Good morning, and welcome to the Life Time Group Holdings conference call to discuss financial results for the first fiscal quarter of 2022. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session, and instructions will follow at that time. Please be advised that reproduction of this call in whole or in part is not permitted without written authorization from the company. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. During this call, the company will make forward-looking statements which involve a number of risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from our forward-looking statements. There is a comprehensive list of risk factors in the company's SEC filings, which you are encouraged to review. Also, the company will discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow before growth capital expenditures.
This information, along with reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in the earnings release issued this morning and the company's 8-K filed with the SEC and on the investor relations section of the Life Time's website. On the call from management today are Bahram Akradi, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, and Tom Bergmann, President and Chief Financial Officer. I will now turn the call over to Mr. Akradi. Please go ahead, sir.
Good morning, and thank you for joining our Q1 earnings call. Our long-term strategy has been and remains to build and uphold the most premium, most loved and respected brand in the healthy way of life, live, work, play ecosystem. As a result of executing this strategy, Life Time was at an inflection point for very accelerated growth pre-COVID. Despite the impact of government-mandated shutdowns and masks, vaccines, and other restrictions, we continued to build and strengthen our brand, reputation, systems, and programs. We are seeing great results and rewards from the way we treated our team members, landlords, vendors, and communities. This has put us in a great position not only to recover, but to exceed our past performance. Life Time is once again at an inflection point with great outlook. Our fundamentals have not only been improving each month, they also have been accelerating.
Tom will provide full color on this call. Now, I'm going to break down our short-term strategy in three parts. First, our most capital and investment-like opportunity is to grow our existing athletic country clubs to their highest potential in revenue and pro-profitability. We're seeing approximately 4% month-over-month dues revenue growth in our athletic country clubs at which we have implemented numerous initiatives over the last 18 months. These initiatives are paying off, and we believe will continue to improve throughout the rest of the year. We believe it will bring the majority of our clubs to exceed our 2019 dues revenue by year-end. Second, we continue to evaluate opportunities to make our company more asset light and strengthen our balance sheet. In this area, we are actively exploring additional sale-leaseback transactions and other structures to achieve this objective.
Third, we are leveraging our brand equity and reputation to capture additional asset-light real estate locations for our athletic country clubs, along with potential health and well-being growth opportunities where our membership base and trusted brand gives us a natural advantage to succeed. For our first priority on growth, our Q1 results were right in line with our expectation, and we're continuing to accelerate as we rapidly grow our revenue and profitability at our existing athletic country club locations. From mid-February onward, we have seen strong growth in visits, revenue, and membership recovery at our athletic country clubs. We believe this will continue throughout the Q2 . Tom and I look forward to sharing those results with you next quarter. As I mentioned, we have invested in a range of initiatives that complements our premium athletic country clubs and provide fuel to accelerating our revenue and profitability recovery.
Our aggressive nationwide rollout of pickleball, active aging, and small group training are just three of the many, many initiatives we have underway. Members are increasingly engaging in these programs, and our membership base is both growing and becoming more diverse. This also has put us in a strong position to capture significant additional membership at substantially higher average dues. Average membership dues were $145 in the first Q1, a sequential increase of $10 from the $135 we reported just in the Q4 of last year. We see these numbers growing to the $150-$160 range by end of the year.
The new join dues rate for memberships sold during the Q1 averaged $166, compared to $135 in the Q1 of 2021, and $115 during the first Q1 of 2019. For the second priority, to further strengthen our balance sheet, we're evaluating alternatives for sale-leaseback transactions involving a significant amount of owned real estate portfolio. As a reminder, we currently own approximately 60 athletic country clubs. As we mentioned on our Q4 2021 call, we closed on two sale-leaseback transactions with proceeds of $80 million in the first Q1 and expect to close another two transactions on or about May 13 with proceeds of $95 million, bringing the year-to-date total to $175 million.
We're currently evaluating sale-leaseback and other opportunities to monetize up to an additional $500 million of owned real estate by the end of the Q3 this year. We will provide you with updates as we progress. For our third priority, we will continue to explore asset-light growth opportunities that are natural extension to our brand. We have built a healthy way of life ecosystem and a premium brand that is extremely well-positioned to grow and capture new growth opportunities. As I turn it over to Tom, I want to reinforce my confidence in the power of Life Time, our brand, and the experiences we deliver. We feel very good about the underlying trends in our business and the strategic initiatives we have in place driving these trends. Thank you for your time today and your continuous support in Life Time. Looking forward to the Q&A. Tom?
All right. Thanks, Bahram. I'll now provide some additional detail on our three priorities Bahram highlighted, Q1 results, and outlook for the full year. To start with the Q1 , total revenue increased 57% to $392 million, driven mainly by center revenue growth. Total center revenue increased 56% to $382 million and was driven by a 55% increase in membership dues and a 57% increase in in-center revenue. Average center revenue per center membership increased to $580 from $459 in the prior year period, reflecting increased member spending with our in-center businesses, the continued execution of our pricing strategy, and the opening of new athletic country clubs in more affluent markets. On a same-store basis, comparable center sales increased 50.3%.
