Singapore’s fitness industry looks booming from the outside. New boutique studios launch every year. Premium wellness clubs promise cold plunges, community vibes, and lifestyle experiences.
Yet behind the glossy Instagram feeds lies a brutal truth:
👉 Many boutique gyms in Singapore operate on razor-thin margins.
👉 Even well-funded concepts can struggle to stay sustainable.
👉 And sometimes, closures happen faster than members expect.
The recent shutdown announcement by Trapeze Rec. Club (TRC) has reignited an important conversation across the local fitness community.
Was it just rising costs?
Or does it reveal deeper structural challenges in Singapore’s boutique fitness market?
In this deep-dive, RAW Active breaks down:
- What officially happened
- The hidden economics of running a premium gym
- Why boutique concepts face mounting pressure
- The breakeven math most operators don’t talk about
- What gym owners — and members — should really watch for
If you are a gym owner, investor, or serious fitness consumer in Singapore, this is essential reading.
What Happened to Trapeze Rec. Club?
In March 2026, TRC announced it would cease operations, with its final day set for 22 March.
According to statements by founder Grant Wee, the key reason was simple:
Rising costs made continuing at the current location unsustainable.
The club occupied an approximately 8,000 sq ft four-storey shophouse in Tanjong Pagar and offered a wide range of services including martial arts, yoga, gym training, recovery suites, and an in-house café. (The Business Times)
On the surface, the explanation sounds straightforward. But within Singapore’s fitness ecosystem, operators immediately recognised familiar warning signs.
To understand why, we need to zoom out.
The Brutal Economics of Running a Gym in Singapore
If you’ve ever wondered why gyms frequently open — and sometimes suddenly close — the numbers tell the story.
A recent industry breakdown found that opening a gym in Singapore can require anywhere from S$150,000 to over S$800,000 depending on size and concept. (Vulcan Post)
But startup cost is only the beginning.
Monthly burn is the real killer
Operators interviewed in the same report revealed:
- Smaller gyms can spend ~S$25,300 monthly
- Larger franchise gyms may hit ~S$55,000 monthly or more
- Owners often need hundreds of thousands in reserves to survive the first year (Vulcan Post)
And that’s for standard gyms — not premium multi-experience wellness clubs.
The reality is harsh:
“Cash burns fast… Most gyms don’t close because the owner lacks passion… They close because they run out of money.” (Vulcan Post)
That quote alone explains much of what we’re seeing in the market.
Why Premium Wellness Clubs Face Even Higher Risk
TRC was not a basic neighbourhood gym. It positioned itself as a holistic lifestyle wellness club.
From a branding standpoint, that’s attractive.
From a cost standpoint, it’s dangerous.
The hidden cost stack
Premium wellness clubs typically carry:
- Larger floor plates
- Prime CBD or city-fringe rent
- More specialised staff
- Recovery utilities (sauna, cold plunge)
- Higher fit-out amortisation
- Community/event programming costs
Each layer adds fixed cost pressure.
In Singapore — where rent is among the highest in Asia — this compounds quickly.
The Breakeven Math Most People Never See
Let’s run a realistic model using publicly available benchmarks and TRC’s known footprint.
Step 1: Known size
TRC occupied approximately:
👉 8,000 sq ft in Tanjong Pagar (The Business Times)
This immediately puts it in the large boutique category, not a small studio.
Step 2: Estimated monthly cost structure
Based on Singapore market averages:
Rent (CBD shophouse estimate)
Typical commercial rents in prime city areas often range around $10–$16 psf/month (industry typical).
For 8,000 sq ft:
- Low estimate: $80,000
- Mid estimate: $120,000–$140,000
- High estimate: $160,000+
Staffing
A full-service club requires:
- coaches
- front desk
- recovery therapists
- operations
- management
Realistic monthly payroll:
👉 $120,000–$160,000
Utilities + operations
Recovery facilities are energy-intensive.
Estimated:
👉 $40,000–$70,000 monthly
Step 3: Realistic total monthly burn
Putting it together:
Conservative scenario: ~$290,000/month
Likely premium scenario: ~$320,000–$380,000/month
This is where many boutique operators start to sweat.
How Many Members Would TRC Need to Survive?
Here’s the uncomfortable math.
TRC’s published pricing showed:
- Monthly all-access: $380
- Specialised memberships: $340
- Recovery-only: $290 (Trapeze Rec. Club)
A realistic blended ARPU (average revenue per user) might be:
👉 ~$240–$270
Breakeven membership requirement
Using a mid burn of $330,000/month:
- At $240 ARPU → ~1,375 members
- At $260 ARPU → ~1,270 members
For context:
Most boutique studios in Singapore operate comfortably at:
- 600–900 members
- 1,000+ is already strong
- Sustaining 1,300–1,500 active members is very challenging
This is the structural tension many operators face.
The Singapore Boutique Fitness Squeeze
TRC’s situation reflects a broader industry pattern.
