DFW gyms are notorious for contracts that are nearly impossible to cancel. Here's the legal reality.
Texas Health Spa Act (Texas Occupations Code Chapter 702):
This law specifically governs gym contracts in Texas and provides significant consumer protections:
-
3-day right to cancel. You have 3 business days to cancel any gym contract after signing with a full refund (702.303).
-
Maximum contract length. No gym contract can exceed 36 months.
-
Relocation cancellation. If you move more than 25 miles from the gym, you can cancel with proof of new address (702.304).
-
Disability/death cancellation. Medical documentation allows cancellation (702.304).
-
Monthly payment option. Gyms must offer a monthly payment option. If they only offer annual/multi-year, that's a violation (702.302).
How to cancel (the method that works):
- Send cancellation in WRITING via certified mail, return receipt requested
- Include your name, membership number, date, and reason
- Cite the specific section of Chapter 702 that applies
- Keep the certified mail receipt as proof
- Cancel the payment method (switch to a card you can cancel if needed)
Common gym pushback tactics:
- "You can only cancel in person" — False. Written notice is valid.
- "There's a $200 cancellation fee" — Check the contract AND the Health Spa Act. Many fees violate 702.
- "You need to give 60 days notice" — Verify this is in your contract. Even then, certified mail starts the clock.
RECEIPTS REQUIRED: If posting about a gym's cancellation nightmare, include the gym name, contract terms, cancellation attempts documented, and outcome.
Sources:
- Texas Occupations Code Chapter 702 (Health Spa Act)
- Texas AG — gym/fitness consumer protection
- FTC — gym membership cancellation rights
Certified mail. Certified mail. Certified mail. That receipt is your proof.