Center memberships increased approximately 24% to just under 674,000 as of March 31, compared to 544,000 as of March 31 last year, and approximately 649,000 as of December 31, 2021. As we discussed on our last earnings call, the timing of the Omicron surge early this year disrupted our typical seasonal membership patterns. While January would typically be the strongest membership month in the quarter, this pattern was reversed in the period because of Omicron. While we do not intend to provide monthly memberships on a regular basis, the following breakdown will help provide some context to the progression of the quarter and momentum of the business. By month, we added 3,300 net center memberships in January, 4,400 in February, and 16,900 in March.
To put this into context, in 2019, we added 21,400 net center memberships in January, 3,300 in February, and 7,000 in March. Further, the momentum we saw in March continued into April with us adding 13,800 net center memberships compared to just under 5,000 back in April of 2019. Given the momentum we are seeing in the business, we expect to add 50,000 or more net center memberships during the Q2 . Average monthly dues per membership was approximately $145 in the Q1 compared to $121 in the Q1 of last year and $135 in the Q4 of last year.
This year-over-year and sequential increase was driven by the opening of new athletic country clubs, increases in legacy pricing, and a higher mix of family memberships. We continue to see average dues per member increasing to the targeted $150-$160 range by the end of the Q2 and remaining in that range during the back half of the year. Other revenue, which includes revenue generated from businesses outside of our centers, more than doubled to approximately $10.6 million in the quarter and was primarily driven by our athletic events business. Total operating expenses during the Q1 were $403 million. This included non-cash share-based compensation expense of $21.4 million and a one-time gain of $28.4 million related to the sale-leaseback of two properties in the quarter.
Excluding these items, total operating expenses increased 24.5% to $410 million. Center operations expense was $240 million and included $1.2 million of non-cash share-based compensation expense. Excluding share-based compensation expense, center operations expense increased 37% due to increased staffing requirements to support our investment in our programs, services and centers, and increased usage of our centers and services by our members during the quarter. Rent expense increased 10.8% to $56 million, driven primarily by additional sale-leasebacks compared to the prior year, and additional non-cash rent expense where we've taken possession of a site to begin construction but have not yet completed construction and opened for operation. General, administrative and marketing expenses were $66.6 million and included $19.9 million of non-cash share-based compensation expense.
Excluding non-operating items from both periods, general, administrative, and marketing expenses increased 24% to $46.2 million. This was primarily due to the restaffing of our center support overhead functions as centers reopened and usage rates continued to increase, along with additional public company expenses. Depreciation and amortization decreased 5.1% to $58.1 million, and other operating income was $17 million, including $400,000 of non-cash share-based compensation expense and a $28.4 million one-time gain related to the sale-leaseback of two properties in the quarter. Excluding these items, other operating expenses increased $11.1 million from $6.1 million, primarily related to the increased activity in our athletic events business.
Our GAAP reported loss from operations for the quarter was $10.9 million, compared with a loss of $82.2 million in the prior year period. Excluding the $6.6 million net impact from share-based compensation expense and other one-time items, the adjusted loss from operations was $17.5 million, compared to an adjusted loss from operations of $79.9 million in last year's Q1 . Net interest expense was $29.9 million, a 68.9% decrease compared to the $96.2 million in the prior year period. Excluding the one-time items impacting its interest expense in the first Q1 of 2021, interest expense declined $7 million or approximately 19% due to lower debt levels. Our effective tax rate was 7%, compared with 26% in the prior year period.
This lower effective tax rate is primarily a result of an increase in the valuation allowance associated with certain of our deferred tax assets, as well as deductibility limitations associated with executive compensation. GAAP net loss was $38 million, compared with a net loss of $152.8 million in the prior year period. Excluding share-based compensation expense and other non-recurring items, our adjusted net loss improved to $44.1 million from $94.1 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA increased to $40.6 million, from a loss of $18.9 million in the prior year period. Moving on to the balance sheet. Cash and cash equivalents as of March 31, 2022 was $41.1 million, compared to $31.7 million at year-end.
During the quarter, as Bahram mentioned, we closed on the sale-leaseback of two properties for gross proceeds of approximately $80 million, and we expect to close on two additional sale-leaseback properties on or about May thirteenth for approximately an additional $95 million in gross proceeds, bringing our year-to-date sale-leaseback gross proceeds to $175 million. As Bahram discussed, we continue to look at opportunities to further monetize our real estate portfolio and are currently evaluating opportunities to sale-leaseback up to an additional $500 million of real estate prior to the end of the Q3 . Assuming the successful completion of an incremental $500 million of sale-leaseback proceeds, we would plan to use the proceeds to pay down our term loan and put cash on the balance sheet to fund future growth.
As a reminder, as we continue to execute sale-leaseback transactions and incur incremental cash and non-cash rent expense, we look at adjusted EBITDA plus the impact of rent expense as reported in our financial statements to better understand our underlying operating performance and trends. Capital expenditures totaled $111 million during the quarter, compared with $43 million in the Q1 of last year. The increase was primarily related to the higher number of athletic country club openings and properties currently under construction. We plan to open 12 new athletic country clubs, compared with just 6 in 2021. Turning to our outlook. Last quarter, we focused our guidance around the Q1 and provided some commentary on how we were thinking about the full year.
