Accounting for Personal Trainers and Fitness Instructors
A guide to accounting for personal trainers and fitness instructors in the UK, covering business structure, expenses, tax and how to keep your finances in order.
Personal trainers and fitness instructors in the UK are almost always self-employed – whether working independently, renting space in a gym or delivering classes for multiple facilities. That self-employment status means you are responsible for your own tax, National Insurance and record-keeping.
Choosing Your Business Structure
Most fitness professionals start as a sole trader because it is simple and low-cost to set up:
| Structure | Best For |
|---|---|
| Sole trader | Most personal trainers; simple bookkeeping, low admin |
| Limited company | Trainers earning over £40,000 profit; those wanting limited liability |
| Partnership | Two or more trainers running a joint business |
As a sole trader, you pay Income Tax on your profits (turnover minus allowable expenses) and Class 2 and Class 4 National Insurance. Registration is free – you simply register with HMRC for Self Assessment.
A limited company becomes more tax-efficient once profits consistently exceed £40,000, because you can use the salary-dividend split to reduce your overall tax and NIC burden.
Registering with HMRC
You must register for Self Assessment with HMRC by 5 October in the second tax year of trading. For example, if you start self-employed work in August, you normally register by 5 October after that tax year ends.
Once registered, you receive a Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR) and must file a Self Assessment return by 31 January each year, covering the previous tax year.
Allowable Expenses
Personal trainers can deduct a range of business expenses from their taxable income:
| Expense Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Training and qualifications | Level 2/3 certificates, CPD courses, first aid renewal |
| Insurance | Professional indemnity, public liability |
| Equipment | Weights, resistance bands, mats, TRX, boxing pads |
| Gym rent or space hire | Renting studio space, gym floor access fees |
| Clothing | Branded uniform with your logo (not general sportswear) |
| Marketing | Website, social media advertising, business cards, flyers |
| Software | Client management apps, booking systems, programme design tools |
| Telephone and broadband | Business proportion of mobile phone and internet |
| Travel | Mileage to client sessions (not home to a regular workplace) |
| Professional membership | REPs (Register of Exercise Professionals), CIMSPA |
| Accountancy fees | Tax return preparation, bookkeeping |
What You Cannot Claim
- General sportswear (trainers, leggings, t-shirts without your branding)
- Food and supplements for personal use
- Gym membership for your own training (unless it is a genuine business cost, such as renting space)
- Commuting costs to a regular place of work
Simplified Expenses
HMRC’s simplified expenses scheme lets sole traders use flat rates for certain costs instead of calculating the actual business proportion:
Vehicle Costs
| Miles | Rate |
|---|---|
| First 10,000 business miles | 45p per mile |
| Over 10,000 miles | 25p per mile |
If you drive to clients’ homes, parks, offices or studios, each journey counts as a business mile. Keep a mileage log with the date, destination, purpose and distance.
Working from Home
| Hours Worked from Home per Month | Flat Rate |
|---|---|
| 25-50 hours | £10 per month |
| 51-100 hours | £18 per month |
| 101+ hours | £26 per month |
This covers a proportion of your heating, electricity, broadband and other household costs. The flat rate is simpler than calculating the actual business proportion of each bill.
Income Streams and How to Record Them
Personal trainers typically have multiple income streams:
| Income Source | How to Record |
|---|---|
| 1:1 personal training sessions | Invoice or receipt for each session; or bank transfer record |
| Group classes | Fee from the gym or studio, or ticket sales |
| Online coaching | Subscription payments, programme sales |
| Gym floor rent (reverse: you pay the gym) | This is an expense, not income |
| Supplement sales | Sales income; track cost of goods separately |
| Workshop or event income | Invoice or ticket sales |
All income must be declared, including cash payments. Open a separate business bank account to keep personal and business transactions apart.
National Insurance
As a self-employed personal trainer, you pay:
| NIC Class | Rate (2024/25) |
|---|---|
| Class 2 | £3.45 per week (if profits above the Small Profits Threshold of £6,725) |
| Class 4 | 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270; 2% on profits above £50,270 |
Class 2 NIC counts towards your State Pension entitlement. If your profits are below £6,725, you can choose to pay voluntarily.
VAT
The VAT registration threshold is £90,000 of taxable turnover. Most personal trainers fall below this, but if you run a successful studio, sell programmes online or combine multiple income streams, you could approach it.
Personal training services are standard-rated at 20%. If you do register voluntarily, your services become 20% more expensive for clients who cannot reclaim VAT (individuals, as opposed to corporate clients booking you for workplace wellness).
Some fitness income may be exempt from VAT if you are providing services as a sole practitioner and the activity qualifies as education or health-related. However, personal training generally does not qualify for exemption.
Tax Return Deadlines
| Deadline | Task |
|---|---|
| 5 October | Register for Self Assessment (first year of trading) |
| 31 October | Paper Self Assessment return deadline |
| 31 January | Online Self Assessment return deadline |
| 31 January | Pay any Income Tax and Class 4 NIC owed |
| 31 July | Second payment on account (if applicable) |
Payments on Account
If your tax bill exceeds £1,000, HMRC requires payments on account – two advance payments of 50% of the previous year’s liability. These are due on 31 January and 31 July.
Record-Keeping
Keep it simple but consistent:
- Sales records – an invoice or receipt for every session, class or programme sold
- Expense receipts – photograph or scan every receipt on the day of purchase
- Bank statements – reconcile your business account monthly
- Mileage log – record every business journey
- Annual summary – total income minus total expenses gives your taxable profit
Accounting software or even a well-structured spreadsheet works for most personal trainers. If you use software, connect it to your bank account for automatic transaction imports.
Keep all records for at least 5 years from the 31 January submission deadline for the relevant tax year.
Common Mistakes
- Not separating personal and business finances – use a dedicated bank account
- Forgetting to declare cash income – HMRC can request bank statements and card terminal records
- Claiming personal clothing as an expense – only branded uniforms qualify
- Not keeping mileage records – without a log, HMRC can deny the entire claim
- Missing the registration deadline – late registration for Self Assessment triggers a penalty
- Not setting money aside for tax – put 25-30% of each payment into a savings account for tax
Growing Your Business
As your income grows, consider:
- Incorporating as a limited company once profits exceed £40,000
- Hiring subcontractors or employees (triggers employer obligations including payroll, auto-enrolment pension and employer’s liability insurance)
- Renting your own studio – the rent, rates and utilities become deductible business expenses
- Selling online programmes – digital products scale without proportional cost increases
- Getting specialist insurance – as your services and client base expand, review your cover annually