Personal training, is it worth it?

CommitSudoku
CommitSudoku Posts: 28 Member
edited November 15 in Fitness and Exercise
I'm currently considering a trainer for some guidance and help. Although i'm sure i can figure out what to do along the way, it would be nice to get advice from someone who has been there and understands what i need for results. So the gym membership will be $38 a month and i would pay for 2 days per week for $100 weekly. They would also give me a plan and advice on what to eat. What aren your opinions and experiences with trainers?
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Replies

  • 2011rocket3touring
    2011rocket3touring Posts: 1,346 Member
    If you can afford it then go ahead. If it's a tough squeeze you'll have to ask what are your goals?
    My mentor is a super fit coworker. He trained his wife to win 2 fitness contests bikini division, it was closer to the end when she got a posing coach and took a couple of classes.
  • lorrpb
    lorrpb Posts: 11,463 Member
    I would not have accomplished what I did without my trainer. Every person is different and every trainer is different. I would encourage you to try it, but don't get locked into any long term contracts off the bat.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    Like any profession, there are good ones, ok ones, and awful ones. I have a trainer that I don't work with directly so much anymore, but I chose him for some very specific training objectives...before him, I went through a few different trainers that just didn't work out for various reasons.

    I'd be somewhat wary of nutritional/diet advice...some are well versed and are also educated in that field, but a lot of trainers simply get an online certification for training but there's not a whole lot of nutrition involved so they just parrot whatever is currently trendy in health and fitness magazines.

    My trainer is not only a certified trainer, he has a degree in exercise physiology as well as a masters in nutrition and dietetics. He also has an extensive resume...he's a retired multi time national champion and world champion BMX pro and maintains his sponsorships by participating in certain BMX events...he is also one of the team USA BMX coaches and beyond that, he coaches a number of pro BMX riders as well as a few pro road cyclists and a whole lot of cycling enthusiasts. All of this was important to me when I got more serious about certain fitness aspirations.

    My first few trainers were fine for the most part, but mostly regurgitated things I was able to just read in magazines...it was early days though and I mostly just needed someone to push me a little harder in my workouts...I had the diet stuff down on my own and had been losing weight just fine without a trainer.
  • ChristopherLimoges
    ChristopherLimoges Posts: 298 Member
    Nothing wrong when hiring a trainer. Somewhere over 75% of people injure themselves all the time because they jump into the gym without a know-how with what they're doing, and by trying to rush their way to success.
  • KirbyFortin1
    KirbyFortin1 Posts: 49 Member
    I believe your profile says you are from La Porte, Texas? You should look into Camp Gladiator if there are camps nearby and convenient to you. It is an outdoor bootcamp like program that (if you commit for 6 months) is $79/month for UNLIMITED camps. They have an offshoot in Orlando where I am and the trainers are AMAZING... it isn't one-on-one training but there are often no more than 10-15 people at any one 1 hour camp session and the trainers do an amazing job of personalizing and giving one-on-one attention.

    Message me if you want more information and my honest review as I have been a paying customer for over a year and would NOT think about doing anything else!
  • Amella21
    Amella21 Posts: 2 Member
    My trainer gave me confidence and always answered all of my questions. It is important to "click" with who you choose. No matter what you pay you'll never get the best results unless you get along with the person, in my opinion.
  • RavenLibra
    RavenLibra Posts: 1,737 Member
    Credentials are important... what qualifies him/her as a personal fitness trainer. ask for references and follow up with those references. A trainer is great if you have well defined goals, or require someone to show you how things (equipment) work in the gym you are in. a better tactic is to start with some fitness classes... get moving... and work the cardio for a while... talk to some of the regulars that seem to have the body and look you are thinking would look good on you... MFP is an important resource read forums that make sense... stay away from the "bro science"
  • cgvet37
    cgvet37 Posts: 1,189 Member
    It was for me.
  • Hello_its_Dan
    Hello_its_Dan Posts: 406 Member
    Yep.
  • ajoseph5
    ajoseph5 Posts: 25 Member
    Make sure the trainer you get has your best interest at heart and your getting the necessary benefits not only to give you confidence but the motivation and training you need to reach your goal.
  • Ready2Rock206
    Ready2Rock206 Posts: 9,487 Member
    A good one is totally worth it. A bad one not so much. I had a fabulous one and he had to quit. I am so sad. I tried a few others before I found one decent enough to stick with for now but he doesn't even compare to the one I had.
  • buffalogal42
    buffalogal42 Posts: 374 Member
    My trainer is fabulous and pushes me beyond what I would ever do on my own. Results have come much faster than I thought. I'll stick with him as long as I can afford it!
  • Fallfrenzy
    Fallfrenzy Posts: 118 Member
    When I was first starting strength training, I found it more helpful to have the personal trainer to make sure I was doing things right and for variety. My first trainer did push me when she saw that what I was capable of. This was many years ago. Now, I have a trainer for a certain number of sessions if I want the push and different exercises that I could be doing for the same muscles to change things up a bit.
  • jdhcm2006
    jdhcm2006 Posts: 2,254 Member
    I didn't think that trainers were allowed to give nutritional advice unless they were a registered dietician. If that trainer isn't, I would take that advice with a grain of salt.

