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Martial Arts

The BJJ Slow Season Playbook: Month-by-Month Strategies That Actually Work

It's mid-July. You pull up your attendance numbers from the past two weeks and feel your stomach drop.

Half your regulars are gone. 

The 6 AM class that had 14 people in May? Now you're looking at seven. Your newest students—the ones who joined after watching that highlight reel you posted in April—haven't been in for three weeks. 

You're not even sure they're still members.

This is the BJJ slow season in action. And if you're running an academy, you've felt this before. The summer enrollment drop hits different than other challenges because it's not from anything you did wrong. It's the calendar. 

School's out, families travel, schedules evaporate.

The problem is that most academy owners respond to slow seasons reactively. They notice the dip in late July and start scrambling—cutting prices, running desperate promotions, wondering if they should just expect to lose money every summer. 

There's a better way: plan the whole year in advance, season by season, so you're never surprised.

Why BJJ Academies Have Seasonal Revenue Swings

You might think this is a general fitness problem, but martial arts schools get hit harder than most gyms—and the reasons are structural.

The school calendar runs your schedule whether you like it or not

Regular gyms see seasonal dips, but they're softer.

A CrossFit athlete might skip a week of vacation and come right back. A BJJ student is different—training is tied to a partner, a class time, a progression system. When summer disrupts that routine, students lose their groove faster.

Your class times are built around after-school hours and weekend slots. The moment families leave town, or kids get dropped at grandma's house, entire class periods empty out.

Recreational athletes—who make up the majority of most academies—prioritize summer with their families over training. That's not a criticism; it's just reality.

And then there's belt testing and promotion cycles.

BJJ promotions create natural emotional peaks and valleys. After a big promotion in spring, some students feel they've "arrived" and pull back without realizing it. Others set a new goal for the fall.

Either way, summer becomes a transition period where engagement softens—even for your most committed students.

The numbers are stark

3% of yearly new gym visitors arrive in June–July—compared to 12% in January
Source: Gymdesk
30–40% spike in cancellations and membership freezes during summer—every year
Source: Gymdesk
Losing 10% of members at a typical BJJ academy creates a $12,000–$24,000 annual revenue gap
Source: Industry estimates

June and July see only 3% of yearly new gym visitors, compared to 12% in January.

That's not a small gap—it's a fourfold difference in the number of people even thinking about joining.

During summer months, cancellation and freeze rates spike 30–40% above normal. For an average BJJ academy running 100–150 active members, losing just 10% of your membership creates a $12,000–$24,000 annual revenue gap—and replacing them takes longer in summer.

The good news: you can see all of this coming.

Revenue reports and month-over-month attendance data let you track the trends before they become emergencies. When you know your historically slow months in advance, you can plan around them—not just survive them.

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The BJJ Seasonal Revenue Calendar

Most BJJ academies follow the same annual pattern:

Season
Months
Enrollment Pattern
Your Focus
New Year Surge
January–February
Peak enrollment (12% of yearly signups)
Getting new members + converting trials
Spring Growth
March–May
Steady momentum, high retention
Community events + referrals
Summer Survival
June–August
Lowest enrollment (3% of yearly new visitors)
Retention + revenue diversification
Back-to-School Boom
September–October
Second enrollment peak
Kids programs + bringing in families
Holiday Season
November–December
Retention risk + seasonal revenue
Retention + gift card strategy

January–February: Capturing the New Year wave

January is your single biggest window for new members. Studies show that 12% of all gym memberships are purchased in January—more than any other month.

People are motivated, aspirational, and actively looking for something that will stick.

The challenge: 80% of New Year fitness resolutions fail by mid-February. Most of those new members who joined with excitement will quietly disappear within 60–90 days unless you give them a reason to stay.

Designing trials that convert serious students

Your trial program is your most important tool in January.

Not every resolution gym-hopper will become a committed BJJ student—and that's actually fine. Your job isn't to convert everyone; it's to identify and keep the students who are a genuine fit for your academy.

