
The first question most people ask is: how much does a personal trainer cost in Vancouver? That’s a reasonable starting point, but it’s not actually the most useful question. Rates vary a lot, and the number alone doesn’t tell you whether you’re getting value or getting ripped off.
This post covers what Vancouver trainers typically charge, what drives the price differences, and what should actually be included in the rate you pay.
Trainer pricing isn’t random. The variation you’ll see across different coaches comes down to a few consistent factors:
A trainer with 15 years of experience and advanced certifications charges more than someone six months into their career, and usually for good reason. More experience means better program design, faster problem-solving, and a higher ceiling on results. When you’re paying for a trainer, you’re paying for their accumulated knowledge, not just their time on the clock.
Downtown Vancouver trainers typically charge more than those operating in the suburbs. Part of this is gym rental costs; training in a premium facility has overhead that affects pricing. Part of it is market demand. If you’re training at a private studio or a higher-end gym, expect that to be reflected in the rate.

One-on-one in-person training is the most expensive format because it’s the most resource-intensive for the trainer. Online coaching allows for more clients at lower overhead, which is why it tends to come in at a lower monthly cost without sacrificing the quality of programming.
Standard sessions run 45 to 60 minutes. Some trainers offer 30-minute sessions at a reduced rate, which works well for people with tight schedules or specific goals that don’t require longer sessions. Most trainers, including Train Like Rob, offer reduced per-session pricing when you purchase a block of sessions upfront.
Here’s what you can generally expect to pay in the Vancouver market:
| Session Type | Format | Typical Rate (Vancouver) |
|---|---|---|
| In-Person 30 min | 1-on-1 | $40 – $60 |
| In-Person 60 min | 1-on-1 | $70 – $120 |
| Online Coaching | Monthly | $200 – $500/month |
These are market ranges, not guarantees. A trainer at the lower end of in-person rates may be newer to the industry or working out of a less expensive facility. A trainer charging at the top of those ranges is typically bringing significant experience, a track record of results, and a higher level of service.
Online coaching tends to get underestimated because people assume less face time means less coaching. That assumption is usually wrong.
With Train Like Rob’s online coaching, clients get custom weekly training programs, video form checks, weekly check-ins via call or voice message, and full accountability tracking — all from their phone. For busy professionals who travel, work irregular hours, or prefer to train at home or in a condo gym, online coaching delivers everything that matters without the scheduling constraints of in-person sessions.
It’s also genuinely more affordable. The lower monthly rate isn’t a reflection of lower quality — it reflects the operational difference between showing up at a gym and coaching through a platform.
This is where the real comparison happens. Two trainers charging the same per-session rate can deliver wildly different levels of service. Here’s what you should expect from a professional coaching engagement:
If a trainer is just showing up, counting reps, and collecting payment, you’re not getting what you’re paying for, regardless of the rate.

The cheapest option is rarely the most cost-effective one. A trainer who doesn’t customize your program, doesn’t adjust it when you plateau, and doesn’t follow up between sessions can cost you months of wasted effort. That time has a value too.
What you’re really investing in when you hire a trainer is the acceleration of results. Getting to your goal in four months instead of fourteen months, or avoiding an injury that would have set you back six months — that’s where the return on a higher rate shows up.
When you’re evaluating options, ask what’s included, how often you’ll communicate outside sessions, and whether the program adjusts as you progress. Those answers matter more than the per-session number.
If you’re a beginner, returning from injury, or you need hands-on feedback to stay accountable, in-person training is worth the premium. The real-time form correction and physical presence of a coach make a meaningful difference in those situations.
If you’re self-motivated, comfortable filming your lifts for form feedback, and value flexibility over having a fixed time slot, online coaching gives you everything you need at a lower cost. Many clients do both one in-person session per week with additional online sessions to fill out their training schedule.
The best way to figure out what format and investment level makes sense is to have a direct conversation about your goals, your schedule, and what’s worked or failed before.
→ Book a free consultation at trainlikerob.net/book-now