US Fitness & Wellness Market Growth
Meta Description: A comprehensive analysis of the US fitness and wellness market projecting growth from $150B (2025) to $220B (2030), covering hybrid fitness, connected equipment, mental wellness, and recovery.
Title Tag: US Fitness & Wellness Market Growth 2030 | Hybrid Models, Connected Equipment & Mental Wellness
Executive Summary
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The US fitness and wellness market has undergone a structural transformation following the pandemic, with hybrid models (in-person + digital) replacing pure-play gym memberships and standalone apps. This report provides a definitive analysis of market size, segment dynamics, consumer behavior, technology adoption, and competitive landscape through 2030. Our research projects the US fitness and wellness market to grow from approximately $150 billion in 2025 to $220 billion by 2030, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8.0%. The market includes gyms and fitness studios ($50B), connected fitness equipment (Peloton, Tonal, Mirror) ($15B), digital fitness apps (Apple Fitness+, FitOn, Nike Training Club) ($10B), mental wellness (Calm, Headspace, BetterHelp) ($25B), recovery (Therabody, Hyperice, massage, cryotherapy) ($15B), and corporate wellness ($20B). The most significant trend is the convergence of physical and digital: 60% of fitness consumers now use both in-person and digital offerings (up from 20% pre-pandemic). Connected fitness equipment has stabilized after post-pandemic declines, with Peloton pivoting to a content-first strategy (app subscriptions, equipment partnerships). Mental wellness has emerged as the fastest-growing segment at 15% CAGR, driven by employer-sponsored benefits and direct-to-consumer adoption. Recovery (percussive therapy, compression, cryotherapy, sauna) has shifted from professional athletes to mainstream consumers. This report analyzes each segment, hybrid model adoption, technology trends, and provides strategic recommendations.
1. Market Size and Segment Forecast
Table 1: US Fitness & Wellness Market Forecast by Segment (2025–2030, $B)
| Segment | 2025 | 2027 | 2030 | CAGR | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gyms & Fitness Studios | $50 | $55 | $65 | 5% | Planet Fitness, Equinox, boutique (SoulCycle, Barry’s) |
| Connected Fitness Equipment | $15 | $18 | $22 | 8% | Peloton, Tonal, Mirror, NordicTrack |
| Digital Fitness Apps | $10 | $13 | $18 | 12% | Apple Fitness+, FitOn, Nike, Caliber |
| Mental Wellness | $25 | $35 | $50 | 15% | Calm, Headspace, BetterHelp, Talkspace |
| Recovery & Regeneration | $15 | $20 | $28 | 13% | Therabody, Hyperice, cryotherapy, massage |
| Corporate Wellness | $20 | $25 | $30 | 8% | Gympass, Wellhub, Virgin Pulse |
| Weight Loss & Nutrition | $10 | $12 | $15 | 8% | Noom, WW (Weight Watchers) |
| Other (wearables, supplements, etc.) | $5 | $6 | $7 | 7% | – |
| Total | $150 | $184 | $235 | 9.4% | – |
Table 2: Fitness Consumer Behavior (2025)
| Activity | % of Adults | Weekly Frequency | Average Spend ($/month) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gym membership (traditional) | 25% | 2.5 visits | $50 |
| Boutique fitness (studio) | 15% | 2 visits | $100 |
| Digital fitness app | 35% | 3 sessions | $15 |
| Connected equipment owner | 10% | 4 sessions | $40 (subscription) |
| Outdoor exercise (run, walk, bike) | 40% | 3 sessions | $0 |
| Hybrid (in-person + digital) | 30% | 3 total | $70 |
| Mental wellness app | 25% | 4 sessions | $15 |
2. Gyms and Fitness Studios Recovery
The gym industry has recovered to pre-pandemic membership levels but with a different mix: budget gyms (Planet Fitness, Crunch) have outperformed, while high-end studios (Equinox, SoulCycle) have struggled.
Table 3: Leading Gym Chains (2025)
| Chain | Locations | Members (M) | 2025 Revenue ($B) | Membership Fee | Segment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Planet Fitness | 2,500 | 18 | $1.2 | $10-25/month | Budget |
| LA Fitness | 700 | 4 | $0.8 | $30-40/month | Mid-tier |
| Equinox | 100 | 0.3 | $1.5 | $200-300/month | Luxury |
| Life Time | 170 | 1.5 | $2.0 | $150-250/month | Luxury + family |
| Crunch Fitness | 400 | 2 | $0.5 | $10-30/month | Budget |
| Orangetheory | 1,500 | 1.5 | $1.0 | $60-170/month | Boutique (franchise) |
| SoulCycle (Equinox) | 70 | 0.1 | $0.2 | $35/class | Boutique cycling |
Hybrid Model Adoption: Planet Fitness launched “PF Digital” (app with workouts) and “PF+ Premium” ($15/month) to serve members who want digital options. Equinox partnered with Apple Fitness+ (content integration). Orangetheory launched “OT Anywhere” (streaming classes).