    It depends on your goals and what the trainer is certified and trained in. I've gone through about 3 or 4 trainers before finding the one I'm currently with. I would tell them I wanted to learn how to lift heavy and they would put me on machines. I finally found one who's trained by an Olympic weight lifter who was willing to train me properly. She hasn't put me on 1 machine (outside of the pull-up machine 1 or 2 times).

    I feel like my current trainer is worth the money bc her advice is solid and helping me towards my goals. Once I run out of sessions, I'll be able to go on by myself with little to no problem. Those other trainers were a complete waste of my money.

    Figure out what your fitness goals are and find someone who will help you achieve them. And remember that the trainer works for you, and not the other way around, so if you feel like you aren't getting the most out of your sessions, you have the right to call them out on it so they can fix the issue. If they can't fix it, then it's time to find another trainer.
  • pondee629
    pondee629 Posts: 2,469 Member
    FWIW when I was training for my half marathon I hired a running coach to provide a training plan. Yes, I could have used a generic plan from the net; Yes, those plans were not significantly different from the plan I got from the coach, the coach's plan was updated weekly based upon my feed back to the prior weeks schedule; Yes, giving the feedback did help me get through that weeks schedule. In short, I found having the coach to be helpful. Perhaps, however, you need only a once a week meeting together with a weekly workout schedule.
  • akboy58
    akboy58 Posts: 137 Member
    edited February 2017
    Having a trainer has been incredibly helpful for me. The guy I train with has a background in physical therapy, and I have a background in overtraining and chronic injury, so it's a good fit :-/. He never offered specific diet advice, but early in our training he kept telling me how much more we could do if I lost some weight; and he turned me on to MFP. Three years later I'm down 75 lbs, am free of sleep apnea, and my doctor has taken me off medications for high BP, cholesterol, and a heart arhythmia. My trainer pushes me relentlessly but carefully; we never do the same workout twice, and I am appropriately sore after every session. Among other things he provides a) consistency, and b) encouragement. I am moving and performing in ways I never thought possible, and at levels significantly above what I was capable of when I was young and injury-free. Sounds like an infomercial, I know, but I'm a convert. Bottom line: for me, it's worth every penny.
  • dulcitonia
    dulcitonia Posts: 278 Member
    I've hurt myself twice getting too confident with my exercise routine.
    I started working with a trainer last week to help me with form and pace. They put me through the wringer. I've got muscles sore that I didn't know I had. Worth the money
  • MeanderingMammal
    MeanderingMammal Posts: 7,866 Member
    Only you can judge whether it's worth it or not, but bluntly 400 USD per month sounds like a lot when you don't identify a specific purpose.

    I can see value in it if you have specific training objectives; 1:50 Half Marathon or something like that. For that kind of money you could qualify as a personal trainer yourself in six months.
  • FatPorkyChop
    FatPorkyChop Posts: 83 Member
    Absolutely worth it! I did Brazilian Jiu Jitsu in PT (I was a beginner) and it brought me to my fittest in no time. Beside, it was really enjoyable and boost my confidence.
  • geebusuk
    geebusuk Posts: 3,348 Member
    Appreciate that personal trainers are in the business of getting people to pay for personal training.

    This has to be their main point of their business in reality.

    So you'll often find those offering 'pop' advice which will appeal, even if other simpler advice might do fine even though people may not like it - and exercise suggestions that justify you going back to them.

    Alas, in a evolutionary world, those that don't work like this don't tend to survive; of course there are plenty that do offer a 100% excellent service doing the best they reasonably can for you.
  • blackcomaro
    blackcomaro Posts: 796 Member
    They are if your new to lifting, or your someone who needs the added motivation.
  • tarothelp
    tarothelp Posts: 167 Member
    YES
  • CommitSudoku
    CommitSudoku Posts: 28 Member
    CarShelley wrote: »
    Absolutely worth it! I did Brazilian Jiu Jitsu in PT (I was a beginner) and it brought me to my fittest in no time. Beside, it was really enjoyable and boost my confidence.

    That sounds fun too, i've always wanted to try Jiu Jitsu but it's so hard to find a program that works with my schedule. So that's why i'm currently considering a personal trainer.
  • CommitSudoku
    CommitSudoku Posts: 28 Member
    Only you can judge whether it's worth it or not, but bluntly 400 USD per month sounds like a lot when you don't identify a specific purpose.

    I can see value in it if you have specific training objectives; 1:50 Half Marathon or something like that. For that kind of money you could qualify as a personal trainer yourself in six months.

    I'm a dummy and it was hard to fully explain how much it would cost, i would only pay the membership and one week to see the trainer twice. So really, it would be somewhere between $138-$200, I put that higher price there in case I didn't catch everything they had pitched to me. When a lot of information I'd thrown at me, I get confused. Lol I'm a special case.