Our Q1 results were right in line with our expectations, and we are seeing the type of acceleration that we anticipated moving through the Q2 . As a result, we feel very good about the progress of the business and our total revenue outlook for the full year of $1.8 billion-$1.9 billion has not changed. Assuming we close on the $500 million of additional sale-leaseback transactions at the end of the Q3 , we expect total cash and non-cash rent expense for the year will increase from our previous range of $235 million-$245 million, or approximately 13% of projected total revenue for the year to $245 million-$255 million, or approximately 13.5% of projected full-year revenue.
Even with this higher rent expense, we still expect our adjusted EBITDA margin to steadily improve into the 18%-20% range in the back half of the year as we continue to gain momentum in our business and operating leverage on our fixed cost base. Finally, a couple of items to note as you think about our performance for the full year. First, as I mentioned earlier, we expect average monthly dues to be in the $150-$160 range by the end of the Q2 and remain in that range during the second half of the year as our mix of family memberships begins to seasonally decline when our pools close and the kids go back to school.
Second, unlike previous years, where we typically lose net members in the back half of the year, we expect to gain net new center memberships in the third and Q4 of this year due to the opening of 10 new Athletic Country Clubs during that period and improved member engagement and retention. There is a lot to be optimistic about as we move away from the pandemic, look forward to our summer outdoor season, and see the momentum building in many of the new initiatives we have been investing in. With that, we will turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A. Operator?
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, you're welcome to press star and then one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star and then two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Our first question is from John Heinbockel of Guggenheim. Please go ahead.
Hey, I wanted to start with real estate. What can you give us a sense of the pipeline for 2023? Right. Because I think right now, including Brooklyn Tower, that you might have seven, right, that we can clearly see. That's part one, and then maybe for Tom, if you think about the current rate environment, I don't think that would have much impact on your per property valuation, right? You normally get about $40 million per property. I don't think this rate environment would impact that. Can you comment on that?
All right. John, how are you, first of all? How is your day?
Excellent. Yourself?
Great. No complaints. Your question is, total clubs opening in 2023?
Yeah, no, just to start with the pipeline, right? You said 11+. I'm just curious right now.
Yeah. It's really like part of it is just I think everybody needs to remain fluid. We have an incredible pipeline of deals we're working on. At the same time, we're not gonna commit to like is it gonna be 10 clubs or 12 clubs or 14 clubs. The pipeline is massive and activity is nonstop. However, deliberately, we are taking the time to sometimes rebid some of the constructions. Construction costs are high right now. Some of it will remain, won't go back, and some of it is purely sort of a timing issue where there has been too much demand and not enough supply of just, you know, just the subcontractors. They sort of give you whatever number without doing any work on it.
You just have to take the time to go back and rebid. Those are just logistical issues we have to deal with. In the macro picture, our growth opportunity has never been any better. Literally never been any better. We are in so much discussions all the time that, you know, I have no concern about do we have amazing opportunities to grow the brand.
Of course, the new clubs opening up, if you guys have a chance to see the New York clubs that are opening in Chicago or what just happened in Frisco, they just perform amazingly. We're looking forward to the growth there. I am less concerned about if it's 11 or 12 or 13, more focused on, hey, do we have 100 deals in the pipeline for the next Five, six years? The answer is yes.
Yeah. John, and on your second question on the rate environment that we're currently in, you're right, this will have very minor impact on our proceeds or on our sale-leaseback environment. Obviously it's a volatile rate environment, but we're extremely confident in the attractiveness of our properties. You know, the change in interest rate environment, again, is pretty minor.
One more thing. This is important for everyone. I have to continue to explain. There are different types of investors. We're talking to numerous different kinds. You know, the normal big REITs, private REITs, and also, you know, of course, those. Some of these people are, you know, investing strictly from FFO and they have big massive corporate revolvers, and they don't do project-by-project financing. Interest rates are gonna go up. They're gonna come down. These guys know that. So they're looking for great assets and tenants that actually have paid their rent throughout this whole time. There aren't that many of those. So obviously, they do come to us. When I say, you know, treating people the right way, building your brand over, you know, 30 years will pay off.
We treat everyone with total respect, and as a result, landlords everywhere wanting to work with us, wanting more Life Time assets. Where it affects it is the people who buy a specific asset and have specific financing to that asset. They're buying three clubs, they're putting 40% down, and they wanna get the financing. That group is gonna have a harder time to compete with the other folks who are giving us the kind of cap rates we're looking for. We're not worried about it. I have zero concern about lack of ability to getting sale-leasebacks done.
All right. One quick follow-up. Where are you in rebuilding the personal training staff? When you think about getting back to 2019 in-center revenue per member, I think that was always a maybe mid- to late 2023 timetable. Is that still fair?
