We mapped Fabletics' dual-pricing model — VIP vs. retail — against Lululemon, Alo Yoga, Gymshark, and Nike. Category breakdowns, discount patterns, and the subscription engine behind $1B+ in annual revenue.
Fabletics proved that a subscription model can reshape athleisure pricing — here's what the data reveals
Fabletics is the only major athleisure brand that charges a monthly membership fee — and it works. While Lululemon, Gymshark, and Alo Yoga compete on product-page prices alone, Fabletics built a $1B+ business by creating two price tiers: one for members, one for everyone else. The result is a pricing model that undercuts premium competitors by 30–50% for loyal customers while maintaining margins through recurring subscription revenue. Here’s what that model looks like in practice:
Fabletics surpassed $1 billion in annual revenue with 18% year-over-year growth. The subscription-first model generates approximately $550 million annually from VIP membership fees alone, creating a predictable revenue base that traditional DTC brands lack.
VIP members account for approximately 95% of Fabletics' total revenue. Around 80% of customers opt into the $59.95/month membership, driven by aggressive introductory offers (2 leggings for $24) and daily discounts of 20–50% off retail. This concentration creates a flywheel: more members = more recurring revenue = deeper discounts = more members.
Fabletics VIP members pay roughly 50% less than Lululemon for comparable leggings. VIP leggings at $25–$70 vs. Lululemon’s $88–$148. Even at non-VIP retail prices, Fabletics undercuts Lululemon by 15–30% — but the real value is locked behind the membership paywall.
How Fabletics' dual-pricing model creates two different brands in one catalog
Fabletics operates two price tiers simultaneously. VIP members pay $25–$70 for leggings. Non-members pay $50–$110 for the same products. This dual-pricing model is the engine behind the entire business — it creates a clear incentive to subscribe, while maintaining a retail price high enough to make VIP feel like a genuine discount.
The VIP credit system is the clever part. When you’re charged $59.95, that becomes a credit redeemable for any outfit (two pieces) up to approximately $100 in value. For regular buyers, this means you’re effectively getting premium athleisure at 40–60% off retail — better than waiting for seasonal sales at Lululemon or Alo Yoga.
We estimate based on fabletics.com VIP catalog browse, March 2026. Percentages represent approximate share of total SKUs in each price band.
Roughly 78% of Fabletics VIP products fall under $60. The subscription model lets them price aggressively — they don’t need high per-item margins when they’re collecting $59.95/month in recurring revenue regardless of whether the customer buys anything.
This is exactly the kind of pricing intelligence LeadMaxxing generates automatically. Our AI scrapes competitor catalogs, maps price bands, and flags when competitors adjust strategy — see how it works →
Leggings, sports bras, shorts, tops, outerwear, and scrubs mapped by VIP price
Leggings are the gateway product. The “2 leggings for $24” introductory offer is the single most powerful conversion tool in Fabletics’ arsenal. Once the customer is a VIP member, the rest of the catalog opens up at discounted prices — creating a classic loss-leader-to-loyalty ladder.
| Category | VIP Price Range | Core VIP Price | Top Seller Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leggings | $25 – $70 | $50 | PowerHold High-Waisted Legging |
| Sports Bras | $15 – $55 | $35 | High Neck Sports Bra |
| Shorts | $20 – $50 | $35 | The One Short |
| Tops & Tanks | $15 – $60 | $30 | Seamless Ribbed Tank |
| Outerwear | $30 – $90 | $60 | Cloudknit Hoodie |
| Scrubs | $25 – $50 | $35 | FIGS-style Scrub Top |
The scrubs line is an unexpected growth driver. Fabletics launched medical scrubs and reportedly generated $75 million in scrub sales. This diversification beyond core athleisure gives them pricing leverage in a category with less premium competition.
Menswear now accounts for over 30% of total business — a significant expansion from the brand’s women-first origins with co-founder Kate Hudson. This category expansion mirrors what Lululemon did a decade earlier, but Fabletics is executing it faster through their multi-platform ad strategy and membership pipeline.
A full Fabletics VIP outfit (leggings + sports bra + top) costs $60–$130. At Lululemon, that same combination runs $180–$350+. The VIP model doesn’t just discount individual items — it makes the total basket dramatically more affordable.
Most DTC brands guess at category pricing. LeadMaxxing tracks your competitors' catalogs daily, flagging new products, price changes, and category shifts before you notice them manually — start free →
Fabletics VIP pricing vs Lululemon, Alo Yoga, Gymshark, and Nike across every category
Fabletics VIP pricing undercuts every premium competitor except Gymshark. Against Lululemon, VIP members save 40–60%. Against Alo Yoga, they save 30–50%. The only brand pricing comparably is Gymshark — but Gymshark doesn’t require a monthly membership commitment.
| Category | Fabletics (VIP) | Lululemon | Alo Yoga | Gymshark | Nike |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leggings | $25–$70 | $88–$148 | $68–$138 | $38–$60 | $50–$110 |
| Sports Bras | $15–$55 | $48–$78 | $40–$88 | $26–$44 | $30–$55 |
| Shorts | $20–$50 | $58–$88 | $64–$101 | $30–$48 | $35–$65 |
| Outerwear | $30–$90 | $98–$248 | $52–$498 | $42–$50 | $55–$120 |
| Full Outfit* | $60–$130 | $180–$350 | $150–$300 | $90–$130 | $120–$250 |
*Full outfit = leggings + sports bra + top. Source: Product page scrapes of fabletics.com (VIP prices), lululemon.com, aloyoga.com, gymshark.com, nike.com. March 2026.