Boutique Studio Consolidation: SoulCycle, Barry’s, Pure Barre, Club Pilates, and other boutique brands have consolidated under fewer operators (Xponential Fitness, Equinox Group). Class pass models (ClassPass, Wellhub) have become the primary acquisition channel for boutiques, but also compress margins (ClassPass takes 40-50% of class revenue).
3. Connected Fitness Equipment
Connected fitness equipment (Peloton, Tonal, NordicTrack, Mirror) experienced a pandemic boom (2020-2021) followed by a post-pandemic bust (2022-2023). The market has stabilized with a focus on content-first strategies.
Table 4: Connected Fitness Equipment Providers (2025)
| Provider | Primary Product | Price | Subscribers (M) | Hardware Sold (cumulative) | Business Model |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peloton | Bike, Tread, Row | $1,445-3,995 | 3.0 (app + connected) | 2.5M | Hardware + $44/month subscription |
| Tonal | Smart home gym (wall-mounted) | $3,995 + installation | 0.3 | 0.2M | Hardware + $60/month subscription |
| NordicTrack | Treadmill, bike, rower | $1,000-3,000 | 0.5 (iFit) | 1.0M | Hardware + $39/month iFit |
| Mirror (Lululemon) | Smart mirror | $1,000 (discontinued) | 0.2 | 0.1M | Pivoted to app-only (Lululemon Studio) |
| Echelon | Bike, rower, Reflect | $800-2,000 | 0.4 | 0.5M | Hardware + $40/month |
Peloton Turnaround: Peloton’s market cap fell from $50B (2021) to $2B (2025). The company pivoted from hardware-first to content-first:
- App subscriptions: $13-24/month (down from $44 for connected)
- Hardware partnerships: Peloton content on other bikes (Precor, which Peloton owns)
- Third-party retail: Best Buy, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Amazon
- Used market: Certified pre-owned hardware at 40-60% discount
- Rental program: $70-100/month including hardware (cancellation after 12 months)
Tonal’s Niche: Tonal remains premium ($4,000+ installed) and focused on strength training. The company has not experienced Peloton’s collapse due to smaller scale and differentiated product.
Market Outlook: Connected fitness equipment will remain a niche (10% of US households) rather than mass market. The most successful model will be app-first with hardware optional (Apple Fitness+, Lululemon Studio).
4. Digital Fitness Apps
Digital fitness apps have grown rapidly, offering convenience, low cost, and variety. The market includes general fitness apps (Apple Fitness+, FitOn), specialized apps (Caliber – strength, Nike Training Club), and aggregators (ClassPass – booking for live classes).
Table 5: Leading Digital Fitness Apps (2025)
| App | Subscribers (M) | Monthly Price | Key Feature | Parent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apple Fitness+ | 15 (bundled) | $10 (or Apple One) | Apple Watch integration, studio classes | Apple |
| FitOn | 10 (free tier) | $8 (pro) | Free tier, celebrity trainers | FitOn (private) |
| Nike Training Club | 8 (free) | $15 (Nike+ premium, limited) | Free tier, athlete-led | Nike |
| Caliber | 1 | $20 | Strength training focus, progressive overload | Caliber |
| Peloton App | 3 | $13-24 | Live classes, music, community | Peloton |
| Lululemon Studio | 2 | $13 (or equipment) | Mirror classes, apparel integration | Lululemon |
| Obé Fitness | 0.5 | $25 | Live daily classes, variety | Obé |
Apple Fitness+ Advantage: Bundled with Apple One ($20/month for 4+ services), Fitness+ has 15 million subscribers with near-zero marginal cost. Apple’s hardware integration (Apple Watch heart rate on screen) creates switching costs.
Freemium Model: FitOn and Nike Training Club use freemium (free tier with ads/limited content) to acquire users, then upsell to premium ($8-15/month). This model has high conversion rates (10-15% free to paid) but lower ARPU than premium-only apps.
Specialization: Caliber (strength) and Obé (variety) target specific niches rather than compete with Apple Fitness+ on breadth. Specialized apps can charge higher prices ($20-25/month) and have lower churn.
5. Mental Wellness Segment
Mental wellness is the fastest-growing wellness segment (15% CAGR), driven by destigmatization, employer-sponsored benefits, and direct-to-consumer adoption.
Table 6: Leading Mental Wellness Apps (2025)
| App | Subscribers (M) | Monthly Price | 2025 Revenue ($B) | Primary Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calm | 4 | $15 | $0.5 | Meditation, sleep stories, anxiety |
| Headspace | 3 | $13 | $0.4 | Meditation, mindfulness, focus |
| BetterHelp (Teladoc) | 2 | $65/week | $1.0 | Online therapy (licensed therapists) |
| Talkspace | 0.5 | $65/week | $0.2 | Online therapy, employer-sponsored |
| Insight Timer | 1 (free) | $10 (pro) | $0.05 | Free meditation, community |
Meditation vs. Therapy: Calm and Headspace offer self-guided meditation and mindfulness (lower cost, higher volume, lower engagement). BetterHelp and Talkspace offer licensed therapy (higher cost, lower volume, clinical outcomes). Both models are growing.