Yeah, now you're starting to ask trade secrets, and if I tell you, I have to come back and make sure you can't tell anybody about it. Look, I have always been pessimistic about the personal training business for the last 10 or 15 years. Without getting in details, I am personally working on it to creating a product can only be delivered physically and at Life Time. Super excited about it. We're involved daily. My, you know, my plan is to beat and surpass the past personal training performances. I'm pretty confident we're gonna get there. Right now, you know, we are in the high 2,000s in terms of number of trainers.
That number will increase, but it's more important to have the educated, well-trained personal trainers who are truly the type of coach that they're earning their keep. You know, a lot of the personal training business really is fluff. I don't think that has been much of a, you know, much of a difference that I've seen in the years. But we're transforming it to a place where I am confident we stand alone in the quality of what we deliver and the type of trainers we attract. And so it's been the highest focus right now for the company. Dues are, as you guys will see, building exactly as we wanted. Other in-center revenues are coming following the swipes of the clubs and growing.
I think the personal training, we will have it, you know, we'll have it get to the same areas that we need to, like, 2019 and beyond, by, towards the end of the year for sure.
Okay. Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
Our next question is from Brian Nagel of Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning.
Good morning, Brian. How are you?
Doing well. Congrats on the momentum here.
Thank you.
The first question, Tom, appreciate all the month-to-month breakdown you gave us in your commentary. My question just on with regard to that membership growth, I mean, anything you could say, you know, as we're looking at the build here regionally? Then also, as far as the members now joining, you know, what portion of those were your, you know, were digital on hold now converting back to normal versus really new to Life Time?
Yeah, Brian, thanks for the question. Good question. Yeah, really happy with the momentum we saw in the quarter and what continued into April. You know, it's getting broader and broader across the country as the Omicron restrictions got reduced. As you would expect, you know, we saw really great strength across the Heartland and into the Mountain region, and, especially down into Texas, into the South, were, you know, largely our strongest performers. You know, and then, you know, we're seeing the areas that had more severe mandates and that came off later starting to rebuild. You know, that's what gives us the confidence that we see all these other markets where the restrictions were less, that we know these other markets are following the same trajectory and are starting to rebuild.
We're continuing to see in those markets, again, where we're, you know, near or at 100% of pre-pandemic levels, the on-hold balances are back to a normalized level or lower. Another reason for optimism on areas such as the Northeast or the Mid-Atlantic is we're starting now to see some of those on-hold balances start to convert back to active access memberships as well. You know, feeling really good about the momentum coming through. You know, as you would expect, you know, again, those states with less restrictions that came off earlier coming back and are in the upper 90s% or are already 100% of where they were pre-pandemic levels.
We are seeing the metrics. I mean, each month, more clubs are achieving 2019 dues. With a couple more tweaks with the programming that we're pushing, they also will surpass 2019 revenues. You can see those patterns. Again, just like Tom said, the more the government interfered, the more they put all these restrictions in place, which obviously today the data clearly demonstrates none of them were having any detectable effect versus the places did it versus didn't do it. It doesn't matter. It's water over the dam. Now we see that trend coming back, and we don't have much doubt that majority, I mean, I think all but maybe a handful of clubs that uniquely, you know, sort of idiosyncrasies, we will get everything back to the 2019 profitability and revenues, of course.
There's been gives and takes on cost increases. We implemented many great initiatives, you know, changing of the sales structure to the member concierge and few other things that had given us quite a bit of incredible margin to make up for all the increase in costs and utilities and stuff. We are really well-positioned to get our clubs to the exact same level of productivity, revenues, and profits that we used to have. If the question is just, is it gonna be a couple of months sooner or a couple of months later? We have enough trends, we have enough data, we have enough, you know, examples of what it takes.
Now, clubs that they had severe restrictions for very, very long time, and they were shut down for a longer period of time, they have had a deeper drop. This is really important for all the analysts to understand. Some of you guys run technology, some of you guys run, you know, hardline retail, some of you guys are in restaurants. Our business is not like any of those businesses. We're a subscription business. It takes forever to build a subscription. Each month, we basically sell somewhere between 2% and 4% of the total memberships of a mature club. It takes time to build that and that gives you the protection.
It also takes time for it to go down, except when the government steps in and does the ridiculous things that they did with shutting things, businesses down, the way they did this. At this point, we have, you know, company turned the corner. We have positive EBITDA. We never stopped investing in our growth rebuild strategy. Not in December, not in January. We plowed through and continued to spend the money, put all the programs in place, get the people, get everything going, and now we're seeing the fruits of that. You know, we obviously will have a pretty robust quarter here, Q2 , with all our pool pass, you know, all the athletic beach clubs that we have and families joining.
Typically, we have a seasonal drop coming end of August, September, October. We have a seasonal drop and people put memberships back on hold or drop out. We have been implementing so many different programs to make sure Tom and I are on it, Jeff is with us, and everybody else, to make sure come August, September, we actually do not have the seasonal drop in the membership, we grow. We are confident on our strategy, on our execution, and the trends are supporting it.