Build your trial around realistic expectations.

A free class is easy to offer, but it attracts the wrong people. A paid intro program (even $30–$50 for a two-week introductory course) filters for people who are willing to invest. It tells you immediately who's serious.

During the trial, show people the community—not just the techniques. 

New students don't stay because of a triangle choke. They stay because they made a training partner, felt welcomed, and started to feel like they belonged. 

Pair every new trial student with a more experienced training partner who can answer questions and check in between classes.

GYM OWNER TIP:

Assign a dedicated onboarding mentor for every January trial student—someone from your existing community who can reach out after the first class and invite them to the next one. This isn't administrative work; it's the most effective retention tool you have. Academies with structured onboarding retain 25–40% more new members past 90 days than those without.

The 60-day dropout problem

January's new members need extra attention in weeks three through eight. That's when the novelty wears off, the initial soreness kicks in, and life starts competing with training again.

Watch your attendance data closely during this window. A student who comes three times in week one and once in week four is showing you a signal.

That's your cue to reach out—not with a promotional email, but with a personal message. "Haven't seen you in a few weeks—is everything okay?" goes further than any automated email sequence.

Set up your first stripe or first milestone goal early. 

In BJJ, progression is a powerful motivator. When someone has a clear, achievable short-term goal (their first stripe, their first submission in rolling), they have a reason to keep showing up. Build this into your onboarding conversation.

For help turning more of these trials into long-term members, read our guides on converting trials into members and onboarding for retention.

Lead management tools that automatically follow up with trials after their intro class—rather than relying on you to remember—make a real difference here. When you're teaching four classes a day in January, manual follow-up falls through the cracks.

March–May: Building spring momentum

Spring is the easiest season to coast through, and that's exactly the problem.

You've got good energy from January's new members. People are training consistently. The weather is improving, and your gym feels alive. It's tempting to keep the status quo and let the momentum carry you.

Don't.

Spring is when you build the community that carries you through summer. The events you run now, the goodwill you bank—that's what keeps members loyal when July empties the schedule.

Seminars and in-house events as retention tools

Hosting a seminar isn't just a revenue event—it's an experience that strengthens the identity of your academy. 

When your community trains together with a special guest, rolls together, and grabs dinner afterward, you're building the kind of belonging that makes people think twice before canceling in July.

Plan at least one seminar or in-house competition for the spring. The format matters less than creating a shared experience.

Some academies do formal seminars with visiting black belts. Others do in-house tournaments, interclub scrimmages, or themed open mats. All of them work because they give students something to look forward to and talk about.

Belt testing events in spring are particularly powerful. 

A promotion ceremony in April or May gives recently promoted students a fresh milestone to chase heading into summer. If someone just got their blue belt in May, they're not quitting in July—they're excited to train as a blue belt.

Referral campaigns while energy is high

Spring is the ideal time to run a referral program because your members are engaged and happy. Referral leads convert 3–5x higher and retain 37% longer—because they come in with social proof and a built-in training partner.

Keep the program simple: "Bring a friend for a free class" works. 

If you want to formalize it, offer a small incentive (a month of dues off, a piece of gear) for every referral that converts to a paid membership. The key is making the ask easy and the process clear.

This is also the right time to review your pricing, refresh your class schedule, and update your marketing materials before the summer slowdown. 

You won't have time to do it in August when you're in damage-control mode.

For promotion ideas that actually work in a BJJ context, see martial arts promotions that work and our gym loyalty program guide.

June–August: The summer survival plan

Summer is where planning pays off—or where the lack of it shows.

A 30–40% spike in cancellations and membership freezes is normal for BJJ schools during summer. Your job isn't to eliminate the drop—that's not realistic. 

Your job is to cushion the fall, keep as many members engaged as possible, and diversify your revenue so the overall impact is manageable.

