How this usually works
A practical process with a tax accountant for gyms starts with a short review: structure (sole trader, company, trust), software stack (Xero/MYOB/QuickBooks plus Mindbody, GymMaster, Clubworx, Zen Planner, Wodify or similar), payment gateways (Ezidebit, Stripe, PaySmart, DebitSuccess), payroll setup, BAS lodgement rhythm and any immediate ATO deadlines.
Work then splits into three layers:
1) Triage. Fix urgent BAS or tax lodgements, correct GST coding on memberships and packs, clean bank rules, and bring payroll/STP into line with the Fitness Industry Award settings.
2) Process design. Map how revenue and settlements hit the bank, reconcile daily takings, handle prepaid memberships and vouchers, create an asset register for equipment/fit‑out, and set quarterly review checkpoints.
3) Ongoing review. Month‑end health checks, BAS preparation, super on time, variance analysis on membership churn and average revenue per member (ARPM), and year‑end tax planning.
Australian context to keep in view
- Verify your practitioner on the Tax Practitioners Board public register (Tax and BAS agents must be registered in Australia).
- Most fitness services attract GST. Some allied health services may be GST‑free when delivered by recognised professionals; apply the correct rule per service.
- Prepaid memberships and gift cards have specific timing and GST considerations—track unearned revenue and redemptions accurately.
- Payroll should reflect STP Phase 2, current super guarantee and Fitness Industry Award loadings/penalties for early mornings, evenings and weekends.
- Small business asset deduction thresholds change from time to time; confirm current rules before large equipment or fit‑out purchases.
- Keep strong documentation: signed PT agreements, subcontractor ABNs, insurance evidence, music licensing (e.g., APRA AMCOS), and lease terms.
What to compare before you commit
Scope
Confirm your quote includes gym‑specific tasks: GST review of memberships and packs, prepaid revenue treatment, BAS, payroll under the Fitness Industry Award, end‑of‑year tax and asset registers.
Software fit
Choose someone fluent in your gym platform (Mindbody, GymMaster, Clubworx, Zen Planner, Wodify, Xplor, TeamUp) and accounting software (Xero/MYOB/QuickBooks), including settlement reconciliations.
Turnaround and communication
Ask about month‑end timelines, BAS cut‑offs, how urgent ATO matters are escalated, and preferred channels for gym managers and owners.
Commercial fit
Compare fixed vs hourly pricing, multi‑site or franchise experience, reporting packs (member growth, ARPM, class utilisation) and whether you need compliance only or proactive tax planning.
Best next steps
Define the outcome you want first: a clean BAS, correct GST on memberships, payroll confidence, or a full year‑end tax plan. Then shortlist providers who can show gym examples and explain the workflow clearly.
Gather essentials before the first call: last two BAS statements, payroll reports, super payment history, merchant/settlement summaries, access to your gym platform and accounting file, and copies of major contracts (lease, franchise, PT agreements).
If your need leans toward daily records, move to bookkeeping for gyms. For staff and rosters, go to payroll services for gyms. For tax strategy or returns, see the broader tax accountant hub or BAS agent services for lodgements.
Frequently asked questions
Are gym membership fees GST-free?
Generally no. Most gym and fitness memberships attract GST. Allied health services (such as exercise physiology) may be GST‑free when delivered by recognised professionals under specific criteria. Split your services correctly and code GST per line item.
How do we handle prepaid memberships, joining fees and gift cards?
Prepaid access is typically treated as unearned revenue and recognised as members consume the service. Joining fees are usually taxable income. Gift cards and vouchers have specific GST timing rules; track liability and redemption so GST and income recognition occur at the right time.
Can we claim equipment and fit-out?
Yes, but most items are capital. Maintain an asset register and claim depreciation. Immediate deduction thresholds for small businesses change periodically, so check current rules before buying large items.
Are personal trainers contractors or employees?
It depends on control, tools, risk and how they are paid. Some PTs are genuine contractors with ABNs; others are employees. The status changes PAYG withholding, superannuation, workers comp and award obligations. Review agreements against the Fitness Industry Award and ATO guidance.