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Personal Trainer near you in United States

Known locally as personal trainer. Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in United States.

Typical price: $40–$2,400

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What personal trainer costs in United States

Researched national ranges in USD. City prices vary by cost tier.
Job size Low Typical High
Single session One 60-minute one-on-one session, assessment included for new clients $40 $60 $110
10-session package Ten 60-minute sessions prepaid, typically 10-15% below the single rate $350 $550 $1,000
One month, 2x per week Eight sessions across a month — the most common starter cadence $300 $450 $800
3-month program (24 sessions) Twice-weekly coaching for 12 weeks with programming and nutrition targets $850 $1,300 $2,400

Full personal trainer price guide for United States

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How to hire a personal trainer pro in United States

  1. Verify an NCCA-accredited certification (NASM, ACE, ACSM or NSCA) — no US state licenses personal trainers, so accreditation is the only quality signal
  2. Ask for proof of general liability insurance and a current CPR/AED certificate
  3. Book a single assessment session before committing to any package
  4. Confirm the venue: big-box gyms usually ban outside trainers, so choose their studio, a trainer-friendly gym, your home, or a park
  5. Get package terms in writing — expiry, session freezes, refunds, and the 24-hour cancellation window
  6. Check reviews on Thumbtack, Google or Yelp and ask for a reference client with a goal similar to yours

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.

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.

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 it cheaper to train at a gym or have a trainer come to me?

Gym-based sessions are usually the cheapest because the facility is included. Mobile trainers add a travel premium of roughly 10-25%, but you save the gym membership and commute, so total cost can even out if you don't otherwise use a gym.

Can I pay for personal training with my HSA or FSA?

Only if a doctor issues a Letter of Medical Necessity tying the training to a diagnosed condition (obesity, hypertension, rehab). Without it, personal training is a non-qualified expense — check with your plan administrator before assuming.

Which certifications actually matter in the US?

The four NCCA-accredited majors: NASM, ACE, ACSM and NSCA (CSCS for strength coaching). Weekend-course certificates without NCCA accreditation carry little weight with gyms or insurers.

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