842 agencies indexed·Latest entry: 17 July 2026
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Industry · 134 agencies

Wellness & Fitness agencies.

Wellness and fitness marketing is the discipline of building demand for gyms, fitness apps, supplements, mental-wellbeing services, recovery and biohacking tech, and women's-health brands. It is distinct because supplement copy is locked to the GB Nutrition and Health Claims Register, MHRA polices the borderline between wellness products and medical devices, and the ASA treats transformation and guaranteed-results language as a default breach risk.

At a glance
  • 134 UK agencies with wellness & fitness experience
  • Across 31 UK locations
  • Reviewed 18 May 2026
Showing 121-134 of 134 wellness & fitness agenciesView in full archive
Builtvisible logo
Builtvisible
Specialist·London·51-200 Employees

Builtvisible, a leading digital marketing firm located in the heart of London, prides itself on forging significant connections between individuals, communities, and brands. By leveraging strategic data, SEO, and content, we offer dynamic organic strategies that make an immediate impact. Renowned for executing campaigns with a high return on investment focus, Builtvisible is also instrumental in d

Incisive Edge logo
Incisive Edge
Independent·London·11-50 Employees

Based in London, Incisive Edge is a growth-focused marketing agency specialising in B2B technology and SaaS. They provide a strategic blend of inbound marketing, content creation, marketing automation, and demand generation to help clients-from startups to global enterprises-accelerate pipeline and ROI. By focusing on measurable outcomes and data-driven insights, Incisive Edge empowers organisatio

Collective logo
Collective
Independent·London·11-50 Employees

Collective World is a pioneering creative agency with a base in both London and New York. This agency distinguishes itself by marrying classic expertise with forward-thinking technology, providing one-of-a-kind services such as 3D content generation, augmented creativity strategies, and ethically mindful performance marketing. As an accredited B Corporation, Collective World underscores an equilib

M3.Agency logo
M3.Agency
Independent·Birmingham·11-50 Employees

M3.agency is a renowned marketing agency headquartered in Birmingham, further known for its strategic offices located in London and Albrighton. Recognised for its pioneering marketing strategies, M3.agency recently made waves with the successful roll-out of their cutting-edge MG3 Hybrid+ campaign, embodying the spirit of contemporary marketing approaches. Specialising in the creation of bespoke, e

Evoluted logo
Evoluted
Independent·Sheffield·11-50 Employees

Evoluted, a comprehensive digital agency headquartered in Sheffield, also operates from additional locations in Birmingham, Manchester, and London. What distinguishes Evoluted is their prowess in crafting tailored digital solutions that are purpose-led, flexible, and expandable, guaranteeing sustained growth for their clientele. Their acclaimed team specialises in web design, development, and ROI-

CEEK Marketing logo
CEEK Marketing
Independent·London·11-50 Employees

CEEK, a London-based digital marketing firm, stands out in the crowded market with its unique OCMX methodology and E-Matrix™ strategy. Specialising in bespoke marketing insights and strategies, CEEK significantly enhances the ROI for every client. With a strong emphasis on innovation and data-led decisions, CEEK provides a holistic range of services: from social media and SEO marketing, to paid me

Artemis Marketing logo
Artemis Marketing
Independent·Brighton·11-50 Employees

Artemis Marketing, a premier digital marketing agency nestled in Hurstpierpoint, West Sussex, excels in providing bespoke SEO and digital marketing solutions, specifically tailored for SMEs and eCommerce enterprises. Renowned for our dedication to transparency and personalised strategies, we bring more than two decades of industry expertise to the table. Our unique methodology involves an in-depth

Sherbet Donkey Media logo
Sherbet Donkey Media
Independent·Birmingham·11-50 Employees

Sherbet Donkey Media, a Stoke Prior-based digital marketing agency, specialises in providing bespoke SEO, web design, and brand identity solutions tailored for businesses. What distinguishes Sherbet Donkey is its unique blend of human understanding and smart data application, guaranteeing superb client satisfaction while consistently achieving digital marketing triumphs. As a certified Google Part

Absolute Digital logo
Absolute Digital
Independent·London·11-50 Employees

As a topic of debate for many, Absolute Digital embodies action. With a firm commitment to becoming the preeminent independent digital marketing agency in the UK, Absolute Digital centralises its multifaceted services-SEO, Digital PR, link building, and PPC-as the cornerstone of its success. Crowned as the SEO Agency of the Year 2023, is your marketing strategy primed for a revolutionary enhanceme

Creative Ideaz logo
Creative Ideaz
Independent·Birmingham·2-10 Employees

Creative Ideaz, a celebrated digital marketing firm based in Birmingham, has been providing bespoke marketing solutions since 2002. As a specialist in the growth-enabling marketing strategies, organic and local SEO, and customised software solutions, we've earned a reputation as a trusted partner for entrepreneurs. What differentiates Creative Ideaz is our dedication to seamlessly integrating with

