Personal Training

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  • deeman11747
    G-M*nnnn
    • Feb 2003
    • 3194

    #1

    Personal Training

    I have a lot of friends who have come to me over the last few months and asked me to get them into shape. I run and lift religiously when I'm out of season so people want to know how I do it.

    With me being unoccupied this summer, I was thinking about how I could turn this into money. I decided maybe I could do some personal training for them... charging them relatively cheap amounts to help get them into shape.

    My question is... do I necessarily need a license? If the whole thign is unofficial and off the books, is it required for legal reasons?

    Any of you guys in experience with this, can you help a brother out?

  • sbmnky
    #ITFDB
    • Mar 2003
    • 1206

    #2
    Re: Personal Training

    Originally posted by deeman11747
    I have a lot of friends who have come to me over the last few months and asked me to get them into shape. I run and lift religiously when I'm out of season so people want to know how I do it.

    With me being unoccupied this summer, I was thinking about how I could turn this into money. I decided maybe I could do some personal training for them... charging them relatively cheap amounts to help get them into shape.

    My question is... do I necessarily need a license? If the whole thign is unofficial and off the books, is it required for legal reasons?

    Any of you guys in experience with this, can you help a brother out?
    As long as both you and the person you're training are members of the same gym, I don't see why you'd need to be 'official' at anything. I, however, wouldn't promote your 'business' without official accreditation. I don't think it takes but a weekend class to get some type of personal training accreditation - it might cost a few hundred bucks.

    You can check this out: NFPT

    Comment

    • deeman11747
      G-M*nnnn
      • Feb 2003
      • 3194

      #3
      Re: Personal Training

      Originally posted by sbmnky
      As long as both you and the person you're training are members of the same gym, I don't see why you'd need to be 'official' at anything. I, however, wouldn't promote your 'business' without official accreditation. I don't think it takes but a weekend class to get some type of personal training accreditation - it might cost a few hundred bucks.

      You can check this out: NFPT
      It wouldnt really be a "business" though. It would mainly be friends of friends and other acquaintances who have inquired how I keep in such good shape. I just wouldnt want to be legally liable if someone got hurt while training with me while they were paying.

      Comment

      • ehh
        Hall Of Fame
        • Mar 2003
        • 28959

        #4
        Re: Personal Training

        Originally posted by deeman11747
        It wouldnt really be a "business" though. It would mainly be friends of friends and other acquaintances who have inquired how I keep in such good shape. I just wouldnt want to be legally liable if someone got hurt while training with me while they were paying.
        I guess it depends on how many clients you have and how far it goes. Myself and my AAU coach I played for in HS run individual instruction sessions for basketball (charge $50/hr) but we do have a registered company (our AAU program) and keep track of everything as taxable income (unfortunately).

        In terms of legality, and I don't know this for sure, whatever you earn through this should probably be filed as taxable income (I'd guess under the "other income" category on the tax forms). But like gambling winnings there is no way the gov't can keep track of it.
        "You make your name in the regular season, and your fame in the postseason." - Clyde Frazier

        "Beware of geeks bearing formulas." - Warren Buffet

        Comment

        • rudyjuly2
          Cade Cunningham
          • Aug 2002
          • 14814

          #5
          Re: Personal Training

          Originally posted by deeman11747
          It wouldnt really be a "business" though. It would mainly be friends of friends and other acquaintances who have inquired how I keep in such good shape. I just wouldnt want to be legally liable if someone got hurt while training with me while they were paying.
          I wouldn't think you were a great friend if you were charging me for workout advice lol.

          Comment

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