No, that's very helpful. Bahram, just one follow-up to that. On that, you know, with regard to all the investments you've made, and you've talked a lot about, you know, the big push into pickleball and other programming. Are you seeing. I know it's early, but are you seeing a better than normal uptake? On these programs from your members, either new or existing, that could suggest the stickier membership going forward?
Absolutely. I mean, we are taking the unique, you know, the unique customer that is using the different programs. Our pickleball, you know, literally is like almost 40,000 people, and it's growing explosively. But understand that we are in a position to be like the Amazon to online sales for pickleball. The number of assets we have with basketball courts, outdoor space, you know, the tennis courts that we have. We're gonna finish having almost 200 dedicated courts. These are not, you know, going on the, in the basketball courts on a wood floor with some paints on there or some tape. This is absolutely professionally executed like everything else we do, dedicated court programming. Nobody will have the same opportunity that they would have with Life Time.
You can go from Phoenix, Arizona, California, Florida, Minnesota, Chicago, Texas, doesn't matter. Whatever market you're in, you can go to your Life Time athletic country club, you can use your app, reserve a court, and play and join the programs. We can be literally 10x the largest provider of pickleball in the United States within the next 18 months, and we are taking that. We're doing it. That's that. Small group training. We are relentless on providing enough programs. You know, we used to teach roughly a goal of 100 big group classes, just normal group fitness programs, yoga, this, that, you know, spin per club. Right now we are focused on getting to some numbers similar to that with small group training.
Obviously, it's a lot of programming, setting up the places, hiring the people, putting the schedule together, making it convenient for the customer to join it, and then all those classes have to ramp up. We are not focused on a month-to-month today, EBITDA, to just be clear. We're focused on getting the top-line revenue, the swipes and the subscriptions, to a level that we will be making more money in each club than we did in 2019. All the programs obviously are put in place. As an engineer and all the other, you know, brilliant people we have in this company, we run a program, we test it, we see how it works, we make adaptation, we run it, we adjust it, we test it. Yes, we're trend.
We're looking at all those trends, and then we make adaptations as we need to, and everything is working extremely well.
Congrats again. Thank you.
Thanks a lot. Bye-bye.
Our next question is from Chris Carril of RBC Capital. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning, and great to hear from you all. You discussed healthy quarter-over-quarter growth in the average membership dues with a line of sight on that $150-$160 level. Maybe could you expand a little bit more on the contribution from those different tailwinds to that growth that you talked about, including legacy increases and the new center contribution?
Let's go through that. I'm gonna walk you guys through the pricing. At Life Time, we have always, and again, I've always taken the blame for myself, and it's not nobody else but me. We built big, large athletic clubs, and we sold them way too cheap. We literally were working around the clock for 10 years to try to micro-adjust those prices by the small adjustments, so that we wouldn't upset the membership in the past. We took a bolder approach. The reality is this business really breaks down to two. You guys compare, you know, some of you guys compare Planet Fitness results or Crunch or etcetera with our business, and these two could not be, you know, any more different as a business model. We as an athletic country club, our business is a use model.
We expect the customer to use the club. They're paying a high amount of dues to use the facility. Even in a use model, maybe 18%-20% of the customers that you have signed up over 10 or 15 years, they start using the club less lightly, you know, a little more lightly or, you know, sometimes they're not there for a month at a time, but they keep paying their dues. In a non-use model, you know, 75% of the 10-20, the HVLP model, that 75% of the customer isn't using the club, but paying the $10 or $15 a month because it's too easy. That's the business model there. With us, we focused on creating an experience that cannot be duplicated.
We told you guys during the roadshow that at 88%, 89% of our membership count, we are planning to get to 101, 102, 103% of our dues. This wasn't a mystery. This was as clear as water. We were not gonna immediately and quickly. It will take years to build back that tank of people who are paying and lightly using. The strategic execution had to allow we getting to the 100% plus of dues at 90% ish of our membership count. Now at 90% membership count, based on the type of users who's paying the dues and back, you have heavier users. You basically have swipes that matches the 2019 swipes with albeit the club membership is about 10% lower.
We have had the ability to change the prices. We're not promoting, we're not selling, we're not pushing. The customer is just coming in based on what Life Time brand is, the experiences. They're just simply buying, and we assist them with that buying. It's smoother, more. It's much more easy to navigate the momentum or lack thereof because we're not skewing it by any gimmicks. We see that trend is improving. We see that the clubs are gonna get to 100% swipe. Like if you look at Texas market, you know, these are reaching the 100% swipe, which then also says they're 100% dues and then the other stuff are following through with it. Our pricing is pretty straightforward.
We should be able to get the higher end of that 150-160 by December on the total membership base. As new customers comes and joins, the new customers are coming and joining at about 170-ish dollars in the price. Our current membership, as Tom said, like last quarter, 145, and it's creeping up each month. Then each time a customer pass drops, the average dues is 145. The new person joining us, the average dues is 175. So this continued transaction, this rotation of membership plus is strategically going back to a person who's paying $30 a month less than the rack rate and saying, "You know, we're gonna take your dues up $15 bucks.