This is the largest section of this playbook because it deserves the most attention.

Retention: Keep who you have

Adjust your schedule to match where your members actually are. 

In summer, holding eight classes a week when attendance is down isn't serving anyone. Consolidate toward your peak-attendance time slots.

A packed 7 PM class feels better than three half-empty ones spread across the day. Your students feel the energy, and you feel less demoralized.

Add at least one open mat session to your weekly schedule. Open mats have a different energy than structured classes—they're more social, more flexible, and they attract drop-ins, visitors, and members who might not make it to a fixed class time. 

Charge a small drop-in fee ($20–$30), and you've created a low-commitment touchpoint that keeps people connected.

Create summer-specific programming to give consistent students something to train toward. Ideas that work well:

  • No-gi intensives: A focused six-week no-gi series gives your dedicated students something structured to attend
  • Competition prep track: A summer training group for members who are targeting a fall tournament
  • Self-defense workshop series: Accessible to beginners, valuable for existing members, and easy to market to new audiences
  • Technique challenges: A "50 techniques in 50 days" challenge, a weekly technique of the week posted to your community group—anything that creates consistency and accountability
PRO TIP:

The training challenge that works best is one your most senior students want to participate in. When blue belts and purple belts are visibly committed to a summer challenge, the newer students follow. Ask two or three of your most engaged members to help design it and they become natural ambassadors for it.

Reach out before members disengage—not after. 

Attendance tracking is your early warning system. A student who's been to every class for six months and suddenly misses two weeks? That's a pattern.

Send a personal message: "Hey, haven't seen you in class—hope everything's good. We miss you on the mats." It costs nothing and takes 30 seconds.

But most academy owners don't do it because they can't see who's drifting. Tracking attendance by individual member—not just by class count—lets you spot these signals while there's still time to act.

Revenue diversification: summer camps

This is where academies that run summer camps pull significantly ahead.

A well-run BJJ summer camp generates $5,000–$15,000+ in additional revenue over the summer—revenue that doesn't depend on adult membership enrollment at all. 

More importantly, camps feed directly into your year-round programs. The kids who attend your summer camp are exactly the students you want in your kids' program in September. 

And their parents are the people most likely to enroll themselves.

The economics are straightforward. A week-long day camp with 15 kids at $250–$350 each is $3,750–$5,250 per week. Run two or three weeks and you've replaced the membership revenue you lost.

Position the camp correctly: it's not a babysitting service, it's a martial arts experience. Emphasize the discipline, focus, and confidence kids develop. Parents respond to that framing much more than to "drop your kid off while you work."

For everything you need to run your first camp, see our martial arts summer camp guide and summer camp marketing ideas.

Private lessons at summer rates. Many of your members who are traveling or have unpredictable summer schedules would still do a private lesson if the timing were flexible. 

Offer a discounted private lesson package specifically for summer—three sessions for the price of two, for example—and you keep revenue coming in while giving members a flexible option.

Open mat drop-in fees. If you're running open mats anyway (which you should be), charge visitors. Traveling BJJ practitioners actively look for open mats, and even a $20 drop-in fee adds up.

Post your open mat times on social media and BJJ community boards. Visitors bring fresh rolling partners and energy—your regular students will appreciate it too.

Re-engagement: win back members who've drifted

Some members will freeze or pause their membership in summer regardless of what you do. That's okay. The question is whether they come back in September.

Automated win-back sequences for members who've gone inactive are one of the highest-return campaigns you can run. 

A simple three-email sequence sent to members who haven't trained in 30 days—acknowledging their absence, sharing something happening at the academy, and offering an easy on-ramp—will bring some of them back.

Keeping an existing member costs five to 25 times less than acquiring a new one. 

A member who takes a summer hiatus and comes back in September is infinitely more valuable than a brand-new lead who found you through a September Facebook ad.

Start pre-marketing your September "welcome back" promotions in late July—before most members have even thought about the fall season. 

