'Club vibes without the hangover': The twenty somethings going out - in the gym

11 hours ago 5

Pritti MistryBusiness reporter

Craig Williams A woman in athletic clothing practices a lifting movement with a white training bar inside a gym. She is positioned in a partial squat with the bar held horizontally in front. Next to her, to the right, are two other women who are also holding training bars and performing similar movements. The gym space includes weight racks, exercise machines, rubber flooring, and high ceilings with ropes hanging down.Craig Williams

Sydney Cassidy is among the young people getting their social fix from the gym

When Sydney Cassidy walks into her local gym, she isn't just clocking in for a workout session - she's also there to meet friends.

"The gym is my space to get a social fix and to talk to and see people," says the 28-year-old digital creator and fitness enthusiast, who is known as Syd Grows on social media.

"That is predominantly where I make all of my friends - at the gym, at training sessions."

It's also a place to opt out of drinking culture without forgoing a social life, she explains: "I don't go out drinking."

Syd says the post-Covid boom in gym content on social media means more people are realising what regulars already knew: gyms can be vibrant, communal hangouts.

Many young fitness enthusiasts like Syd are increasingly treating gyms as anchor points for friendships in a similar way to how previous generations treated the local pub - a place to go, see familiar faces and feel part of a community.

The figures speak for themselves. PureGym, the UK's largest gym chain, notes 47% of its new joiners in January were aged 25 or under.

Craig Williams Sydney has long blonde wavy hair and is wearing a white long-sleeved gym t-shirt. She is in a busy studio with unidentified females behind her.Craig Williams

Syd says she prefers to improve her health than go out drinking

According to research group Mintel, younger people now have a much broader idea of what "wellness" means to them - they no longer see health as just going to the gym or lifting weights, and they expect fitness centres and health clubs to provide more than just workout equipment and exercise classes.

Gyms are positioning themselves as alternative spaces for socialising, its senior director of leisure and trends Paul Davies says, which is "encroaching on the traditional role of bars and nightclubs".

"Young consumers are choosing gyms and leisure centres over traditional alcohol-centric socialising, such as pubs," he adds.

Some are twinning a trip to the gym with coffee mornings or protein smoothie meet-ups - further boosting the social experience.

'It feels like you're in a club'

On a Wednesday night in Grimsby, dance anthems are pumping out in a kaleidoscopic disco-lit studio at Oasis Health Club.

You might be forgiven for mistaking this as a nightclub but the 50 people - mostly women - are here for an hour of cardio and strengthening.

Megan has long brown hair tied up in a ponytail. She is wearing a dark hooded sweatshirt and is standing in a gym, positioned in front of shelves filled with colourful kettlebells, weight plates, and stacked dumbells.

Fitness classes are a key part of Megan Riley's social life

These classes make Megan Riley, a paralegal apprentice, feel "empowered" and connected after her friends moved away to university.

"We're all celebrating each other's little wins whether that be upping your weights or doing a really successful class," the 20-year-old says.

"It feels like you're in a club, you're getting all the songs, you're all dancing, you've got the club vibes but without the hangover the next day."

This shift towards alcohol-free socialising is echoed by Vikki Harries, a 28-year-old safeguarding manager, whose social calendar is jammed with gym sessions alongside her friends.

Vikki has dark brown hair tied up at the back of her head in a bun. She is wearing a brown long-sleeved exercise top and is standing on a treadmill in a spacious gym, which is filled with cardio and strength equipment. Rows of treadmills are lined up on the right, while several people use weight machines in the background on the left. The gym has bright overhead lighting, grey flooring, and large windows along one wall.

Vikki Harries spends time with her friends at the gym while training for marathons

"The gym just feels like there's like-minded people there. I just don't feel out of place or anything like that," she says.

She plans her week training for marathons while fitting in time with her friends. "That is kind of how we see each other now," she explains.

It has seen a 12% rise in the number of children and young people taking part in gym and fitness between 2017 and 2024.

While the Gym Group reported 44% of Gen Zs saying they work out to socialise with friends in 2025, compared with 37% the previous year.

It also noted an increase in how much Gen Z spend on fitness per month.

The average spend is £48.81 per month on memberships, apps and equipment - up 17% on 2024.

Mintel's research found just over half of 18 to 24-year-olds had gone to a gym more than once in the month to July 2025, compared with 42% who went to a pub for drinks more than once in the same period.

Helping to fuel last orders for pubs?

So is this apparent shift harming pubs?

Mintel says it does not have any evidence to prove the increased popularity of gyms on a social level is having a direct impact on pub takings.

However, data from the Night-Time Industries Association, compiled by CGA Intelligence, does show that the number of clubs, pubs, bars and casinos has declined by 28% since the Covid pandemic, and continued to fall last year.

While the hospitality industry is facing a multitude of challenges including taxes, young people opting for socialising away from the pub is clearly another issue for the sector to grapple with.

The gym, meanwhile, is "absolutely heaving with young people" at times, says Lauren Connis, head of health and wellbeing at Oldham Active in Manchester.

"I think sometimes there's a common misconception that young people are there to cause trouble when actually they just want to connect with their friends and become happier and healthier in a safe space."

Marwan and Arthur in a gym, positioned at a strength-training machine. Marwan is seated and holding the machine’s handles, while Arthur stands beside him with a hand resting on his shoulder. Both are wearing athletic clothing, and the gym equipment surrounds them in a well-lit workout space.

Best friends Marwan Hamouche and Arthur Perroud train together between their business lectures

Childhood friends and international students Marwan Hamouche and Arthur Perroud are training together at their local Fitness First branch in London, between their business lectures.

The 19-year-olds, both from Dubai, aim for at least three shared sessions a week because, as Arthur says: "It helps to motivate us. If you go alone it's harder, especially when it's cold."

While the gym isn't their main hangout, it's a big one, they admit. Asking others for help and advice has even led to new friendships, Marwan adds.

For digital creator and fitness enthusiast Syd, the appeal is simple. "I justify [the cost of gym] because I don't go out drinking. It's how I choose to spend my free time and that's what I like to do."

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