From Central Phoenix to North Phoenix.
Mike serves clients across Phoenix — driving to you so the only commute is the one between your front door and your living room.
- Central Phoenix
- Arcadia
- Biltmore
- Roosevelt Row
- North Phoenix
- Ahwatukee
- South Mountain
- Paradise Valley border
In-home training built for Phoenix.
No commute through Phoenix traffic
Phoenix's spread-out grid means a typical gym workout includes 30–40 minutes of driving. Mike comes to you — no Loop 101, no I-10, no parking. The session starts the moment you're ready.
Built for Phoenix heat and schedules
Early morning sessions before the sun makes outdoor work brutal. Indoor session formats for July and August. Workouts that fit around your real Phoenix life.
Custom plans, not templates
Every Phoenix client gets a plan built for their body, their space, and their goals. Mike's been coaching Phoenix-area clients for 10 years — busy professionals, parents back in motion, retirees rebuilding strength.
Equipment-aware
Use what you have. Mike works with bodyweight, dumbbells, kettlebells, or a full home gym — and tells you exactly what (if anything) to add as you progress.
Personal training in Phoenix, answered.
How much does a personal trainer cost in Phoenix?
Mike offers single sessions, packages of 5, 10, or 20 sessions, and recurring weekly slots. Rates reflect no gym overhead — you pay for Mike's time and expertise, not for a facility. Text Mike for the current rate sheet; pricing is competitive with Phoenix studio rates and includes the convenience of no driving and no membership.
Is $300 a month a lot for a personal trainer?
$300 a month typically covers 4 sessions — about $75 per session. That sits at the lower end of the Phoenix personal training market. For one-on-one in-home work with a coach who builds your plan personally, it's reasonable. Group fitness or app-based coaching costs less; expert one-on-one in-home work costs more.
Is a personal trainer actually worth it?
Worth it depends on what you'd otherwise do. If you'd join a gym, never go, and quietly pay the membership for a year — a trainer is more efficient. If you'd get a workout app and use it consistently — the app is fine. The trainer's value is mainly accountability + correct technique + a plan that adapts as you progress. Most clients who keep working with Mike past month 3 do so because the consistency clicked.
Do you serve all of Phoenix?
Yes — from Central Phoenix and Arcadia north through Biltmore and Paradise Valley border, plus North Phoenix, Ahwatukee, and South Mountain. Drive time is built into Mike's day, not your bill. If your address is on the metro fringe, text first to confirm fit — there's a soft drive-time limit that keeps sessions punctual.
Can a personal trainer come to your house?
That's exactly what Mike does. He brings the equipment your workout needs, sets up in whatever space you have (a spare room, a garage, an 8×8 patch of carpet — all viable), and runs the session. The first time is a free intro: assessment, goal-setting, no commitment.
Training in Phoenix starts here.
First session is a free intro — no commitment, just a conversation about what you want and how Mike can help.