i talked to 3 different people this week who signed long-term contracts at gyms they regret. dont be that person. here are the questions you need to ask BEFORE you commit.
BEFORE THE TRIAL CLASS:
- do you offer a free trial class? (if no, red flag. every reputable gym offers this)
- what is the monthly cost? are there enrollment fees? (get the FULL number)
- what is the contract length? is there a month-to-month option? (avoid 2-3 year contracts)
- what is the cancellation policy? (read it carefully. some gyms make it nearly impossible to cancel)
DURING THE TRIAL CLASS: 5. what is the coaches background? where did they get their belt/credentials? (verify this. fake credentials exist in martial arts) 6. how is the class structured? (technique + drilling + live training is the standard) 7. is sparring available and how is it managed? (supervised, matched by size/experience, controlled intensity) 8. what is the gym culture like? (watch how students interact. are higher belts helpful or dismissive?) 9. how clean is the facility? (mat cleanliness is non-negotiable. dirty mats = staph infections)
AFTER THE TRIAL: 10. do current students seem happy and engaged? (talk to people. ask them honestly how they like it) 11. is there a competitive team and do students compete? (even if you dont want to compete, a gym that produces competitors usually has better instruction) 12. are there students at higher belt levels? (if a gym has been open 5+ years and has no purple belts or above, the instruction or retention might have issues)
RED FLAGS TO WATCH FOR:
- long-term contracts with no cancellation option
- belt promotions tied to testing fees ($100+ to test for your next belt)
- instructors who cannot verify their lineage or credentials
- no sparring ever (unless its explicitly a fitness-only program)
- the gym is more focused on selling you gear and supplements than teaching
- the instructor gets defensive when you ask about their background
- excessive bowing, uniforms, or cult-like reverence for the head instructor
GREEN FLAGS:
- month-to-month option available (even if yearly is cheaper)
- the coach has verifiable credentials (check BJJ Heroes, fight records, etc)
- students stick around for years (high retention = good culture)
- the gym is clean and well-maintained
- the coach encourages visiting other gyms and cross-training
- transparent pricing with no hidden fees
DFW has 50+ martial arts gyms. take your time, visit at least 3, and make an informed decision. this is an investment in your health and community — dont rush it.
the belt testing fee red flag is HUGE. legitimate BJJ gyms promote you when you are ready, at no charge. if a gym charges you $150 to test for your next belt, they are monetizing your progression. run