Operations
Personal trainer cancellation policy template (Australia)
A free, copy-paste personal trainer cancellation policy template for Australia — with notice periods, late-cancel and no-show fees explained.
A cancellation policy is one of the most valuable bits of admin a personal trainer can have, and one of the most often skipped. Without one, a client who cancels at 5am for a 6am session has cost you a paid hour and you've no agreed basis to do anything about it. With one — clearly written and shown up front — most of those late cancellations simply stop happening.
This guide gives you a ready-to-use Australian cancellation policy template you can copy and adapt, then explains the choices behind it: notice periods, late-cancel and no-show fees, keeping it fair, and how to enforce it automatically so you're never the bad guy chasing money.
The copy-paste template
Replace the bracketed parts with your own details. This is a general template, not legal advice — if you're unsure about your obligations, check with a professional. It's deliberately plain-English and fair, which is what makes clients comfortable agreeing to it.
“Cancellation & No-Show Policy — [Your Business Name]. I value your time and ask that you value mine. To keep sessions running smoothly and fairly for everyone: 1. Notice period — please give at least 24 hours' notice if you need to cancel or reschedule a session. 2. Late cancellation — cancellations made with less than 24 hours' notice will be charged [50% of / the full] session fee, as the slot can rarely be filled at short notice. 3. No-show — if you miss a session without notice, the full session fee will be charged. 4. How to cancel or reschedule — use the link in your booking confirmation or reminder message to reschedule or cancel yourself; it only takes a moment. 5. Genuine emergencies — I understand that life happens. If something unavoidable comes up, get in touch and we'll work it out. By booking a session you agree to this policy.”
— General template — adapt to your business
Choosing your notice period
The notice period is the heart of the policy. It's the window in which a client can cancel for free. Most Australian personal trainers land on 24 hours, and clients widely accept it as reasonable.
- 12 hours — flexible and client-friendly, but leaves you little time to refill a same-day cancellation.
- 24 hours — the standard. Long enough to offer the slot to someone else, short enough to feel fair.
- 48 hours — suits in-demand trainers and premium slots, but expect occasional pushback.
Whatever you choose, pick one figure and apply it consistently. Inconsistency is what creates resentment and disputes — far more than the policy itself ever does.
Setting late-cancel and no-show fees
There's a meaningful difference between a late cancellation (the client told you, just too late to refill the slot) and a no-show (the client didn't tell you at all). It's common and reasonable to treat them differently:
- Late cancellation: a partial charge (often 50% of the session fee) acknowledges they made contact while compensating for the lost slot.
- No-show: the full session fee, because you held the time, prepared, and got nothing back.
You can absolutely charge 100% for both — plenty of trainers do — but a tiered approach tends to feel fairer to clients and reduces arguments.
Keeping it fair (and Australia-appropriate)
A cancellation fee needs to reflect a genuine cost to your business, and it must be disclosed before the client agrees to it. A fee a client never saw or agreed to is hard to justify and likely to end in a chargeback or a bad review. The principles of a fair, enforceable policy are simple:
- Disclose it up front — on your booking page and in confirmations, not hidden in fine print.
- Make sure the client agrees to it as part of booking.
- Keep the fee proportionate to the actual loss (a lost session, not a punishment).
- Apply it consistently to everyone, and leave genuine discretion for real emergencies.
How to enforce it without chasing payments
A policy you have to manually enforce is a policy you'll quietly let slide — because nobody enjoys sending the 'about your missed session' message. The fix is to automate it so the rules apply themselves and you're never personally chasing money.
With BookAndGo you can wire your policy straight into your booking flow:
- Display your policy on your booking page and in confirmation messages, so every client sees and agrees to it before booking.
- Set a late-cancel notice window that matches your stated period, so the system knows what counts as 'late'.
- Turn on no-show protection to hold a card on file (via Stripe) and charge your stated fee on a late cancel or no-show — automatically, according to the terms the client agreed to.
- Include a self-service reschedule link in every reminder, so clients move their session instead of skipping it.
The result is a policy that does its job in the background: clients are reminded, they can reschedule easily, and on the rare occasion someone still doesn't show, your fee applies without you having to send an awkward message.
The short version
A good cancellation policy is short, fair, shown up front, and applied consistently. Copy the template above, set a 24-hour notice period, decide on your late-cancel and no-show fees, and — most importantly — put it somewhere every client sees it before they book. Then let your booking software handle the reminders, reschedules and fees so the policy enforces itself.
Frequently asked
Can I charge a cancellation fee as a personal trainer in Australia?
Yes, provided the fee is clearly disclosed and agreed to before the client books, is proportionate to your actual loss, and is applied consistently. A fee the client never saw or agreed to is much harder to justify and likely to be disputed.
What's a reasonable notice period for cancellations?
24 hours is the most common and widely accepted standard for personal training in Australia. Some trainers use 12 hours for flexibility or 48 hours for high-demand slots. Choose one figure and apply it the same way to every client.
Should a no-show fee be different from a late-cancellation fee?
Many trainers charge a partial fee (often 50%) for a late cancellation, where the client at least gave notice, and the full fee for a no-show, where they didn't. A tiered approach tends to feel fairer and causes fewer arguments, though charging full price for both is also reasonable.
How do I enforce a cancellation policy without awkward conversations?
Automate it. Display the policy so clients agree to it at booking, set a late-cancel notice window, and use card-on-file no-show protection to charge your stated fee automatically. BookAndGo supports all three, so the policy enforces itself.
Where should I display my cancellation policy?
Everywhere the client meets your booking process — on your public booking page, in the confirmation message, and ideally in reminders. The goal is that no client can say they didn't know the terms before they booked.
Is this template legal advice?
No. It's a general, plain-English starting point you can adapt to your business. If you have specific concerns about consumer law or your obligations, check with a qualified professional.