Not every gym investment starts with a container. Sometimes you already have the space — a PT studio, a hotel suite, a room at work, or a converted garage — and all you’re missing is the kit: treadmills, a rack, a dumbbell stand, a cable machine. And that brings back the same question you get with any big purchase: pay cash, or arrange fitness equipment leasing?
Here’s the practical version: what exactly you can finance, what a realistic monthly payment looks like, how a finance lease differs from hire purchase and long-term rental, and what actually drives the price of gym equipment. No fluff — but always run the tax side past your own accountant.
What you can lease — gym equipment
Equipment finance covers almost all of a gym’s “hard” assets. A single agreement can fund one machine or a whole zone in one go:
➜ Cardio — treadmills, cross-trainers, spin bikes, rowing ergs, stair climbers ➜ Strength kit — racks, cages, cable stacks, plate-loaded machines, Smith machines, pulley systems ➜ Free weights — Olympic bars, dumbbell sets, kettlebells, plates, stands ➜ Accessories and the functional zone — pull-up rigs, plyo boxes, ropes, sports flooring, mirrors, storage
Minimum value threshold. Most finance providers will fund an item from roughly £600–1,000 upwards. Nobody finances a single £120 barbell on its own — but a complete kit-out invoiced together by one supplier is a different story. That’s the key rule: it pays to finance a package, not individual odds and ends.
➜ If you’re building the kit from scratch, start with choosing equipment for your budget and space, then pick the finance route.
Finance lease vs hire purchase vs long-term rental
Three models that salespeople tend to lump together under “leasing”. They differ on who owns the asset and what you can put through the books.
| Feature | Operating lease | Hire purchase | Long-term rental |
|---|---|---|---|
| Owner during the term | the lessor | you (your fixed asset) | the lessor / rental firm |
| Tax-deductible | full rental payment | capital allowances + interest | full rental payment |
| VAT (20%) | on each payment, as you go | on the full value up front | on each payment |
| End of term | optional purchase, nominal fee | title transfers after final payment | none — return or renew |
| On your balance sheet | no | yes | no |
| Best for | most businesses, PTs, hotels | reclaiming VAT and owning the asset | frequent kit swaps, seasonality |
➜ Operating lease — the default for most. The full payment is an allowable business expense, the initial outlay is low, and you can usually buy the kit at the end for a nominal fee. ➜ Hire purchase — sensible when you want to own the asset, claim capital allowances (potentially the Annual Investment Allowance) and reclaim VAT up front. ➜ Long-term rental — when you want to swap the kit every 2–3 years (a premium studio that has to run the latest machines) or you trade seasonally. You hand the kit back instead of worrying about resale.
We’ve covered the full tax-side comparison of leasing, buying and a bank loan in our guide to container gym leasing vs a loan.
Example fitness equipment lease payment
Indicative figures: operating lease over 48 months, 10% deposit, nominal end-of-term purchase, rate depending on the base rate — treat them as a starting point, not a quote.
| Equipment package | Value (ex VAT) | Monthly payment (48 mo) |
|---|---|---|
| Home / starter zone (rack, bar, dumbbells, bench) | from £2,500 | from approx. £60/month |
| PT studio, semi-pro (cardio + 2 machines + free weights) | from £8,000 | from approx. £190/month |
| Full commercial gym (complete zone) | from £24,000 | from approx. £560/month |
Tax effect. On an operating lease the whole payment is an allowable expense. At small-company corporation tax rates, a payment of about £190/month effectively costs you noticeably less after relief, and a VAT-registered business reclaims the VAT on each invoice on top. That changes how “expensive” the finance really looks — see the VAT section below.
VAT and allowable expenses — the short version
Three things to know before you sign — and yes, confirm them with your accountant:
➜ Allowable expense — on an operating lease, 100% of the payment (including the initial rental) reduces your taxable profit. That’s the big edge over a bank loan, where only the interest and capital allowances are deductible. ➜ VAT (20%) — you reclaim it on each lease invoice as you go, provided the kit is used for taxable business activity. On hire purchase the full VAT lands up front. ➜ Gym kit depreciates faster than the building — it’s plant and machinery, so it typically qualifies for capital allowances (often the Annual Investment Allowance when you buy outright, letting you write off the full cost in year one). A steel container shell is treated very differently — check with your accountant which allowances apply to your purchase.
We’ve written up the numbers — Annual Investment Allowance, staff-benefit angle, the hotel case — with worked examples in running a gym through your business. Essential reading if you’re putting the investment through a company.
How gym equipment is priced — what it depends on
“How much does it cost to kit out a gym?” is as broad a question as “how much does a car cost?”. The price of the same rack can vary fivefold. Three things drive the price of gym equipment:
New vs used
Second-hand kit can be 40–60% cheaper, but it’s rarely possible to lease (finance houses prefer new with a supplier invoice) and there’s no warranty. New means a full warranty, servicing and access to finance. For a commercial site meant to run for years, new usually works out cheaper per year of use.
Equipment grade — home / semi-pro / full commercial
This is the biggest variable in pricing:
| Grade | Who it’s for | Treadmill price (example) |
|---|---|---|
| Home | home gym, garage, 1–2 people a day | from approx. £600 |
| Semi-pro | PT studio, small business, boutique hotel | from approx. £1,600 |
| Full commercial | club, large hotel, 24/7 gym | from approx. £3,600 |
Full commercial kit has stronger frames and bearings built for constant use, and it stands up to dozens of users a day — that’s not marketing, it’s the difference between “lasts 10 years” and “falls apart in one”. Matching the grade to real footfall is half the battle in getting the pricing right.
How complete the zone is
Are you costing the treadmill alone, or a zone with sports flooring, mirrors, storage and installation? A complete PT-studio fit-out usually runs from approx. £8,000 ex VAT, and a full commercial gym from approx. £24,000 ex VAT upwards. You’ll see the same brackets in our ready-made Gym Box packages in the shop.
How it works with Gym Assistance — kit and finance in one
We don’t split “buying the kit” from “financing it”. In a single process we:
➜ spec the equipment to your budget, space and load grade (home / semi-pro / full commercial), ➜ prepare a quote for the whole kit as one package on a single supplier invoice — so it can actually be leased, ➜ connect you with our finance partner and show the real monthly payment over 48 months (operating lease or hire purchase, depending on your tax position).
You can finance the kit alone (you already have the space) or the container together with the equipment in one agreement — the finance house funds the whole set invoiced together. That’s a common route with container gyms on a full finance package, where the building and the equipment go in on a single application.
For commercial sites — a PT studio, hotel, club, or a company building a staff wellness zone — we have a separate business financing package comparing leasing, a loan and long-term rental for your specific scenario.
Leasing is for businesses and sole traders (usually trading for 12 months or more). A private individual without a business uses a consumer instalment plan instead — but if you trade, even as a sole trader, fitness equipment leasing will usually be the most tax-efficient route. As always, your accountant has the final word on what suits your set-up.
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Tell us the space and budget you’re starting with — we’ll spec the kit, price the package and show the real lease payment. ➜ Get in touch with Gym Assistance or request a quote.