Gym Leads — Scrape Google Maps for Gyms & Fitness Studios
A gym is a local-marketing business first and a fitness business second — memberships are won and lost on how easily people nearby can find, trust, and sign up with you. From 24-hour gyms to boutique yoga, CrossFit boxes, and personal-training studios, they compete on local visibility, which makes them steady buyers of marketing and software. This page turns a Google Maps search like "gyms in Chicago" into a spreadsheet of every gym and studio in the area: name, full address, phone, website, category, rating, and review count, one location per row.
It is for the agencies and vendors that sell to gyms — local marketers, web designers, and companies offering gym-management or class-booking software, equipment, or supplements — and for an owner scouting the competition before opening a new studio. Instead of eyeballing pins on a map, you get the whole local market as a CSV you can sort and filter.
What's in every row
Every gym and studio comes back as one row with the same columns, so the map turns straight into a list you can qualify:
Name & category
The business name and how Google files it — gym, CrossFit box, yoga or pilates studio, personal training — so you can pitch the segment that fits your offer.
Phone & full address
The public phone number from the listing plus the full address for local outreach, mailers, or territory planning.
Website — or the no-website flag
The site URL when there is one, and a flag when there is not. A studio taking sign-ups only through Instagram DMs is a prime web and booking prospect.
Rating & review count
Stars and review volume — the quick read on which locations are busy and established versus just getting started.
Contact columns
Public emails pulled from the gym's own website land in their own columns at no extra cost; blank when there is no site to read.
How to turn gym leads into clients
Memberships come from local search and social, so any pitch that fills the schedule works. If you sell web or marketing, target the gyms with a strong following but no real website or no online sign-up — they lose the person who is ready to join today. Pitch a booking-enabled site, local SEO, review generation, or a New-Year membership-drive campaign; for no-website gyms, a demo with their class schedule and a join button already built gets opened.
If you sell software, equipment, or supplements, the same list is your pipeline. Filter by rating and category to find the established, higher-volume gyms most likely to switch management software, upgrade equipment, or stock a retail line — and skip the segments that are not your buyer.
Filter to the best-fit prospects
Sort by review count to lead with the busiest locations, use the category column to separate big-box gyms from boutique studios (very different pitches), and flip the no-website filter when web design is the offer. Timing helps too: run this a few weeks before New Year, when every gym is thinking about membership season.
How it works
Search "gyms in [city]"
Type a query like "gyms in Chicago", "yoga studios in Austin", or "crossfit in Miami" — or sweep the fitness category across the metro.
Set your cap
Choose how many gyms you want. Starting the run holds only its worst-case cost — never more than your balance.
Watch it run live
Gyms stream in with a live counter, so you always know where the run stands.
Download your CSV
Billed per gym scraped — never your full cap — the unused hold refunded, and the file opens straight in Excel or Sheets.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get gyms without a website?
Yes. Flip the no-website filter and the CSV holds only gyms and studios with no site on their Google Maps listing — often boutique studios running entirely on social media. They are strong web-design and online-booking prospects because they clearly have members but no easy way for a new one to sign up. You are billed per gym scraped; the filter keeps the matches.
How current is the data?
Each run scrapes live from Google Maps at the moment you start it, so names, phones, ratings, and review counts reflect the listings as they are right now — not a stale, resold list. Re-run the search whenever you want a fresh pull for a new campaign.
How much does it cost?
Pricing is $8 per 1,000 results, and every new account starts with $5.00 in free credits — enough to pull a first city for free. You are billed per gym scraped, never for your full cap, and failed runs are refunded in full.