18
28%
Eighteen gyms compete for attention in a neighbourhood roughly ten blocks wide. That's a high density for Yonge and Eglinton — one of midtown Toronto's busiest commercial intersections, packed with condo towers, office workers, and heavy foot traffic from the Eglinton TTC station.
The competitive mix spans traditional full-service gyms and specialised studios. Fit Factory Fitness, Club Pilates, Detox, Rumble Boxing Studio Midtown, and Park Cycle - Spin Studio all operate with websites, signalling they understand digital discovery. But there's a gap: only 5 of those 18 gyms — just 28% — have a working website. In a neighbourhood where most potential members search online before visiting, the majority of local gyms are essentially invisible in digital search results. That's a significant opportunity for any operator willing to invest in basic online presence.
The surrounding commercial ecosystem also shapes demand. With 108 restaurants, 47 cafés, and 75 fast food options within walking distance, gyms here compete not just with each other but with the broader wellness and lifestyle spending of residents and office workers. A gym in Yonge and Eglinton needs to justify its place in someone's daily routine alongside dozens of dining and social alternatives.
For a compact neighbourhood, 18 gyms is a crowded field. The operators that recognise the digital gap — and fill it — have the clearest path to growth.
Walkable from the TTC station
Yonge and Eglinton is a major transit hub; residents and office workers expect their gym to be within a few blocks of the station, not hidden on a side street they'd never walk down.
Boutique class variety
With studios like Rumble Boxing, Club Pilates, and Park Cycle already operating, people in this neighbourhood expect specialised classes — not just a room full of treadmills and a bench press.
Early morning and lunch slots
The neighbourhood's office crowd wants early-morning and midday class options to fit workouts around a 9-to-5 schedule, not just the 6 PM rush.
Post-workout food within steps
With 108 restaurants and 47 cafés nearby, members factor in whether they can grab a smoothie or meal after class without a detour.
Flexible membership terms
Condo-dwelling renters in this area skew younger and are wary of multi-year contracts when they might move neighbourhoods within 12 months.
A sample of real gyms in this area. Want ratings, reviews, and exactly where you rank against them? Run a free report on your business.
| Business | Type |
|---|---|
| Fit Factory Fitness | Gym |
| GoodLife Fitness | Gym |
| Oxygen Yoga & Fitness | Gym |
| Club Pilates | Gym |
| Groove - Pilates And Wellness Bar | Gym |
| Orangetheory Fitness | Gym |
| Detox | Gym |
| Fit Factory Private Training | Gym |
| F45 Training | Gym |
| Rumble Boxing Studio Midtown | Gym |
| Park Cycle - Spin Studio | Gym |
| Fitness Social | Gym |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Build a website before anything else
72% of gyms in this area have no web presence at all. A basic site with class schedules, pricing, and location puts you ahead of 13 competitors in local search results. It's the lowest-hanging fruit in this market.
Pick a lane instead of going broad
The five gyms with websites are almost all boutique studios — boxing, cycling, Pilates. If you're a general fitness centre, differentiate with a specific angle like recovery, strength training, or small-group coaching rather than competing on 'everything under one roof.'
Capture the lunch-hour crowd
Yonge and Eglinton has a significant office population that wants midday workouts. Offering 45-minute express classes between 11:30 AM and 1:30 PM can pull in members that evening-only gyms miss entirely.
Yonge and Eglinton is a crowded gym market — 18 operators in a compact, walkable neighbourhood. The space skews heavily toward boutique and specialty studios (boxing, cycling, Pilates) rather than traditional big-box gyms, and the five digitally active competitors are almost all in that category. The biggest gap is digital visibility: 13 of 18 gyms have no website, meaning any new entrant with basic SEO and online booking can leapfrog most of the field. Standing out here requires either a clear niche or a strong digital presence — ideally both.
See your exact rank against nearby competitors, what customers say about them, and where you can win.