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Guide

# Spreadsheet vs app for personal training clients

The spreadsheet is not wrong — it just has a breaking point. Here is how to know if you have hit it.

A spreadsheet manages personal training clients well up to roughly five clients with simple arrangements: it is free, flexible, and familiar. Past that point, packages, renewals, and gym-floor updates make a phone-based client management app the more accurate system, because the record gets updated in the moment instead of at the laptop.

[Download on the App Store](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/coachjournal-session-tracker/id6449302292)

Free to start. Android is in development.

## How to decide between a spreadsheet and an app in 5 steps

1.  ### List what you actually track
    
    Contacts, sessions completed, package balances, renewal dates, payments, notes. If your real list is two items long, a spreadsheet is honestly enough. The comparison only becomes interesting when packages and renewals enter the picture, because those need updating from wherever you are.
    
2.  ### Count your active clients
    
    Under about five clients, everything fits in your head and the sheet is a backup. Between five and fifteen, the sheet is the system and its gaps start to cost real money. Beyond fifteen, manual tracking reliably leaks — missed renewals and untracked sessions stop being rare events.
    
3.  ### Notice where the failures happen
    
    The spreadsheet's weakness is not features — it is location. Sessions finish on the gym floor; the sheet lives on a laptop. Every hour between the session and the update is where wrong counts, forgotten payments, and phantom package balances come from.
    
4.  ### Time one week of admin
    
    Count the minutes spent updating the sheet, cross-checking who paid, and reconstructing what happened on busy days. Trainers are consistently surprised — 30 to 60 minutes a week is common, and it is the least enjoyable part of the job.
    
5.  ### Run both for two weeks
    
    The cheap experiment: keep the spreadsheet, add a free client-management app, and log into both for two weeks. If the app's record is more accurate at the end — it usually is, purely because your phone is always with you — you have your answer with nothing lost.
    

## Where Coach Journal fits in

Coach Journal is built for the exact things spreadsheets drop: it lives on your phone, so sessions and payments get logged between clients, and package balances and renewal status update themselves from what you log.

Client profiles replace the rows — contact details, notes, session history, package status, and payment records in one place per client, visible before every session.

It is free to start, which makes the two-week side-by-side test genuinely free to run. And when you need a spreadsheet again — for taxes or reporting — exports give you one.

## Questions people ask

### Is a spreadsheet good enough for managing personal training clients?

For a small roster with simple per-session arrangements, yes — genuinely. Spreadsheets fail specifically when packages, renewals, and away-from-desk updates enter the workflow, which for most trainers happens somewhere between five and ten clients.

### What does a client management app do that a spreadsheet cannot?

Mainly three things: it is with you when sessions happen, so records stay current; it derives package balances and renewal status automatically from logged sessions; and it flags who needs attention instead of waiting for you to scan rows.

### Can I move my client spreadsheet into Coach Journal?

Yes — add your clients with their current package status, then track forward from there. Most trainers migrate in under half an hour, and exports mean you can always get your data back out as files.

## Related guides

[Track client payments](/en/guides/how-to-track-coaching-client-payments)[Organize clients without a CRM](/en/guides/how-to-organize-coaching-clients)[Session log: template or app](/en/guides/coaching-session-log)

## Coach Journal for your profession

[Fitness Trainers](/en/for/fitness-trainers)

## Related searches

-   personal training client spreadsheet
-   client tracking app for personal trainers
-   PT client management
-   personal trainer admin tools

## Put this system on your phone

Coach Journal tracks clients, sessions, renewals, and payments so you do not have to. Free to start on iPhone and iPad.

[Download on the App Store](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/coachjournal-session-tracker/id6449302292)