Literal Humans logo
Literal Humans
Independent·London·11-50 Employees

Literal Humans, a London-based marketing agency, champions a human-centred approach in an age dominated by AI and automation. Their global team of strategists, writers, designers, and developers delivers full-stack marketing solutions, blending creativity with cutting-edge data insights. With services spanning content marketing, branding, website design, performance marketing, organic social media

UKB Marketing logo
UKB Marketing
Independent·Bournemouth·2-10 Employees

UKB Marketing, a premier digital marketing firm located in Bournemouth, is renowned for its performance marketing services. They offer a range of bespoke services including marketing strategy, managing paid social and search, crafting high converting creatives and copy, and designing effective sales funnels. By focusing on top-tier creativity and strategic acumen, they propel substantial business

Search Buddy logo
Search Buddy
Independent·Leeds·2-10 Employees

Search Buddy, a renowned digital marketing firm, is nestled in the heart of Leeds, West Yorkshire. Possessing a collective expertise of over two decades, this compact team of professionals provides an exceptional fusion of digital marketing, tangible promotional strategies, and brand development services. Garnering trust from fledgeling start-ups, established SMEs, and global enterprises, Search B

TLMT(R) logo
TLMT(R)
Independent·Essex·11-50 Employees

TLMT® is a premier digital marketing agency situated in Frating, Colchester, UK, specialising in delivering bespoke, ROI-focused strategies that supersede conventional marketing tactics. What differentiates TLMT® from the crowd is their focus on crafting pragmatic, result-driven digital marketing solutions, personalised to each client's needs. They boast proficiency in SEO, SEM, PPC, web design, a

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Editor's note
AgencyIndex lists 130 UK agencies positioning into wellness and fitness. They split roughly six ways: gym-chain specialists working budget operators (PureGym, JD Gyms) and boutique studios where the market sits at around £6.5bn in 2025 with 11.3 million members and 16.6% population penetration; subscription-app shops running paid acquisition, onboarding and retention for fitness and habit products where 30-day retention in health and fitness clusters around 3-12% and annual plans materially out-retain monthly; supplement and sports-nutrition agencies operating under the GB Nutrition and Health Claims Register; mental-wellbeing and meditation-app teams handling sensitive-category copy and CQC-adjacent positioning; recovery, wearables and biohacking specialists working sleep tech, cold plunge and continuous-glucose-monitoring brands; and femtech and menopause shops in a UK menopause market sized around USD 490m in 2024 and growing at 4.8% to 2030. The category is distinct for four reasons. Supplement marketing in Great Britain is bounded by the GB Nutrition and Health Claims Register, which lists every authorised nutrition and health claim with its conditions of use; only register-listed wording (or wording with the same meaning) can be used in commercial communications, evidence has to be on file, and disease prevention or treatment claims are prohibited outright. The MHRA polices the borderline between food supplements, cosmetics, wellness products and medical devices, and a claim that strays toward diagnosis, prevention, monitoring or treatment of disease can pull a product into the medicines or medical-device regime, with reclassification triggering licensing, conformity-assessment and recall risk. The ASA has been actively monitoring food-supplement and weight-loss advertising through 2024 and 2025, with August 2025 alone seeing five rulings against supplement ads making unlicensed medicinal claims or unauthorised health claims. And women's-health and mental-wellbeing audiences sit in a sensitive register that punishes outcome-led 'transformation' creative the rest of consumer marketing has historically relied on. What is shifting in 2025 and 2026 is the category mix and the enforcement texture. The UK menopause and femtech segments are moving from niche wellness to mainstream women's-health positioning, with PA Consulting, Grant Thornton and Femtech World all flagging clinical validation, perimenopause-stage targeting and integrated care as the growth angles. AI-coach and AI-personalisation products are commodifying the bottom of the fitness-app stack, pushing brand and trust signals up the value chain. Wearables penetration sits at 42% of UK adults in 2024, with digital-fitness-app revenue projected to rise from USD 590m in 2025 to around USD 780m, so Apple Health, Strava and Garmin integration is now a default expectation rather than a feature. And the ASA's 2024 to 2025 enforcement trend is unmistakable: AI-assisted monitoring captured nearly 6,000 paid ads in early 2025, and the regulator's stance on transformation, before-and-after and guaranteed-results creative has hardened.
Common briefs
Gym-chain acquisition and membership campaigns across budget and boutique segmentsSubscription-app growth with onboarding, retention and creator-led acquisitionSupplement and sports-nutrition DTC launches under the GB Nutrition and Health Claims RegisterFemtech and menopause brand-build with clinical validation and perimenopause-stage positioningWearables, recovery-tech and biohacking marketing with Apple Health and Strava integrationMental-wellbeing and meditation-app campaigns with sensitive-category creative disciplineInfluencer and creator programmes with ASA and CMA disclosure rigourPersonal-trainer, studio and class-based marketing with local-search and community focus
Regulatory landscape
ASA · GB Health Claims Register · MHRA · FSA
claims must come from the approved register, no outcome guarantees

