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.
i work in the fitness industry and the contract shenanigans at some DFW gyms are borderline predatory. always insist on seeing the written contract before your trial class. if they wont show you the contract terms upfront, leave