Lady of America vs Fit For Her Franchise Comparison

Below is an in-depth analysis and side-by-side comparison of Lady of America vs Fit For Her including start-up costs and fees, business experience requirements, training & support and financing options.

Start-Up Costs and Fees

 
Lady of America Franchise
Fit For Her Franchise
Investment $187,000 - $452,000$120,000 - $150,000
Franchise Fee $12,500N/A
Royalty Fee --
Advertising Fee --
Year Founded --
Year Franchised --
Term Of Agreement --
Term Of Agreement --
Renewal Fee --


Business Experience Requirements

 
Lady of America Franchise
Fit For Her Franchise
Experience --

Financing Options

 
Lady of America Franchise
Fit For Her Franchise
  In-House/3rd PartyIn-House/3rd Party
Franchise Fees -/--/-
Start-up Costs -/--/-
Equipment -/--/-
Inventory -/--/-
Receivables -/--/-
Payroll -/--/-

Training & Support

 
Lady of America Franchise
Fit For Her Franchise
Training --
Support --
Marketing --
Operations --

Expansion Plans

 
Lady of America Franchise
Fit For Her Franchise
US Expansion --
Canada Expansion No-
International Expansion No-

Company Overviews

About Lady of America

LOA Fitness for Women takes a comprehensive approach to the women's fitness and wellness industry. We combine the best of our proven brands along with the latest product and service offerings, while maintaining the Lady of America signature culture. LOA Fitness for Women clubs offer convenient and exciting group fitness classes, a unique aerobics floor, "pin-select" strength training equipment, personal training, cardio equipment, our world famous Circuit Training utilizing our specially designed equipment, nutritional advice and product sales through TrimWorks(r), child care, a changing room with lockers and showers and spa services.

About Fit For Her

We offer a dynamic opportunity in a fast growing business with significant potential. Now is a great time to take advantage of the growth in the fitness industry, especially in the woman's fitness and weight loss segment, which is the fastest growing segment in the fitness industry. The number of health clubs and gyms in the US has increased consistently over the past 5 years, up 39% from 13,097 businesses in 1997. This news follows the announcement that consumer demand for health clubs remained strong in 2001, growing approximately 3% to 33.8 million US members as of January of this year. Clearly, Americans are still using there disposable income to attain their fitness and weight goals - despite a rocky economy.