Handld.org

Personal Trainer near you in Australia

Known locally as personal trainer (pt). Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in Australia.

Typical price: A$60–A$3,200

Get quotes from personal trainer pros — free, no obligation

Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.

What personal trainer costs in Australia

Researched national ranges in AUD. City prices vary by cost tier.
Job size Low Typical High
Single session One 60-minute one-on-one session A$60 A$85 A$150
10-session pack Ten sessions prepaid at a 10-15% discount A$550 A$780 A$1,350
One month, 2x per week Eight sessions across a month A$450 A$650 A$1,150
3-month program (24 sessions) Twice-weekly coaching for 12 weeks A$1,300 A$1,900 A$3,200

Full personal trainer price guide for Australia

Popular cities for personal trainer

Browse Australia by region

How to hire a personal trainer pro in Australia

  1. Check for Certificate III and IV in Fitness — Cert IV is what qualifies someone to train clients independently
  2. Look for AUSactive registration (formerly Fitness Australia/Physical Activity Australia)
  3. Ask for public liability insurance proof and a current first aid/CPR certificate
  4. If training outdoors, confirm the PT holds the council permit required for commercial sessions in public parks
  5. Book a trial session before buying a pack
  6. Get pack terms in writing — expiry, freezes, refunds, cancellation window

Frequently asked questions

Should my personal trainer be insured?

Yes. Public liability insurance covers injury or property damage during sessions, and professional indemnity covers bad advice. Ask for the certificate — this matters most with independent and mobile trainers, since gym-employed trainers are usually covered by the gym.

Do personal trainers offer free trial sessions?

Many independents offer a free or discounted first consultation-plus-workout because packages are where they earn. Treat it as a two-way interview: they assess you, you assess whether their coaching style and programming logic make sense.

Is online personal training worth it compared to in-person?

Online coaching (programmed workouts plus weekly check-ins) runs 30-50% cheaper than in-person sessions. It suits self-motivated people with some lifting experience; beginners usually get better value from in-person sessions where form gets corrected in real time.

Is a personal trainer worth it for a complete beginner?

Beginners get the most value per dollar of anyone: correct movement patterns and habit-building in the first 8-12 weeks prevent injuries and years of ineffective training. A common budget approach is to front-load weekly sessions for 2-3 months, then taper to fortnightly check-ins.

What happens at the first personal training session?

Expect a health questionnaire (PAR-Q), a movement and fitness assessment, and goal-setting — not a punishing workout. Many trainers discount or waive the first session; use it to judge coaching style before buying a package.

What's the difference between Cert III and Cert IV in Fitness?

Cert III qualifies someone as a gym instructor working on a supervised floor; Cert IV is the personal-trainer qualification allowing independent one-on-one programming. For 1:1 coaching, insist on Cert IV.

Do Australian PTs need a permit to train me at the park or beach?

For paid sessions, usually yes — councils sell commercial fitness permits and rangers do enforce them in busy areas. It's the PT's responsibility, but an unpermitted trainer may have sessions cancelled mid-block.

Related services

Planning a budget?

See the full personal trainer cost guide or browse all Australia price guides.

Compare personal trainer quotes — free

Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.