British gyms run on a quiet, unspoken code. Nobody will tell you off for breaking it. They will simply remember, and the next time you ask to work in on a squat rack, the answer will be a little cooler. Learn the unwritten rules early and you will be welcome anywhere from a council leisure centre to a boutique in Clerkenwell.
Key Takeaways
- – Wipe every machine, every time, without exception
- – Re-rack your weights, including the heavy ones
- – Share equipment during peak hours, always
- – Keep phone calls, videos and grunts to yourself
- – A polite nod goes further than you think
The top five rules everyone agrees on
- Wipe down after yourself. Every gym provides blue roll or sanitiser. Use it, on every bench, bike and mat.
- Re-rack your weights. A 20 kg plate is not someone else’s problem. If you loaded it, you unload it.
- Do not hog machines. Between sets, step aside or offer to share. Three minutes is a set, not a phone break.
- Keep the volume down. Speakers on your phone, loud grunting and slamming weights are poor form. Headphones exist for a reason.
- Ask before borrowing. Nicking a dumbbell from someone’s station is the quickest way to start a polite argument.
Five more that mark you out as a regular
- Do not film strangers. If your video of your set includes somebody else’s face, you are doing it wrong.
- Respect the squat rack. Racks are for squats, deadlifts and overhead presses — not bicep curls. Bring your curls to the dumbbell area.
- Keep the changing room tidy. Wet towels in the bin, locker emptied, no wet footprints through the lounge.
- Say good morning. A nod or a quiet hello at 6 am builds the community you will quietly rely on in six months.
- Leave the gym cleaner than you found it. Stray plates back on the tree, benches back to flat, a chalk-free bar after deadlifts.
If you are unsure whether a behaviour is acceptable, imagine your quietest, most polite colleague is on the next machine. If it would embarrass them, do not do it.
British-specific norms
Queue sensibly
Britain invented the queue. Apply it in the gym. If someone is resting between sets on a bench, a polite how many sets have you got left? is the correct opener. Standing silently three feet away is not.
Mind the chat
A brief exchange is friendly; a ten-minute monologue during someone’s working set is not. Read the room. Headphones in, eyes forward usually means not now, thanks.
Peak hours are sacred
Between 6 and 9 in the evening, machines should rotate every three minutes and supersets on two pieces of kit are frowned upon. If you want a long, slow session, come at 2 pm or on a Sunday morning.
If you are brand new
If you have never set foot in a UK gym, please ignore the myth that everyone is watching. They are not. Read our guide to starting again and pick a simple plan such as the one in our three-day full-body routine. Walk in, wipe down your kit, re-rack your weights and leave with a nod at reception. You will fit in immediately.