You're still gonna pay $15 less than the rack rate because you're an old member." We have lots of opportunity in our pricing that the rack rate that is working versus the legacy rates that the customer still has room to go up and still be treated as a legacy customer. We have a lot of levers left to execute. We're doing it slowly, methodically on a monthly basis, as small groups get it. My expectation is we will hit the membership counts and the average dues we need by the very end of the year, setting us poised to go into 2023.
Got it. Thanks for all that detail. And then on, maybe performance by club type, if there's anything else you can add here in terms of demand levels you're seeing at the, you know, newer urban locations versus those legacy suburban locations. Thank you.
They're all the same. The same, whether if it's a Frisco or a Chicago. It's really, you guys, again, I can't emphasize enough, if you get the opportunity to go to see our any one of the new clubs, urban or suburban, you will see these are not gyms. They're not. They're athletic country clubs of the highest level of experience for the customer. It's not one that can get duplic the experience simply cannot be duplicated digitally. Digital is only a incremental, small incremental add that we have added for the customer. So if they can't make it to the club, they have the best digital option from classes to meditation, everything. You guys should check the app as it continues to improve.
Our business strategy has always been to build a business that has incredible barrier to entry and create the only of. Life Time is the only national athletic country club with Beach Clubs, with tennis, with swim lessons, with best workout classes, best spin classes, best. We address every detail for every customer. We have no national or international or regional competitors. We just have to take the damage that was inflicted to us by the governments across the country. We have to take that damage. We've taken the hard part of it. You know, we've turned around. We are now just gotta bring in the remainder of the revenue in these clubs, which the bulk of this remainder of the revenue goes into our profitability. We feel fantastic about how we have dealt with it.
The Life Time team has been absolutely nothing short of amazing. This is all my team members. Phenomenal in how they have put their back into it. Along the way, we get the members, we get landlords, we get vendors. Everybody all the time is in appreciation of how we have handled this incredibly difficult blow to our company, but it's built on our reputation, our brand, and it's all paying off right now.
Great. Thanks again.
Thanks, Chris.
Our next question is from Robbie Ohmes with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Hi, this is Alex Perry on for Robbie. Thanks for taking our questions and congrats on the strong momentum here. Just first, on the guidance, could you maybe walk us through some of the embedded assumptions for the Q2 guide? I guess maybe talk through more on a per club basis when we should expect the profitability to return to pre-pandemic levels. Then if you could maybe layer in how much strategic investments such as pickleball, small group training, the active aging programs are sort of maybe pressuring the adjusted EBITDA guide versus your original expectations and, you know, maybe when we should start to expect flow through from these initiatives.
Just, you know, as a part of that, how much of the Q2 sort of SG&A pressure is more sort of one-time investments versus, you know, structurally higher center operations expense versus pre-pandemic, maybe due to things like wage inflation? Thank you.
Yep. Hey, Alex, it's Tom. I'll start talking about the Q2 and how we're looking at it. As you heard in my comments, yeah, great momentum coming out of April. As you know very well, we have our summer season ahead of us to take advantage of all our wonderful outdoor spaces. With that, with the continued momentum, you know, if you look at building it, we see more than 50,000 new joins happening in the Q2 at that $150-$160 average dues rate. If you think
Net joins, right?
Net joins.
Yeah.
If you see that you start to build up the continued dues momentum in our business. You're right, as Bahram talked about, we're making really smart and good investments into these programs such as pickleball and active aging and small group training. You know, really pleased with the early indicators we're seeing in the growth of those business, and the member feedback has just been tremendous. We'll continue to make those investments here through the Q2 . As we grow the membership base, it's really in the third and Q4 that we start to get the leverage on our club fixed cost investments, and you start to see a much higher flow through a margin.
That's why the full year guidance is to have an exit rate in that 18%-20% EBITDA margin, as we gain the leverage on our fixed cost base. If we can exit the year then at 18%-20%, that sets us up for a really strong 2023. Clearly we're seeing some wage pressure and supply chain pressure in certain areas as well. I always remind people, you know, people come to Life Time, we have a great culture and a culture of respect. You know, we don't feel as much wage pressure as maybe some other industries do, but we do have, you know, wage pressure, I would call it, in the upper single digits if you go back from the beginning of 2021 through today.
However, we've taken a lot of steps, such as introducing, you know, credit card surcharge fees, as we've talked about introducing our member concierge and consolidating our member services and sales functions that have cost savings, as well as other cost-saving initiatives in order to offset all that wage inflation and supply chain inflation we've had. I think we're doing a really nice job of coming up with ways that don't impact the member experience and, you know, will help us get that margin expansion in the back half of the year.
Yeah. I'm gonna add to that. Just so that you know what I am driving here, and Tom is helping me drive through. The number one task is to get the programs and the experiences in such a level that the club's swipes will surpass the past swipes. Once the swipes pass, our dues has recovered and gone beyond the past dues. The gives and takes that Tom mentioned, the coupled savings that we have in transformation to a member concierge from sales and from the credit card was initially intended to potentially cover some of the PT margin erosion. With all the supply chain, again, some increased cost of programming in our own strategy with adding pickleball coordinators and pickleball pros and additional hourly high-priced instructors teaching the small group stuff.
