Short answer: One-time payment delivers fast cash flow and simpler first launches; subscriptions build predictable MRR but demand ongoing content and retention ops. In 2026 most solo trainers start with a single 8–12 week purchase ($79–$149), then add a monthly club with fresh workouts. On FitSpace you can combine both: flagship course one-time, upsell community subscription.
Pricing model is not accounting—it is the promise to the student. “Pay once, transform in eight weeks” and “pay monthly, stay fit for years” sell to different people and need different operations. The mistake is copying Netflix subscriptions without a content and support rhythm.
Below is a comparison with numbers for a typical trainer with 500–5,000 Instagram or TikTok followers. See also pricing, course page design, and FitSpace for trainers.
One-time payment: when it wins
A single purchase is classic info-product economics: the student pays $99, gets six to twelve months access to “Home Strength in Ten Weeks.” Pros for the author: larger day-one revenue, clear launch marketing (“buy now, start Monday”), less monthly churn anxiety.
Cons: you re-hunt demand every quarter; without email, LTV caps at one sale. Healthy refund rates on well-packaged courses run 3–7%; impulse promos can hit 12%.
- Best for: first launch, a bounded 4–12 week syllabus, audiences tired of “another subscription.”
- Typical price band: $49–$199 depending on coaching depth.
- Platform: FitSpace or GetCourse with timed access—not a Telegram folder.
Subscriptions: MRR, churn, hidden workload
A $19–$39/month plan promises ever-fresh workouts. Two hundred members at $29 ≈ $5,800 MRR—seductive. But monthly churn of 8–15% is common without strong community: after a year, 20–35% of cohort one may remain.
Subscriptions need rhythm: a new micro-cycle every two to four weeks, live Q&A, moderated chat. Solo trainers on GetCourse often burn out by month four updating “next Monday’s plan” alone.
Decision prose: if you can spend 6–10 h/week on content and chat—subscription; if the product is one eight-week method—one-time; corporate wellness B2B—annualized subscription contracts.
Hybrid: flagship plus club—the 2026 pattern
A FitSpace pattern: core course $99 one-time (12-month access). Upsell after week four: “Support Club” $19/month—short add-ons, Telegram form checks, discount on the next season. Conversion among happy graduates: 15–25%.
You are not selling “subscription instead of results”; you extend the relationship post-transformation. Pair with post-launch promotion: “two weeks left—join the club” beats cold ads.
- One-time product fills launch cash.
- Subscription monetizes the top 20% engaged.
- Club churn is lower than naked subscription without a base course.
Cash flow and a 12-month sketch
Example solo trainer: launch 80 sales × $99 = $7,920 in a month (minus 5–10% platform fee and ads). Subscription at $29 with 50 starters = $1,450 MRR—smaller spike, steadier at six months with 10% churn.
Do not merge forecasts: one-time launch is a spike; subscription is a plateau. Plan taxes and your online pivot with a 2–3 month no-sales reserve.
GetCourse, Telegram, and FitSpace: model meets platform
GetCourse excels at recurring billing and funnels but weak fitness UX. Telegram “$15/month channel” sees high churn and piracy risk. FitSpace offers app delivery, one-time products, and recurring in one author dashboard—see platform comparison.
If you already sell in Telegram, migrate gently: first season one-time on platform, chat stays in Telegram as bonus, then structure the club as a real tier.
Choose tonight: decision checklist
- Finished 4–12 week syllabus with a clear finale? → one-time.
- Can you ship new content every 14 days indefinitely? → subscription.
- Target LTV >$250 per client? → hybrid.
- Audience says “no more subscriptions”? → one-time plus optional club.
- Need fast cash for gear or relocation? → one-time launch.
State the model clearly on the sales page: “single payment, 365-day access, no auto-bill” or “subscription, cancel anytime.” Transparency cuts chargebacks—tie to retention and completion.
LTV sketch for three models
One-time course $99 × 120 sales/year = $11,880 without repeats. Subscription $19 × 150 average active × twelve months at 10% monthly churn lands roughly $24–28k only if you ship content reliably. Hybrid: eighty × $99 plus 20% join a $19/month club for eight months ≈ $7,920 + $2,432 = $10,352 with less ops load than pure subscription.
For solo trainers without staff, hybrid often wins: one big launch per quarter plus a club of eighty to 120 members. Do not chase MRR for dashboard screenshots—sustainability beats vanity metrics on GetCourse.
When students compare you to gym memberships ($40–70/month), anchor value: structured progression, app delivery, optional Telegram community—not “random workouts uploaded.” That framing supports both one-time and club tiers on FitSpace.
Before launch, ask your email list one question: “one-time program or subscription?”—a 70/30 split ends guesswork. If most hate subscriptions, do not force MRR; add a club upsell later.
Payment UX matters: failed recurring charges drive silent churn. On FitSpace, test checkout on mobile; on GetCourse, audit auto-billing emails. One failed retry sequence can cost 5–8% monthly revenue.
Refund and expectation policy by model
One-time launches: 7–14 day “try week one” windows reduce fear without open-ended refunds. Subscriptions: publish cancel flow in FAQ—hidden cancel links destroy trust on Trustpilot and Telegram. Hybrid: state that club is optional after the core program completes; do not auto-enroll graduates without consent.
Run a post-purchase survey at day fourteen: “Would you prefer monthly club or next season one-time?” Answers guide your second SKU better than guessing in a GetCourse pricing spreadsheet.
Frequently asked questions
- Can I mix one-time and subscription on FitSpace? Yes—separate products, shared student base.
- When is subscription too cheap? Below ~$9/month rarely covers support; feels like “just another channel.”
- GetCourse or FitSpace for recurring? GetCourse for heavy funnels; FitSpace when workouts live in an app.
- How to cut subscription churn? Onboarding, monthly live, milestone DMs, 30-day pause instead of cancel.
- One-time access length? Six to twelve months balances urgency; “lifetime” can cannibalize the next launch.
- Installments on one-time? Yes above ~$99—often +10–20% conversion at similar LTV.
Your monetization model should match the transformation promise, not MRR fashion. When you pick a format, create your course on FitSpace and study one-time and club packaging on trainer profiles.