Personal Trainer near you in Canada
Known locally as personal trainer. Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in Canada.
Typical price: CA$45–CA$2,600
Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.
What personal trainer costs in Canada
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single session One 60-minute one-on-one session | CA$45 | CA$70 | CA$120 |
| 10-session package Ten sessions prepaid at a 10-15% discount | CA$400 | CA$650 | CA$1,100 |
| One month, 2x per week Eight sessions across a month | CA$340 | CA$540 | CA$900 |
| 3-month program (24 sessions) Twice-weekly coaching for 12 weeks | CA$950 | CA$1,500 | CA$2,600 |
Popular cities for personal trainer
- Personal Trainer in Toronto
- Personal Trainer in Montréal
- Personal Trainer in Calgary
- Personal Trainer in Ottawa
- Personal Trainer in Edmonton
- Personal Trainer in Winnipeg
- Personal Trainer in Mississauga
- Personal Trainer in Vancouver
- Personal Trainer in Brampton
- Personal Trainer in Hamilton
- Personal Trainer in Surrey
- Personal Trainer in Québec
- Personal Trainer in Halifax
- Personal Trainer in Laval
- Personal Trainer in London
- Personal Trainer in Etobicoke
- Personal Trainer in Markham
- Personal Trainer in Vaughan
- Personal Trainer in Gatineau
- Personal Trainer in Victoria
- Personal Trainer in Saskatoon
- Personal Trainer in Kitchener
- Personal Trainer in Burnaby
- Personal Trainer in Windsor
- Personal Trainer in Longueuil
- Personal Trainer in Regina
- Personal Trainer in Oakville
- Personal Trainer in Richmond
- Personal Trainer in Richmond Hill
- Personal Trainer in Burlington
Browse Canada by region
How to hire a personal trainer pro in Canada
- Verify a recognised Canadian certification — canfitpro PTS or CSEP-CPT are the two big ones; US NCCA certs (NASM, ACE) are also accepted
- Ask for proof of liability insurance and current CPR-C/AED certification
- Book an assessment session before committing to a package
- Confirm venue: most commercial gyms ban outside trainers, so plan on their studio, a condo gym, your home, or in-park training in summer
- Get package expiry, freeze and refund terms in writing
- Check Google reviews and ask for a reference client with your goal profile
Frequently asked questions
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.
How long before I see results with a personal trainer?
With 2-3 sessions a week and reasonable nutrition, expect measurable strength gains in 4-6 weeks and visible body-composition changes in 8-12 weeks. Any trainer promising dramatic results in 2-3 weeks is overselling.
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.
What is a fair cancellation policy for training sessions?
24 hours' notice is the industry standard — cancel later than that and you'll usually forfeit the session. Avoid trainers who demand non-refundable multi-month contracts up front before you've trained together.
Do personal trainers help with nutrition and meal plans?
Most give general nutrition guidance and calorie/protein targets, which is fine. Prescriptive meal plans for medical conditions (diabetes, kidney issues, eating disorders) are dietitian territory — in many countries dietitians are regulated health professionals and trainers legally shouldn't go there.
Are 30-minute sessions worth it, or do I need a full hour?
45-60 minutes is standard for a full session. 30-minute sessions, usually priced at 60-70% of the hourly rate, work well for maintenance training, seniors, or a focused technique block — less well for a complete strength program.
Is personal training tax-deductible in Canada?
Generally no — it's a personal expense. Narrow exceptions exist where training forms part of a prescribed therapy plan, and some provinces have periodically offered fitness tax credits for children's programs, but don't budget around a deduction.
Where do Canadians train with a PT in winter?
Condo gyms, private studios and home sessions dominate November-March; outdoor and park training reappears in summer. If your building has a gym, confirm management allows external trainers — many require proof of insurance first.
Related services
Planning a budget?
See the full personal trainer cost guide or browse all Canada price guides.
Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.