The Gymshark comparison is the most instructive. Both brands target value-conscious fitness consumers, but their models are opposite. Gymshark charges everyone the same price with no membership. Fabletics locks the best prices behind a paywall. The result: Fabletics gets recurring revenue; Gymshark gets simpler customer acquisition. Both hit $1B+ revenue.
Against Lululemon, the gap is enormous on outerwear. A Lululemon jacket runs $98–$248. Fabletics VIP outerwear tops out at $90. That’s the category where subscription pricing creates the biggest absolute dollar savings — and likely where Fabletics converts the most Lululemon cross-shoppers.
LeadMaxxing monitors competitor product pages, detects price changes, and alerts you when competitors adjust their strategy. The same intelligence shown above — updated daily, for your brand.
Start free →Where Fabletics sits in the athleisure landscape and how the subscription model defines it
Fabletics occupies a unique position: “subscription-powered accessible premium.” They’re not competing on product prestige like Lululemon or on community like Gymshark. They’re competing on value-per-dollar, locked behind a membership gate. It’s the Costco model applied to activewear.
Source: Product page scrapes of fabletics.com (VIP prices), lululemon.com, aloyoga.com, gymshark.com, nike.com. March 2026. Full outfit = leggings + sports bra + top.
Fabletics' brand positioning rests on four pillars:
Fabletics doesn't compete on product hype — they compete on recurring economics. While Gymshark builds community and Lululemon builds prestige, Fabletics builds a subscription flywheel. The $59.95/month fee means they can afford to price products lower than anyone else in the premium tier. The risk? If members stop seeing value, they cancel. The reward? Predictable revenue that funds aggressive growth: 114 stores, $75M scrubs line, and category expansion into men's.
Introductory offers, VIP perks, and seasonal events that drive the membership machine
Fabletics' entire discount strategy is designed to funnel customers into VIP membership. The introductory offer (2 leggings for $24) is one of the most aggressive in athleisure. Once you’re in, daily VIP discounts of 20–50% off retail make it hard to leave. Seasonal sales layer additional savings on top — but the deepest discounts are always VIP-exclusive.
The “2 for $24” intro offer is a loss leader, not a discount. Fabletics likely loses money on the initial transaction. The payoff comes from the $59.95/month subscription that follows. If even 50% of intro-offer customers stay as VIP members for 6 months, that $24 acquisition cost generates $360 in membership revenue alone — before any additional purchases. This is why Fabletics can afford the most aggressive introductory pricing in the industry, supported by their tracking infrastructure that optimizes the conversion funnel.
Fabletics' “skip or be charged” model is deliberate behavioral design. Between the 1st and 5th of each month, VIP members must actively skip or they’re charged $59.95. This creates monthly touchpoints with the brand — even if you skip, you’re browsing the new collection. Some fraction of would-be skippers convert to buyers. It’s the gym membership model: revenue from inaction.
Turning Fabletics' pricing playbook into your competitive advantage
If you’re a DTC brand, Fabletics proves that subscription pricing can work in categories where no one expected it. Their VIP model turns a commodity product (leggings) into a recurring revenue engine. The data above shows exactly where Fabletics sits relative to competitors — and the lesson is clear: the most powerful pricing strategy isn’t just about price points, it’s about pricing models. Explore how this connects to their SEO and content strategy for acquisition, their tech stack for personalization, and their homepage evolution to see how pricing is embedded across the business.
The pricing intelligence in this report took weeks to compile manually. LeadMaxxing scrapes competitor product pages, maps price bands, flags price changes, and benchmarks your positioning — updated weekly for your brand. Plans start at $29/month.
Try competitor price tracking →Actionable lessons from Fabletics' pricing playbook
Fabletics proves that subscription pricing works in athleisure. Even if you don’t charge monthly, consider a paid loyalty tier that unlocks better pricing. LeadMaxxing tracks how competitors structure their loyalty and membership programs.
Fabletics' “2 for $24” loses money on day one but generates $360+ in membership revenue over 6 months. Design your introductory pricing around lifetime value, not first-order margin. LeadMaxxing monitors competitor intro offers and promotions in real time.
Fabletics' non-VIP retail prices exist primarily to make VIP pricing look irresistible. If your membership saves less than 20%, it won’t convert. LeadMaxxing benchmarks the gap between member and non-member pricing across your competitive set.
Scrubs ($75M), menswear (30%+), accessories — Fabletics keeps growing by giving VIP members more reasons to use their monthly credit. LeadMaxxing tracks category launches and new product drops across your competitors.
Get a free LeadMaxxing account and start supercharging your leads. Start free →
Create a free LeadMaxxing account and we'll generate a full competitive analysis for YOUR brand. The same intelligence you just read — comparison with competitors, actionable strategies, and AI-powered recommendations.














