How to Track Return On Ad Spend for Gyms
You spend $1000 on Facebook Ads and sign up 20 new members at $50 per month. That is $1000 in monthly recurring revenue. But are those members staying? Tracking return on ad spend helps you find members who stick.
Why Return On Ad Spend Matters for Gyms
Memberships are recurring revenue. A member who stays for 12 months brings $600, not $50. ROAS must account for lifetime value, not just initial sign-ups.
Retention changes everything. If members cancel after one month, your effective ROAS drops dramatically. Tracking helps you find ads that bring loyal members.
Different memberships have different values. Premium memberships bring more money than basic plans. ROAS helps you target ads that sell what you profit from most.
New year peaks are huge. January drives massive sign-ups. Tracking ROAS during these periods shows what works best.
How to Check in GA4
GA4 tracks ROAS with the right configuration.
Set up conversion events for sign-ups and trials. In GA4, go to Configure > Events. Mark “membership_signup” and “trial_start” as conversions.
Link your Google Ads account. In Admin > Property > Google Ads linking, connect your account to import cost data.
Build a custom report. In Acquisition, look at User acquisition. Add ROAS as a metric. Compare it across campaigns.
Track membership duration. Create a custom event for “membership_active_6_months.” This shows which ads bring members who actually stay.
The Easier Way
Configuring ROAS in GA4 takes time and technical work. ClawAnalytics makes it simple.
ClawAnalytics connects to your Google Ads and Google Analytics automatically. It pulls together costs and conversions in one dashboard. You see ROAS without building any reports.
For gyms, ClawAnalytics answers questions like: “Which ad brought members who stayed past month 3?” It tracks retention and shows the actual ROAS over time.
You can also ask: “Compare ROAS between my $1 trial offer and my $29 monthly promotion.” The dashboard shows which offer brings better members.
Another useful query: “What is my average member value from Google Ads versus Facebook?” ClawAnalytics breaks it down by platform.
Quick Wins
Target new residents in your area. People who just moved are looking for a new gym. Local targeting works well.
Promote new member specials. Introductory offers drive sign-ups. Track which specials bring members who stay past the promotion period.
Use lead forms. Facebook Lead Forms capture prospects directly. They often convert better than website clicks.
Retarget website visitors. People who toured your gym or viewed pricing are much more likely to join. Retargeting typically delivers the best ROAS.