Four regulatory layers shape the work. The GB Nutrition and Health Claims (NHC) Register, maintained by DHSC and signposted via gov.uk, is the closed list of authorised claims for food and food supplements placed on the GB market; only register-listed wording or wording carrying the same consumer meaning can be used, every claim has documented conditions of use, and disease prevention, treatment or cure claims are not allowed. The FSA enforces the underlying food and supplement regime, including notification routes for novel ingredients, while CAP Code Section 15 mirrors the register on the advertising side and Clearcast NOG 13 applies on broadcast. The MHRA polices the borderline between food supplements, cosmetics, wellness products, medical devices and medicines under GN8 and the borderlines-with-medical-devices guidance: claims about diagnosis, prevention, monitoring or treatment of disease, or pharmacological, immunological or metabolic mechanisms of action, can reclassify a product into the medicines or medical-device regime, which carries CE/UKCA marking, conformity assessment and licensing obligations the marketing team usually has not budgeted for. The ASA enforces consumer-facing claims under CAP Code Sections 12 and 15, and in 2024-25 has been visibly active on weight-loss, food-supplement and fitness advertising; August 2025 saw five rulings against supplement ads making unauthorised health claims, and the regulator's published guidance treats 'guaranteed results', 'lose X pounds in Y days' and 'works for everyone' wording as default breach risk unless robustly substantiated and not misleading in context. The CMA, with direct-fining powers under the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 from 6 April 2025, sits alongside the ASA on influencer disclosure and consumer-law breaches, and the ICO enforces UK GDPR and PECR over health-data capture and electronic marketing.

Specialist signals
5 signals
of real wellness-and-fitness experience
  • · GB Nutrition and Health Claims Register fluency on supplement and functional-food briefs, with a working knowledge of the listed claims and their conditions of use rather than freeform wellness copywriting
  • · MHRA borderline awareness on any product that touches monitoring, recovery, mental-wellbeing or symptom relief, with a documented view on whether the work risks pulling the product into the medical-device or medicines regime
  • · Named UK case studies across at least one of gym chains, subscription apps, supplements, mental-wellbeing, wearables and femtech, with category-specific results rather than recycled consumer-brand showreels
  • · Sensitive-category creative discipline for women's-health, menopause and mental-wellbeing audiences, with copy and visual conventions that avoid transformation framing, before-and-after imagery and outcome guarantees
  • · Subscription-economics fluency for app and DTC supplement briefs: CAC, payback, monthly versus annual retention split, churn cohorts and Apple Health, Strava or Garmin integration as a retention lever
Sector watch-outs
5 to watch
in any wellness pitch
  • · Supplement copy in the work samples that strays off the GB Nutrition and Health Claims Register, with paraphrased health claims, disease-adjacent wording or implied benefits the listed claim does not authorise, sitting directly inside the ASA enforcement window
  • · Wellness or recovery-tech briefs treated as lifestyle marketing with no MHRA borderline check, no view on whether monitoring or symptom-relief claims would trigger medical-device classification, and no plan for what happens if the product gets reclassified
  • · Transformation and guaranteed-results creative: 'lose X pounds in Y days', 'guaranteed results', 'permanent transformation', before-and-after sequences without disclosed methodology, all of which the ASA flagged repeatedly through 2024 and 2025
  • · Women's-health, menopause and mental-wellbeing creative that uses generic wellness language ('balance your hormones', 'fix your gut', 'beat anxiety') with no clinical or evidential support and no sensitive-category copy discipline
  • · Subscription-app pitches with no view on day-30 retention benchmarks, no monthly-versus-annual retention split and no plan for Apple Health, Strava or Garmin integration as a passive-data and retention lever
Frequently asked

What brands ask about agencies for wellness & fitness.

5 questions our editors get most often, answered honestly. No agency-marketing speak.

Curated by humans

Specialist wellness and fitness retainers in the UK cluster in three bands. Boutique studio, personal-trainer and single-location gym work runs £1,500 to £6,000 a month for a focused brief covering local SEO, paid social, Google Ads and member-acquisition funnels. Mid-market specialists working multi-site gym chains, subscription apps and supplement DTC brands sit at £6,000 to £25,000 a month for integrated programmes covering paid media, creator pipelines, CRM, organic content and CRO with retention and contribution margin in the reporting. Premium and category specialists working femtech, mental-wellbeing platforms and national supplement or wearables brands bill £25,000 to £100,000 a month for brand, performance, retail-media and PR on retainer. Project work like a brand launch, a peak-January acquisition campaign or a subscription-app rebuild lands at £25,000 to £250,000. Media spend on Meta, TikTok, Google and out-of-home sits outside agency fees and is usually the largest line on the plan, and any work touching supplement claims or MHRA-borderline products carries an additional regulatory-review cost the agency should price in rather than absorb.