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How to Collect More Cash from Your Martial Arts School: Powerful Strategies That Work

How to Collect More Cash from Your Martial Arts School: Powerful Strategies That Work

Table of Contents

Hey everyone, it’s Donovan here. If you’re running a martial arts school and feeling like you’re leaving money on the table every month, you’re not alone. I’ve worked with hundreds of dojo owners just like you, helping them boost memberships and revenue without burning out or resorting to gimmicks. Today, I want to share four straightforward ways to get more cash flowing from your existing students. These aren’t fluffy ideas; they’re tested systems that my highest-earning clients use to maximise profits.

Before we dive in, a quick disclaimer: only use these if you actually want to make more money. If you’re happy with less in the bank, skip this entirely. I’ll walk you through them in reverse order, saving the best for last. These last two are game-changers; they’ll deliver the biggest returns in the shortest time.

Stick with me, and by the end, you’ll have actionable steps to implement right away.

Let's start with the basics.

Strategy 1: Increase Your Prices
This one is obvious, but most school owners aren’t charging enough. I see average prices around £39, £49, or £59 a month for three classes a week, often with tiered options like once-a-week or unlimited. The top-performing clubs charge more—think £49, £59, £79, or even £97 per month.
Why does this matter? If competing schools charge higher and attract as many or more students, they have extra cash to reinvest in advertising, pulling ahead while you’re stuck. If you’re at £20 a month and wondering why profits are slim, raising prices is your first move. Don’t jump drastically; test a small increase and see how it lands. In my experience, students value quality instruction and stick around when they see the benefits.

Strategy 1

Increase Your Prices

This one is obvious, but most school owners aren't charging enough. I see average prices around £39, £49, or £59 a month for three classes a week, often with tiered options like once-a-week or unlimited.

The top-performing clubs charge more—think £49, £59, £79, or even £97 per month.

Average Schools
£39 - £59
per month
Top Performers
£49 - £97
per month

Why does this matter? If competing schools charge higher and attract as many or more students, they have extra cash to reinvest in advertising, pulling ahead while you're stuck.

If you're at £20 a month and wondering why profits are slim, raising prices is your first move. Don't jump drastically; test a small increase and see how it lands.

In my experience, students value quality instruction and stick around when they see the benefits.

Action Step: Review your current pricing against competitors. Start with a modest £5-£10 increase on new memberships and measure retention—you'll likely find students care more about value than price.

Strategy 2

Implement a Joining Fee

Here's a great way to boost upfront revenue without upsetting current members. When new students sign up, add a £49 joining fee that includes gear like gloves or a uniform. Aim for at least £20-30 profit per signup.

Picture this:
Without Joining Fee
£0
10 new students/month
With £30 Profit Fee
£300
per month

That's £3,600 yearly cash you can reinvest in growth.

£49
Typical Joining Fee
Includes gloves or uniform
£99
High Performers
Funneled into ads for growth

Many successful schools charge £99 upfront and funnel it straight into ads for more signups. Students feel they're getting value, and you build a buffer. I've seen clubs shy away from this, but those who embrace it grow faster.

Now, for the powerful ones. These next two have given my clients ridiculous returns. I'll take a bit more time here because they're worth it.

Strategy 3

Sell Courses to Existing Members

Credit where it's due—this idea came from Alex at Black Dog Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. He's collected an extra £3,000 leading up to Christmas by offering specialized courses to his current students.

Here's how it works: if you do private training (PTs) at £60 an hour, many members can't afford that. Cut the price in half to £30, but make it group-based—one instructor for a small class.

Traditional PT
£60
per hour / 1 person
Group Course Model
£30
per person / 10 people
"Untappable by Christmas" Defensive BJJ Course
10
People Max
£300
Per Person
10
Weeks

Alex earns £300 per hour with 10 participants

£3,000
for 10 hours total work

Result? Members pay less per hour but love the value. Alex earns £300 per hour with 10 participants—£3,000 for 10 hours total. It's a win-win: they improve skills, he works less and earns more.

If PTs are eating your time, steal this. For kickboxing or MMA, create a "Knockout Defense" course or similar. Charge half your PT rate, cap at 10, and watch the cash roll in.

1
Charge half your PT rate per person
2
Cap at 10 participants maximum
3
Create a specialty course theme
Strategy 4

Offer Higher-Tier Memberships

⭐ Donovan's Favorite

This is my favorite—it's simple and insanely effective. Approach your current students with limited higher-tier options: two one-year memberships, one five-year, and one lifetime.

One Year
£475
Save £125
2 spots available
Five Year
£3,000
Massive discount
1 spot available
Lifetime
£££
Ultimate value
1 spot available

Example message: "Hey, we're offering two one-year spots at £475 (save £125 on £50/month regular). Claim yours now!"

If two take the one-year offer, that's £950 instantly. For five-year, price at £3,000 (work out your discount). Lifetime? Set it high but appealing.

£950 Immediate Revenue

No one bites? No loss. But push it, and someone will. I know owners selling 10 one-years, 3-5 five-years, and 1-2 lifetimes annually.

Typical annual results from higher-tier memberships:

£20,000 - £30,000
extra yearly revenue

Expenses: £0 (They're existing members)

Use Black Friday or holidays to promote without cheap uniforms eating profits. These are pure revenue opportunities with zero additional cost.

If Lazy: Start With Tiers

Low effort, high reward. Simply email your list with limited spots. No extra work, no inventory, just immediate cash flow from existing members.

Want More Work? Sell Courses

More work but added value. Create specialized training programs. Students get better results, you earn premium rates per hour.

These two strategies shine for quick wins. Either way, you'll collect more from students you already have. The money is in your existing member base—you just need to give them the opportunity to invest more.

Wrapping up, what’s your biggest revenue challenge? Drop it in the comments, I’ll reply personally. If this helped, like, subscribe, and share with fellow owners. Let’s build sustainable dojos together. Have an amazing day!

Donovan Wint
Author

DONOVAN WINT

Award-winning martial arts school marketing specialist and consultant. Donovan has been recognized for his excellence in digital strategy and business growth, helping schools worldwide scale through high-impact marketing systems.

Donovan Wint – Martial Arts & Marketing