19
32%
Nineteen gyms compete for space in Mount Pleasant, a compact Vancouver neighbourhood with no shortage of fitness options. That puts serious pressure on any new or existing operator — but the competition picture is uneven. Only six of those 19 gyms (32%) have a website, which means more than two-thirds are invisible to the majority of consumers who search online before visiting. For a digitally savvy neighbourhood with over 250 food and drink businesses within its borders — 132 restaurants, 52 cafés, 42 fast food outlets, 13 bars, and 15 pubs — that gap is significant. Mount Pleasant draws a health-conscious, urban crowd that already eats and drinks locally. Converting that foot traffic into gym memberships requires more than a good space; it requires a discoverable presence.
The 19 gyms here aren't all direct competitors. The category includes everything from traditional weight rooms to niche operators like archery ranges and bouldering walls, meaning the market fragments across several fitness verticals. General-purpose gyms face less saturation than specialty studios, but they also blend in more easily. Standing out in Mount Pleasant means competing not just on equipment or price, but on identity. The neighbourhood rewards businesses with a clear point of view — whether that's boxing, martial arts, climbing, or yoga — and a professional online presence to back it up.
Walking distance matters here
Mount Pleasant is dense and walkable, and residents expect their gym to be close enough to reach on foot or by bike without adding a commute.
Specialty over generic
With names like Rumble Boxing, Gracie Barra, and Progression Bouldering on the block, locals gravitate toward gyms with a defined discipline rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.
Clear pricing on the website
When only 32% of local gyms have a website, the ones that post transparent pricing and class schedules online get an immediate trust advantage.
Fits a post-work coffee routine
With 52 cafés and 15 pubs nearby, people plan their gym time around social stops — a location near favourite hangouts beats a hidden industrial unit every time.
Beginner-friendly without pressure
Many Mount Pleasant residents are exploring fitness for the first time and want a welcoming atmosphere, not an intimidating gym culture that assumes prior experience.
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 |
|---|---|
| F45 Training | Gym |
| Anytime Fitness | Gym |
| Original Yin Qi Gong Gym | Gym |
| Rumble Boxing Studio | Gym |
| D.Tox Spa | Gym |
| Uphoria Yoga | Gym |
| Tantra Fitness | Gym |
| Lykopis Archery | Gym |
| Gracie Barra | Gym |
| Raincity Athletics | Gym |
| Oxygen Yoga | Gym |
| Orangetheory Fitness | Gym |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Get a website — you're in the minority
Only 6 of 19 gyms in Mount Pleasant have a website. Simply publishing a basic site with hours, pricing, and a booking link puts you ahead of 68% of local competitors in search results.
Claim your niche before someone else does
The neighbourhood already has boxing, archery, jiu-jitsu, bouldering, and yoga covered by named studios. If you run a general gym, define what makes yours different — a training philosophy, a demographic focus, or a unique programme — and say it plainly.
Partner with the 250+ food businesses nearby
Cross-promotions with local cafés, restaurants, and bars are low-cost and high-visibility in a neighbourhood this walkable. A post-workout smoothie discount or a pub quiz sponsorship builds local loyalty faster than online ads.
With 19 gyms packed into one neighbourhood, Mount Pleasant is a competitive market — but not evenly so. Specialty studios in boxing, martial arts, climbing, and archery have carved out defined positions, while general fitness offerings face more direct overlap. The biggest structural gap is digital: 68% of gyms here have no website at all, which means discoverability is wide open for any operator willing to invest in basic online presence. The neighbourhood's 250-plus food and drink businesses signal strong local spending and foot traffic. Standing out requires a clear identity, a findable website, and genuine ties to the surrounding community.
See your exact rank against nearby competitors, what customers say about them, and where you can win.