People keep asking what your training looks like. Stop answering one DM at a time - put your schedule behind your link, set your price, and get paid for what you were writing down anyway.
Free to start. Free until you're earning $100/mo.
No coaching. No check-ins. No content treadmill. You owe your subscribers exactly one thing: a schedule that's current.
Pick your handle, then the required profile: a photo, your sport, a line about who you are, and your socials - subscribers are buying your schedule, so they need to see you and find you. Connect payouts with Stripe and set your price.
You already plan your week somewhere. Plan it here instead - a simple week grid, edit any session in seconds. Plan ahead as far as you like.
Subscribers pay your price, Stripe pays your bank. Every "what's your training?" DM gets a one-word answer: the link.
You set the price. Your first $100 every month is yours - we take nothing until sharing your training is actually paying you.
If you're already writing your program down, this costs you nothing extra. No filming, no editing, no replying. Your schedule is the content.
| 3 subscribers ($45/mo) | you keep $45 |
| 6 subscribers ($90/mo) | you keep $90 |
| 20 subscribers ($300/mo) | you keep $280 |
| 100 subscribers ($1,500/mo) | you keep $1,360 |
Your price may differ - the split is the same. Stripe's standard processing fees apply.
No. Subscribers see your schedule - what you are doing. You owe nobody feedback, programming, or replies. The site says this to subscribers everywhere, so the expectation is set before anyone pays.
Then you make $45/month for zero extra work and pay us nothing - the platform is free until you clear $100 in a month. There's no downside case.
Through Stripe, straight to your bank. Onboarding takes a couple of minutes and works in most countries. You pay Stripe's standard processing fees; we never touch your money.
Your call - most athletes land between $8 and $20/month. Subscribers see it framed per week ("$3.75/wk, billed monthly"). You can also offer an annual price at a discount; annual buyers get access to your schedule as far ahead as you've planned it.
Nothing happens automatically - like Patreon, how often you publish is up to you. Your page shows subscribers when it was last updated, and they can cancel anytime, so staying current is what keeps them around.
Every page carries the same message, before anyone pays: schedules are a glimpse into your day-to-day life, not a recommendation to copy them, and you built up to your load over years. Subscribers accept that they train at their own risk and that nothing here is coaching or medical advice.
Yes. Pause new subscriptions or leave entirely whenever you like. Existing subscribers keep access until the end of what they've paid for.