We are covering all that cost with the measures we had put in place before, and now we have a game plan to get the PT margin back. What you should be thinking about is that I am directing the company way more focused on revenue growth and capturing the market share and being the best experiences that is not duplicable for the next two quarters. In fourth Q, we start planning 2023. By then, we have captured the bulk of the revenue recovery, and then we will work on efficiencies that they are not gonna impact the customer experience, but where we have opportunistically chances to do similar things we did with the merging of the sales and the member services into one division in a club.
Other things in the corporate office to get rid of layers and, you know, what I always call the more layers, the more red tape, and streamlining the decision-making process to create more efficiencies. This year, our focus totally is to get the revenue recovery and beyond. Obviously, some of that naturally will throw the EBITDA. We wanna be, we need to be, by December of this year, at a jumping-off point to 2023 based on our revenue across the system and the EBITDA that gives us a kick-ass 2023. That's the goal, and we will have the more focus on, hey, now I wanna squeeze all the margins I want out of this thing, will come heavily in the Q4 , planning for the 2023 to be the banner EBITDA year for the company.
That's incredibly helpful. Thank you for that. I guess my follow-up question is, for the full year guide, Tom, I think you sort of mentioned that there's some more sort of optimistic member retention assumptions for 3Q and 4Q versus historical patterns. What do you sort of see driving that? Are you seeing different sort of data signals in terms of, you know, usage sort of driving, you know, what is assumed to be better member retention in those time periods? Thank you.
Yeah. Alex, good question. It's several items that we see as we look at the business. One, our member NPS score continues to improve and be very strong, and we're getting a lot of great feedback on, again, to how we treated people during the pandemic and then the experience that they're walking back into in the club. All the programming initiatives that we're investing in and have been investing in, and all the new members coming to Life Time to participate in pickleball and small group training. You know, they're new members, they're engaged in these activities, so we expect the average membership of those members to continue. It's really the overall club experience and the new investments that we're driving to engage people into all the different communities and social aspects that Life Time provides.
We feel pretty good about where we're heading on the attrition and engagement front with our members right now.
Perfect. That's incredibly helpful. Best of luck going forward.
Thanks, Alex.
Our next question is from Simeon Siegel of BMO. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Morning, everyone. Hope you're all doing well.
Morning.
Appreciate all the color. Yeah. Hey, so appreciate all the color, and nice to see the acceleration. Tom, just a few nuances if I can. Just given the moving pieces, any help quantifying how you expect center op expense to look over the next several quarters? Maybe the same question on rent, given the potential lift in sale-leasebacks. You had color on G&A and marketing as well, just that was a little higher with the share-based comp and non-operating. Any help on those three line items given moving pieces over the next several quarters, if you're willing to? Thank you.
Yeah. You know, from a center ops perspective, you know, you'll continue to see continued improvement in our center ops margin, starting in the Q3 and Q4 , again, as we've talked about the investments we're making here. I expect to see incremental improvement in Q2 and then more improvement in the third and Q4 as we grow that membership base back and get the leverage on our fixed cost base. On the rent piece of it, you know, I expected us to be around 13% of revenue, if and when we close on the additional $500 million of sale-leaseback.
If you assume we do that towards the end of the Q3 , that moves rent expense for the full year up to about 13.5% and adds about an incremental $10 million of rent expense for the Q4 . On the SG&A front, same thing as we continue to get into the back half of the year, and as Bahram talked about, we'll continue to get more leverage on our SG&A base. We're at the point where we do not need to add any more SG&A costs into the business, that we can leverage our SG&A base that we have. On the marketing front, you know, really pleased with how we're dialing in our marketing spend. We've really become more efficient in it.
We've reduced certain areas of marketing spend that we didn't see as effective, and we're investing in those areas of the experience of the club and on social media marketing, to make sure we're getting the message out there to prospective members, about what Life Time is about and providing.
One of the tailwinds of our execution is that based on the heavy you know eight times a month promotional approach that we used to do pre-COVID, I believe that approximately 10% of the memberships sold then was based on just the intensity of the you know promotions, marketing and you know pressure you know the selling process that was basically very non-sticky customer. They were sort of being you know hustled to come and join membership where I hated that. We had the opportunity to take it out during the COVID period, we took it out. My anticipation is once all dust settles, and I've told you guys this during the roadshow as well consistently, when all settles, I expect our overall retention be about a 10% better than what it had been before.
There's just a natural byproduct of what we are not doing. The customer who's joining Life Time today, all the literally 28,000-30,000 people joining every month, they are just coming in and joining because they want to engage in Life Time athletic country club, in the programming that we are offering, in the classes, in the summer camp, in all the different things we're doing. It's all being done naturally. There's no gimmick. We're not spending $300 million a year in advertising like some other folks, boosting bullshit sales and then have it drop down. It is 100% natural and authentic. Our expectation, directly answering one of your questions, is that we believe the retention should be about a 10% better.
