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by gobdovan 19 days ago
> gym memberships are subsidized by people who barely go to the gym and would be better served by buying day passes

In my country, they're priced in such a way that day passes never make sense. If a monthly subscription is 50 EUR, a day pass is 18 EUR. So you'd need to go less than once a week for it to be better than a Gym subscription. But at that level of gym-going, you'd never see any kind of progress, unless you do very specific training, like very heavy lifts.

So, as a rational actor you're left concluding that the only options are:

- gym membership: you can grow muscle if you go daily; you won't see much benefit if you don't. <- reasonable

- no gym membership: you feel bad. <- suboptimal both for money and for muscle

- day passes: no muscle growth <- reasonable but then you feel bad about yourself

So, the middle is squished out completely and you're left either feeling bad or buying a membership. This presupposes you don't have alternatives for growing muscles, such as calisthenics, parks, free weights at home, which is the case for many. I can only conclude daily passes are for heavy gym goers that are traveling and don't want to lose progress, or other situations with people whose demand temporarily inelastic or non-repeatable.

1 comments

Day passes are there to make the monthly look good. And if the average user goes to the gym twice a month, they’re optimal for the average.

But day passes force you to admit this and be sad, whereas if you have a monthly pass you can be happy because obviously tomorrow you’re going to go to the gym.