A heads-up about your back-to-school programming, sent to your list in early August, plants a seed that pays off in September enrollment.

For proven retention strategies, see gym retention strategies and winning back former members.

September–October: Riding the back-to-school wave

September is your second-best enrollment window of the year—and for kids programming, it rivals January.

Parents are in a completely different mindset in September than they are in summer. 

They're looking for structure. They want their kids in an organized after-school activity. And they've been thinking about it since August.

You need to be marketing before school starts

The biggest mistake academy owners make with back-to-school is waiting until September to start promoting. 

Parents make back-to-school activity decisions in July and August. They're researching and signing up before the first day of school.

Your back-to-school campaign should start in late July and ramp through August. Email your existing community, post consistently on social media, and consider targeted local advertising in the final two weeks of August. If you wait until September 1 to mention your kids' program, you've already missed a chunk of your audience.

The messaging that lands with parents: focus, discipline, confidence. 

"Your child will learn to defend themselves" is a secondary message. "Your child will develop the focus and self-discipline to thrive in school and in life" is the primary one. BJJ genuinely delivers on this—you're not selling something you can't back up.

How kids' programs bring in whole families

Your kids' program is one of the best ways to bring in adult members.

When parents bring their child to class and see a well-run academy with great instruction and an engaged community, some percentage of them want to train too. 

Others bring their spouse to watch, and the spouse gets curious. Siblings enroll. This isn't some marketing trick—it's just what happens when people spend time around martial arts and see the value firsthand.

Offer a family membership package that makes it easy for the whole family to train together. 

Include a one-week family intro package in your back-to-school promotions. Host an open house in late August or early September where parents can watch a class and try a demo themselves.

QUICK WIN:

Set up a back-to-school open house in the first week of September. No sign-up required, free for kids, parents can watch or participate in a beginner demo. Even 10–15 families in your academy creates visibility and word-of-mouth that your September enrollment numbers will reflect.

September is also when members who drifted in summer start looking to come back. Make re-engagement easy: a simple "welcome back" message to members who've been inactive, with no guilt and no hard sell, is all you need.

For insight into why students leave (and how to keep them), see why members leave your gym.

November–December: Holiday retention and revenue

November and December feel like opposing forces: on one hand, the holidays create genuine emotional connection and community moments. 

On the other hand, the end of the year triggers cancellation conversations, membership freezes, and the "I'll start fresh in January" mindset.

Your job is to lean into the community side while managing the revenue risk.

Gift cards are your holiday revenue engine

The gym-as-gift opportunity is massively underused by most academies. Most people don't know they can give a martial arts membership as a gift. Your job is to make it visible and easy.

Set up digital gift cards in your POS system and promote them actively starting in mid-November. Promote them in your email newsletter, on social media, and at the front desk. 

A simple sign near the check-in area—"Give the gift of jiu-jitsu this holiday season"—works.

Gift cards do two things at once: they bring in immediate revenue, and they bring new students through your door in January. When someone redeems a gift card in January, they're a warm lead who already has a reason to be there.

REAL EXAMPLE:

Kristine Blackman of Blackman's Champion Martial Arts turned the holiday season into her school's biggest revenue period—over $100,000 in seasonal sales—by building gift cards, holiday events, and pro shop promotions into a system her team runs every year. (Source)

Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and holiday promotions

The fitness industry runs aggressive promotions around Black Friday and Cyber Monday—and they work. But the execution matters.

A Black Friday discount on memberships can bring in motivated January starters early. 

Frame it as a limited offer: "Lock in January membership pricing now." This creates urgency and gets people committed before the holiday distraction peaks.

Pro shop sales on gear, equipment, and academy merchandise move well around the holidays, too. Branded gi patches, rash guards, and belt racks are practical gifts that members actually want. 

You don't need a huge inventory—a small curated selection marketed to your existing community is enough.