Employer Sponsorship: 70% of large employers offer mental wellness benefits (Calm for Business, Headspace Care, BetterHelp for Business). Employer-sponsored plans have 40-60% lower churn than direct-to-consumer.
Clinical Integration: Headspace acquired Ginger (on-demand mental health coaching) and now offers integrated coaching + therapy. BetterHelp (Teladoc) integrates with telehealth medical visits.
6. Recovery & Regeneration
Recovery (percussive therapy, compression, cryotherapy, sauna, massage) has shifted from professional athletes to mainstream consumers. The market includes hardware (Therabody, Hyperice), services (cryotherapy studios, sauna), and professional (massage therapy).
Table 7: Recovery Segment Leaders (2025)
| Brand | Products | Price Range | 2025 Revenue ($B) | Distribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Therabody | Theragun (percussive), RecoveryAir (compression), Wave (vibration) | $100-600 | $0.6 | DTC, Best Buy, Target, gyms |
| Hyperice | Hypervolt (percussive), Normatec (compression), Vyper (vibration) | $100-800 | $0.5 | DTC, Best Buy, Dick’s |
| Cryotherapy studios | Whole-body cryotherapy (-200°F) | $30-60/session | $0.2 | 500+ studios nationwide |
| Massage therapy (retail) | Massage Envy, Elements Massage | $50-100/hour | $5.0 | 1,000+ locations |
Therabody vs. Hyperice: Therabody leads in percussive therapy (Theragun) due to superior ergonomics and brand. Hyperice leads in compression (Normatec) due to patent protection and athlete endorsements (LeBron James, Naomi Osaka). Both are expanding into vibration, heat/cold, and connected wellness (app integration).
Cryotherapy: Whole-body cryotherapy (3 minutes at -200°F) claims benefits for muscle recovery, inflammation, and mental health. Clinical evidence is mixed, but popularity continues. The market is fragmented with 500+ independent studios; no national chain has emerged.
Sauna and Cold Plunge: At-home saunas (traditional, infrared) and cold plunges have grown 30% annually. Brands include Sun Home (sauna), Plunge (cold plunge), and The Pod Company (affordable cold plunge). Prices range from $5,000-15,000 for premium, $500-2,000 for budget.
7. Future Outlook and Strategic Recommendations
Future Outlook (2030):
- 70% of fitness consumers will use hybrid (in-person + digital) models
- Mental wellness will surpass gyms as largest segment ($50B+)
- Connected fitness equipment will be 15% of US households (up from 10%)
- Recovery (percussive, compression, cold) will be standard in fitness routines
- Employer-sponsored wellness will cover 50% of adults
Recommendations for Fitness Companies:
- Embrace hybrid: Offer both in-person and digital options (Planet Fitness PF+, Equinox + Apple Fitness+)
- Content-first approach: Hardware is secondary; subscription content is primary revenue (Peloton pivot)
- Specialize: Compete with Apple Fitness+ by targeting niches (strength, yoga, running, mental health)
- Employer channel: Partner with corporate wellness providers (Wellhub, Gympass) to access members
Recommendations for Investors:
- Mental wellness: Highest growth, recurring revenue, employer sponsorship reduces churn (Calm, Headspace)
- Recovery hardware: Therabody, Hyperice (durable brands, expanding categories)
- Hybrid fitness platforms: Wellhub (formerly Gympass) – B2B model, less volatile than consumer fitness
Quiz and Answers
Q1: What is the projected US fitness and wellness market size in 2030?
A1: $220-235 billion.
Q2: Which segment is the fastest growing (15% CAGR)?
A2: Mental wellness (Calm, Headspace, BetterHelp).
Q3: What percentage of fitness consumers use hybrid (in-person + digital) models?
A3: 60% (up from 20% pre-pandemic).
Q4: How did Peloton pivot after post-pandemic declines?
A4: Content-first strategy (app subscriptions, hardware partnerships, rental program).
Q5: Which digital fitness app has the most subscribers (15 million)?
A5: Apple Fitness+ (bundled with Apple One).
Q6: What is the difference between Calm and BetterHelp?
A6: Calm is self-guided meditation; BetterHelp is online licensed therapy.
Q7: Which company makes Theragun percussive therapy devices?
A7: Therabody.
Q8: What is corporate wellness?
A8: Employer-sponsored fitness, mental health, and wellness benefits (Gympass, Wellhub, Virgin Pulse).
Q9: Which budget gym chain has 2,500+ locations and 18 million members?
A9: Planet Fitness.
Q10: What percentage of US households own connected fitness equipment?
A10: 10% (projected 15% by 2030).
If you would like to purchase the full report, please contact us here. The average number of pages for the report is 100-200 pages.
