Moving is one of the few situations where you have a clear, contractual right to cancel a gym membership early, even one with months left on the agreement. Almost every gym contract includes a relocation clause that lets you cancel without penalty once you move far enough from their locations. The catch is that the front desk rarely brings it up, and a quick phone call usually will not get it done. You have to invoke the clause in writing.
This guide covers how to use the relocation clause, why the "you have to cancel in person" line is usually not the whole story, and how to send a cancellation that actually sticks so you are not still being billed after you have left town.
Yes, until the membership is canceled the way your contract requires. Moving does not stop the billing on its own, and neither does closing the bank account the dues come out of. The membership is tied to the agreement you signed, not to the card on file, so if a charge fails the gym simply marks the account past due, and an unpaid balance can eventually go to collections. The good news is that most contracts give you a clean, fee-free way out when you move. You just have to use it correctly.
Pull up your membership agreement and look for a section on cancellation, relocation, or moving. The standard version lets you cancel with no early termination fee if you move a set distance from the gym, commonly 25 miles from any of their locations. Moving to a different state almost always clears that distance easily.
To use it you generally need two things: written notice that you are canceling under the relocation clause, and proof of your new address. A signed lease, a utility bill, a bank statement, or a government ID with the new address all work. Send the proof along with your request so they cannot stall by asking for it later.
Some contracts only let you out if there is no location within the set distance of your new home, measured against every club the chain runs nationwide. A big national chain can be stricter than a single local gym, so read the exact wording.
Front desk staff often say cancellation has to be done in person. Sometimes that is what the contract says, but very often it is not. Most agreements list a written method, usually a letter sent by certified mail, as an accepted way to cancel. The rep pointing you to the counter is not always wrong on purpose. It is just the easiest answer for them and the one most likely to keep you paying while you sort it out.
Read the actual cancellation terms in your contract. If it allows written notice by mail, you can cancel from your new state without setting foot in the building. If the contract genuinely requires in person cancellation and you have already moved, the relocation clause is what overrides that, since the entire point of the clause is that you can no longer reasonably show up.
Note the required method, any notice period, and the exact relocation clause wording.
State that you are canceling, that you have moved, and that you are invoking the relocation clause. Include your member number and the effective date.
A lease, utility bill, or ID showing the new address. Send a copy, never your only original.
This gives you a dated, signed record that they received it. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Many contracts allow a 30 day notice period, so one more charge can be normal. Anything after that is not.
Ask them to confirm in writing that the account is closed and the balance is zero.
It does not need to be long. A few clear sentences that name the clause and include your details are enough. Something like this works:
To Whom It May Concern: I am canceling my membership (member number: ____), effective immediately. I have permanently relocated to [new city, state], which is more than 25 miles from your nearest location, and I am exercising the relocation clause in my membership agreement. Proof of my new address is enclosed. Please confirm in writing that my account is closed and that no further charges will be made. Sincerely, [name, old address on file, new address, phone, date].
If a gym is still billing you after a cancellation, get a ready-to-send dispute letter for your bank or the merchant.
If the gym ignores your letter or keeps charging after the notice period, you still have leverage. Send one more written notice that references your certified mail receipt and the date they signed for it. If that does not work, dispute the charges with your bank or card issuer, since you now have written proof that you canceled. For the full escalation path, see what to do when a company refuses to cancel. If charges are still hitting your card, our guide on stopping a company from charging your credit card covers revoking authorization and disputing, and canceled but still being charged walks through getting those charges reversed. You can also browse other tricky cases in the hard to cancel guide and the gym and fitness cancellations hub.
Prepaid or paid-in-full memberships. If you paid for a year up front and then move, you may be owed a prorated refund for the unused months. Ask for it in the same letter.
Contracts with an early termination fee. The relocation clause is what waives that fee. Without a qualifying move, you would normally owe it, so make clear in writing that you are canceling because you moved.
Franchise locations. At many chains the individual club handles cancellation, not corporate. Send your letter to the specific club address on your agreement, not to the national headquarters.
You moved and lost the contract. Ask the gym to resend your agreement, or check the email you got when you signed up. Most chains can send a copy, and you need the relocation wording to cite it correctly.