Handling membership freezes and pauses

December is when freeze requests spike. Members are traveling for the holidays, budgets are tight, and "I'll start fresh in the new year" is an easy story to tell.

The worst thing you can do is make freezes or pauses difficult. 

Members who feel like they're being held against their will cancel outright. Instead, make the pause easy and use it as an opportunity to set expectations: "No problem—we'll pause your membership through January 2 and send you a reminder about getting back on the mats."

Offer an alternative before defaulting to a full freeze. 

Some members who would freeze at full price are happy to stay on a reduced-rate "hold" plan—three classes per month, for example, at half their normal dues. It keeps them connected to the community through the holidays and makes their return in January frictionless.

Prep for January before December ends

Your New Year surge starts in the last two weeks of December. People start thinking about their January goals before the calendar flips.

Email marketing delivers $36–$42 for every $1 spent in the fitness industry. Use that. 

A December 26th email—"Ready to start jiu-jitsu in the New Year? Here's how to get started"—catches people in the exact moment they're setting intentions.

Pre-sell January intro packages in December. Offer a slight discount for booking now versus walking in off the street in January. You'll lock in committed students before they get distracted.

Automated holiday email campaigns—triggered by dates, member status, or inactivity—handle this without you having to manually send emails on December 26th. Set them up once before the holiday rush, and they run while you enjoy the break.

For an email marketing strategy that works for martial arts schools, see email marketing for martial arts and marketing automations.

The Retention Playbook: Keeping Members Through Every Season

80% of New Year fitness resolutions fail by mid-February without community support
Source: Inc.
Structured onboarding retains 25–40% more new members past the 90-day mark
Source: FitDegree
Email marketing returns $36–$42 for every $1 spent
Source: EmailToolTester

Seasonal tactics work better when they're supported by year-round retention systems.

Spotting disengagement before it becomes cancellation

The most expensive student you can lose is the one you could have kept with a five-minute conversation.

Disengagement signals are predictable: attendance drops over two to three weeks, members stop registering for classes, they skip a belt testing cycle. Any of these patterns—especially in combination—means someone is losing their connection to your academy.

Check your attendance data weekly, not monthly. 

Monthly reviews show you what already happened. Weekly reviews show you what's happening right now, while there's still time to act.

When you spot a member with declining attendance, don't wait for them to bring it up. Reach out first—personally, not with an automated message.

"Hey, haven't seen you at class in a couple weeks. Everything okay? Would love to see you back on the mats."

That's it. No offer, no discount, no pitch. Just a human acknowledging that they're missed.

Win-back campaigns for members who've drifted away

Members who've gone inactive for 30–60 days are still reachable. After 90 days, it gets significantly harder.

A simple win-back email sequence for inactive members:

  • Email one (30 days inactive): Personal check-in. No offer. Just acknowledgment.
  • Email two (45 days inactive): Share something happening at the academy—an upcoming event, a new program, a student success story.
  • Email three (60 days inactive): A specific, time-limited offer to come back. One free class, a waived reactivation fee, something that removes the barrier.

Marketing automations that trigger these sequences when a member's attendance drops below a threshold take the manual work out of this process. 

You set the rules once, and the system handles the outreach while you're on the mat.

Community as the deepest retention tool

The tactics in this playbook help. None of them matters as much as community.

Students who know five other students by name don't cancel. Students who've been to a team dinner, a camping trip, or a post-competition party feel a pull toward the academy that no discount can replicate.

Invest in at least two to three community events per year. They don't need to be elaborate—a post-tournament dinner, a holiday party, an end-of-summer open mat followed by a cookout.

These moments create the bonds that keep people training through the slow seasons. Keeping one member who trains for five years is worth more than finding five new members who each last six months.

Building Your Annual Marketing Calendar

Planning ahead means the slow months stop catching you off guard.

