A personal trainer costs between $80 and $150 per hour in most major cities. At two sessions per week, that's $640-1,200 per month. For many, that's simply unaffordable — but does that mean you have to give up on professional training guidance?
| Option | Cost per month | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Trainer (1×/week) | $320-600 | 4 sessions of 60 min, individual plan |
| Personal Trainer (2×/week) | $640-1,200 | 8 sessions, technique correction |
| Online Coach | $150-400 | Weekly plan via app/PDF, check-ins |
| AI Personal Trainer (App) | €14.99 | Daily individual plans, 24/7 available |
The scientifically relevant functions of a trainer are:
The first five points — periodization, intensity, volume, recovery, and exercise selection — are data-driven decisions. They don't require physical presence, they require knowledge and consistent application of research. That's exactly where an AI coach excels.
| Option | 12 months |
|---|---|
| Personal Trainer (1×/week) | $3,840-7,200 |
| Online Coach | $1,800-4,800 |
| MUSCLE TECHNICS | €179.88 |
This isn't a little cheaper — it's a different order of magnitude. The question isn't whether you can afford a trainer, but whether technique correction alone justifies paying 20-40× more.
Invest in 5-10 sessions with a real trainer for technique fundamentals. Then switch to an AI coach for daily programming. You get the best of both worlds — human technique coaching plus AI-driven daily planning — for a fraction of the cost of a permanent trainer.
18 peer-reviewed studies, muscle-specific recovery, real-time autoregulation. Like a personal trainer — just cheaper, always available, and science-based.
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