a more holistic approach.

New this year is the inclusion of an analysis for the major cities in Europe. The 150-page report includes a full description of key operators and key countries.

Herman Rutgers, EuropeActive ambassador and co-author of the report says: “The European Health and Fitness Market Report is the gold standard for market research in the fitness and physical activity sector. Based on the growth shown in our research and the outlook for 2025 and beyond as expressed by the operators we interviewed, we are confident to reach EuropeActive’s ambition of getting to 100 million members of health and fitness centres by 2030.”

The report was sponsored by Basic-Fit, FIBO, Matrix, Myzone, Perfect Gym, Purpose Brands and Technogym. The report can be ordered here.

The launch of the European report follows the publication last week of the 2025 UK Health and Fitness Market Report, from UK Active in partnership with Deloitte, 4Global and Sport England.


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