As we have the bulk of, this is what Tom is basically keep explaining, the bulk of our heavy cost infrastructure is already in place. This next $100 million, $120 million of revenue that comes in on a quarterly basis, it should be largely, you know, two-thirds of it should be translating into incremental EBITDA because the fixed cost is already covered and the total cost of that incremental revenue should be about 30%-35%. We should see a natural margin improvement as the next layer of the revenue is coming in. Is that helpful?
Yeah. That's great. Thank you. What I was hoping to get your perspective on, sorry if I missed it, I don't think I did, but obviously we have connected fitness in a different situation maybe than when we had spoken last year. Any thoughts, you see any survey work, people are coming back. We can see the trends across the spectrum.
I guess you guys don't listen. I've told you this before. The connected fitness got a little boost from COVID, and the transformation is. Some customers are in the habit of now getting up from home and getting on their bike or treadmill. They're affluent enough, they get their social, the connection and all this stuff. Our business model is radically different. It's everything that you need to have from social standpoint, programming, leagues, clubs, groups. That business never goes away if it's executed correctly. Now, some customers are doing some of their workouts at home, and some may just have gotten in the habit of just doing it at home. That is done and over. From here going forward, you're gonna see the natural tendencies of human being play out again. We're creatures of habit.
For those people who have a home piece of equipment or two or three, you know, all it's gonna take is come in and join one of our pickleball programs, get in that social community. They may still do their stuff at home, but they also join the club. We never saw connected fitness pre-COVID as a threat, and we had no data, no facts supporting that was actually affecting our business negatively. It wasn't. COVID just basically shut us down, pushed everybody there. Everybody who would wanna be back into the social environment is come back. What I try to explain is the only thing sometimes I worry about you as the analyst is that you expect, oh, COVID period is over, all the members should come back. It doesn't work that way in subscription business.
It takes two, three, 4% of your total base will rejoin. Doesn't matter how good of a month you have. It just takes time, but the trends are supporting. We feel, however, that if you look at we will launch our new platform next month, which basically largely the digital Life Time experience that you see today, but on a completely new chassis, allows us to increase the subscription by 10x, 20x, 100x without having any glitches in our program. We see gradually more people, it's a small number, you know, 40 or 50 people in a day signing up for our digital program who we look at that, these are people who know the Life Time brand, these are people who are past members, now they're a little further away. They wanna stay connected.
We see some in other markets naturally. At some point, as I've told you guys, we will press on our digital membership as well, but it's mostly subscription and branding. You know, it's not gonna be a meaningful revenue structure. Eventually, all that can be given digitally will be given for free because some company like us, we're gonna be able to stream 2,000, 3,000 classes of all kinds a week, and it's simply the byproduct of what we are executing in our clubs. We are in a perfect position with that, never been threatened by it, never will be.
Perfect. Thanks a lot, guys. Best of luck for the year.
Thanks.
Thanks, Simeon.
Our next question is from Chris Woronka of Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Hey guys. Good morning. It's been a lot of focus at Life Time on getting legacy members up to a new price point. I actually wanted to ask about the new join rate, and it seems like you're having pretty good success there. I mean, do you think you can do more on that new join rate? Do you think you need to do more, you know, a year from now, whether that's to offset some of the inflation or just an opportunity to, you know, continue to price up? How do you think about the new members and pricing elasticity?
Yeah, we have significant room right now. We changed 35 clubs prices yesterday, you know, $10, $15 for the new joins, and we saw 0 impact in how many people signed up yesterday. We have, as I've mentioned before, for the experience we offer, many clubs are still woefully underpriced for what the potential is for that. We are continuing to test and execute, watch the results and make adjustments as necessary. But the short answer is plenty of powder left for making those adjustments for the future year. To your other point about cost increases. In our expectation, the bulk of that increases is already in our numbers. You know, we have a much bigger utility cost this year as a cost due to the energy cost that it's all we've already plugged into our numbers.
We already have plugged in significantly more dollars for the classes that we will teach incrementally. All that stuff is in there. I think the upside is way more robust than the incremental cost headwinds. Again, we're in the sweet spot right now of seeing, you know, the revenue grow nicely, but the EBITDA grow significantly steeper than that because of all that we've just mentioned to you. Q2 there, you know, we'd love to just get to the point where we can be back at this call with you guys and tell you guys what we've been able to, you know, learn and communicate that with you during this next quarter there. I think results will be great.
The right time where I feel like we need to see the leap stage all the hard work, all the different initiatives, programming that we put in place, it really is designed to make sure, as I mentioned before, to readjust in time, you know, for that by July, August, we have enough other reasons for people to be in our facilities to make sure our membership retention and membership counts continue to grow. All things are, you know, all hands on deck, all the team is working extremely diligently and in alignment. Customer response is fantastic. We just have to let it play itself out and just see hopefully every month the company generate more revenue and more EBITDA for foreseeable future.
Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes the Q&A session. I would like to hand back to management for any closing remarks.
Great. Thank you, Irene. Thank you everybody, for joining us today. Bahram and I look forward to speaking with you soon. Have a great day.
That concludes today's conference. Thank you for joining us. You may now disconnect your lines.