Here's a practical framework for your annual calendar:

  • Plan campaigns two to three months in advance. Your back-to-school campaign needs to start being built in June. Your holiday promotions need to be ready in October. If you're planning in August, you're already late.
  • Spend more on marketing during slow periods, not less. This is the mistake that deepens slow seasons. When attendance dips in July, the instinct is to cut costs everywhere.

But cutting marketing in a slow period makes the next period even harder to recover from. Your competitors are pulling back—staying visible is an advantage.

A rough monthly marketing rhythm:

Month
Primary Focus
Secondary Focus
January
New member conversion, trial programs
Onboarding, 60-day retention
February
Retention—catch the dropout wave
Referral activation
March
Referral campaigns, spring events
Seminar planning
April–May
In-house tournaments, belt testing
Summer camp pre-marketing
June
Summer retention, camp launch
Pre-September list building
July
Camp programming, open mats
Win-back sequences
August
Back-to-school pre-marketing
September preview campaigns
September
Kids enrollment, family acquisition
Adult re-enrollment
October
Retention, back-to-school follow-through
Holiday preview
November
Gift cards, holiday promotions
Black Friday/Cyber Monday
December
Freeze management, January pre-sales
Holiday community events

Common Mistakes That Make Slow Seasons Worse

Even experienced academy owners fall into predictable traps during slow seasons. Here are the four that do the most damage.

Cutting marketing spend when revenue dips

When July hits and memberships drop, the gut reaction is to reduce every variable cost. 

Cutting your marketing budget feels logical—why spend money on ads when people aren't signing up anyway?

The problem: slow seasons end. August becomes September. The question is whether you've maintained visibility through the dry period so that people think of you when they're ready. 

The academies that keep consistent outreach through summer are the ones with full classes in September. The ones that went dark in July start from scratch.

Panic discounting that trains your community to wait

There's a difference between a structured promotional offer and a desperate discount. 

Emailing your list in mid-July with "50% off membership this week only" because you're worried about revenue does two things. It signals that your prices are negotiable. And it attracts the exact type of new member who will leave the moment the deal is over.

If you're going to run a promotion, make it intentional—tied to an event, a milestone, or a specific program. 

See our jiu-jitsu marketing guide for approaches that don't require giving away the product.

Ignoring the data until it's too late

Most academy owners don't realize how bad the summer was until they look at their revenue report in September. By then, the damage is done, and the recovery period is compressed.

Month-over-month attendance and revenue reporting give you visibility into what's coming before it arrives. If your March attendance is down 8% compared to last year's March, that's a signal to act in April—not to react in July.

The goal isn't to be surprised by your own data. If you're looking at numbers you haven't checked in two months, you're driving blind.

Treating every season the same

Running the same promotions, the same class schedule, and the same marketing messaging in July as you do in January isn't neutral—it's a choice to be less effective than you could be.

Your students have different lives in different seasons. 

Families travel in summer. Kids are back in school in September. The holidays compress everything. Your academy's messaging, schedule, and programs should reflect that reality.

Speed Up Your Slowest Seasons

You can't eliminate seasonal revenue swings—they're built into the nature of martial arts and the rhythms of family life.

What you can do is stop being surprised by them. The academy owners who weather slow seasons best just plan earlier. They know their slow months in advance and have systems in place before the dip hits—not after.

The key takeaways from this playbook:

  • January–February: Capture the surge, but invest in the 60-day retention window before the dropout wave hits
  • March–May: Don't coast—use your strongest enrollment period to build community infrastructure and referral momentum
  • June–August: Retain who you have, run camps, build open mats, and pre-market September before your students have even thought about fall
  • September–October: Start your back-to-school campaign in July; kids programs are the fastest way to bring in whole families
  • November–December: Gift cards, holiday community events, and proactive freeze management make your January surge bigger

Want to track attendance trends, set up automated win-back sequences, and manage seasonal promotions without the admin load? Gymdesk handles the systems side so you can focus on teaching. 30-day free trial—no credit card required.

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