Singapore now has over 500 gyms, with numbers still growing. (Vulcan Post)
At the same time:
- Consumer wallets are finite
- Boutique competition is intense
- Class-based fatigue is rising
- Post-pandemic habits have stabilised
In simple terms:
👉 Supply is growing faster than premium demand.
This puts pressure on mid-premium concepts especially.
Why “Rising Costs” Is Often Industry Code
When gym operators say:
- “not sustainable”
- “rising costs”
- “reviewing our options”
Industry insiders usually read between the lines.
It typically means one or more of:
- margins shrinking
- membership growth plateauing
- rent step-up approaching
- capital redeployment decisions
Importantly, it does not necessarily mean crisis or insolvency.
In many cases, it’s a strategic exit before losses deepen.
The Lease Renewal Factor
One key detail in TRC’s announcement was the upcoming lease review.
Founder Grant Wee noted the team took “a hard look” at the future ahead of the renewal. (The Business Times)
This is significant.
In Singapore commercial real estate:
- Lease renewals often come with rent increases
- Landlords reprice successful locations
- Fit-out depreciation may still be ongoing
For high-fixed-cost gyms, lease renewal is often the make-or-break moment.
Many closures in Singapore’s fitness history cluster around this exact trigger.
Was TRC Failing?
Based on publicly available evidence:
What we can say with confidence
✅ The club faced rising cost pressure
✅ It was approaching lease renewal
✅ It operated a high-fixed-cost model
✅ The founder chose not to continue
What we cannot confirm
❌ No public evidence of insolvency
❌ No reports of regulatory action
❌ No confirmed major disputes
The most evidence-based interpretation is:
👉 TRC likely faced unfavourable unit economics rather than sudden collapse.
A Pattern Seen Across Singapore’s Fitness Scene
The closure fits a pattern seen repeatedly in the local market.
Over the past few years, Singapore has seen multiple gym and boutique studio shutdowns despite strong branding.
The core reason rarely changes:
Fixed costs rise faster than member growth.
When that gap persists long enough, operators eventually make a strategic call.
What Gym Owners Should Learn From This
At RAW Active, we believe the TRC case offers valuable lessons for the industry.
Lesson 1: Size discipline matters
Bigger is not always better in Singapore.
Large footprints create:
- higher breakeven
- longer payback
- greater lease risk
- more staffing complexity
Smaller, focused formats often achieve profitability faster.
Lesson 2: Premium positioning must match market depth
Singapore has strong fitness demand — but the ultra-premium segment is still relatively narrow.
Operators must realistically assess:
- true addressable market
- price elasticity
- member churn behaviour
- competitive density
Overestimating premium demand is a common pitfall.
Lesson 3: Recovery and lifestyle add cost, not just value
Cold plunges, saunas, cafés, and community spaces are attractive — but each adds:
- capex
- utilities
- manpower
- maintenance
The key question every operator must ask:
👉 Does each feature drive measurable revenue or retention?
If not, it becomes margin dilution.
Lesson 4: Lease strategy is critical in Singapore
Many gym failures are not caused by poor concepts — but by real estate math.
Smart operators plan:
- exit clauses
- renewal buffers
- location flexibility
- landlord negotiations early
Lease risk is often underestimated by new entrants.
What Fitness Consumers Should Watch For
For members, situations like TRC’s closure highlight important considerations.
Before committing to large prepaid packages, it’s wise to assess:
- how long the gym has operated
- whether the location is lease-secure
- business model sustainability
- community stability
- refund policies
A beautiful facility does not always equal long-term viability.
The Future of Boutique Fitness in Singapore
Despite the challenges, the outlook is not negative — but it is evolving.
We are likely to see:
- more specialised micro-studios
- hybrid fitness-recovery models
- flexible membership structures
- stronger community-driven brands
- operators prioritising capital efficiency
The era of “build big and hope members come” is fading.
The next winners will be those who master both experience and economics.
RAW Active’s Perspective
At RAW Active, we believe the future of fitness in Singapore belongs to operators who balance:
- smart footprint strategy
- disciplined cost structure
- strong coaching quality
- authentic community building
- sustainable pricing models
The lesson from TRC is not that boutique fitness is failing.
It is that execution and economics must evolve with the market.
Final Thoughts
The closure of Trapeze Rec. Club is a reminder that even well-conceptualised wellness clubs face real financial gravity in Singapore.
Behind every beautiful gym lies a simple equation:
Members × Retention × Pricing must consistently outrun fixed costs.
When that balance tilts — even slightly — the pressure builds quietly until a strategic decision is made.
For gym owners, the message is clear:
Passion builds the brand.
But unit economics keeps the doors open.
About RAW Active
RAW Active is committed to delivering sustainable, high-quality fitness experiences in Singapore through smart programming, strong coaching, and community-first design.
👉 Visit: https://rawactivesg.com
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- Beyond the Comfort Zone: Embracing the Unknown in Fitness and Life - November 14, 2025