    However, it is still expensive for me at this time and I would have to plan it out carefully for it to work. Like.. stop eating out and spending money on things I don't need. ;; My main objective is to get leaner, but stay toned. So really, a basic get fit for most girls.
  • CommitSudoku
    CommitSudoku Posts: 28 Member
    akboy58 wrote: »
    Having a trainer has been incredibly helpful for me. The guy I train with has a background in physical therapy, and I have a background in overtraining and chronic injury, so it's a good fit :-/. He never offered specific diet advice, but early in our training he kept telling me how much more we could do if I lost some weight; and he turned me on to MFP. Three years later I'm down 75 lbs, am free of sleep apnea, and my doctor has taken me off medications for high BP, cholesterol, and a heart arhythmia. My trainer pushes me relentlessly but carefully; we never do the same workout twice, and I am appropriately sore after every session. Among other things he provides a) consistency, and b) encouragement. I am moving and performing in ways I never thought possible, and at levels significantly above what I was capable of when I was young and injury-free. Sounds like an infomercial, I know, but I'm a convert. Bottom line: for me, it's worth every penny.

    That is extremely inspiring, thanks for sharing!
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    jdhcm2006 wrote: »
    I didn't think that trainers were allowed to give nutritional advice unless they were a registered dietician. If that trainer isn't, I would take that advice with a grain of salt.

    It depends on your goals and what the trainer is certified and trained in. I've gone through about 3 or 4 trainers before finding the one I'm currently with. I would tell them I wanted to learn how to lift heavy and they would put me on machines. I finally found one who's trained by an Olympic weight lifter who was willing to train me properly. She hasn't put me on 1 machine (outside of the pull-up machine 1 or 2 times).

    I feel like my current trainer is worth the money bc her advice is solid and helping me towards my goals. Once I run out of sessions, I'll be able to go on by myself with little to no problem. Those other trainers were a complete waste of my money.

    Figure out what your fitness goals are and find someone who will help you achieve them. And remember that the trainer works for you, and not the other way around, so if you feel like you aren't getting the most out of your sessions, you have the right to call them out on it so they can fix the issue. If they can't fix it, then it's time to find another trainer.

    This varies considerably by state...

    http://www.nutritionadvocacy.org/laws-state
  • CommitSudoku
    CommitSudoku Posts: 28 Member
    I believe your profile says you are from La Porte, Texas? You should look into Camp Gladiator if there are camps nearby and convenient to you. It is an outdoor bootcamp like program that (if you commit for 6 months) is $79/month for UNLIMITED camps. They have an offshoot in Orlando where I am and the trainers are AMAZING... it isn't one-on-one training but there are often no more than 10-15 people at any one 1 hour camp session and the trainers do an amazing job of personalizing and giving one-on-one attention.

    Message me if you want more information and my honest review as I have been a paying customer for over a year and would NOT think about doing anything else!

    Camp Gladiator was recommended to me from a client at work and I am considering it. Just viewing all of my choices and trying to see what would work best for me. Personal training just kind of popped out because I feel like they would know just how to get me slim and know what's right for my body on a personal level. But the price for CG is lighter on my wallet for sure!
  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    bAKApANDII wrote: »
    I'm currently considering a trainer for some guidance and help. Although i'm sure i can figure out what to do along the way, it would be nice to get advice from someone who has been there and understands what i need for results. So the gym membership will be $38 a month and i would pay for 2 days per week for $100 weekly. They would also give me a plan and advice on what to eat. What aren your opinions and experiences with trainers?

    If you can, negotiate down to once weekly or every other week after 1-2 sessions, with them giving you a workout schedule/instructions to follow until the next session. A lot of gyms will have 1 evaluation trainer session free when joining.
  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    ..and assuming you are interested in weight training..I wouldn't bother with a trainer for cardio (the gym will probably have classes that are included for free with membership, or go running/cycling/do the hampster wheels in the gym).
  • jdhcm2006
    jdhcm2006 Posts: 2,254 Member
    edited February 2017
    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    jdhcm2006 wrote: »
    I didn't think that trainers were allowed to give nutritional advice unless they were a registered dietician. If that trainer isn't, I would take that advice with a grain of salt.

    It depends on your goals and what the trainer is certified and trained in. I've gone through about 3 or 4 trainers before finding the one I'm currently with. I would tell them I wanted to learn how to lift heavy and they would put me on machines. I finally found one who's trained by an Olympic weight lifter who was willing to train me properly. She hasn't put me on 1 machine (outside of the pull-up machine 1 or 2 times).

    I feel like my current trainer is worth the money bc her advice is solid and helping me towards my goals. Once I run out of sessions, I'll be able to go on by myself with little to no problem. Those other trainers were a complete waste of my money.

    Figure out what your fitness goals are and find someone who will help you achieve them. And remember that the trainer works for you, and not the other way around, so if you feel like you aren't getting the most out of your sessions, you have the right to call them out on it so they can fix the issue. If they can't fix it, then it's time to find another trainer.

    This varies considerably by state...

    http://www.nutritionadvocacy.org/laws-state

    Thanks for this info! In my state it is illegal to give nutritional info without being licensed.

    Edited to fix typo.
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