LT
Life Time Group Holdings, Inc. (LTH)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Beat across key lines: revenue $706.0M (+18.3% YoY) vs S&P Global consensus $683.0M*, Adjusted diluted EPS $0.39 vs $0.28*, and Adjusted EBITDA $191.6M vs $178.8M*; flow‑through driven by higher dues rates, mix shift to full‑dues members, and strong in‑center spend . S&P Global estimates marked with * (see disclaimer).
- Raised FY25 outlook: revenue to $2.94–$2.98B (from $2.925–$2.975B), net income to $286–$293M (from $277–$284M), Adjusted EBITDA to $792–$808M (from $780–$800M); lifted comp center revenue growth to 8.5–9.5% (from 7–8%) and reduced interest expense/tax rate assumptions .
- Balance sheet and cash: net debt leverage to 2.0x (from 2.28x in Q4), fourth consecutive quarter of positive FCF ($41.4M), and LOI for ~$150M sale‑leaseback expected in Q2; entire term loan fixed below 6% all‑in via swap (3.409% + 2.50% margin) .
- Stock catalysts: outlook raise, accelerating margins (Adj. EBITDA margin 27.1%, +260 bps YoY), leverage at 2.0x, and visibility on lower interest expense may support multiple; capacity management (waitlists) and disciplined growth (10–12 annual club openings) frame execution narrative .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong top-line and profitability: Revenue +18.3% YoY to $706.0M; Adjusted EBITDA +31.2% to $191.6M (27.1% margin, +260 bps YoY) on pricing, mix, and in‑center spend strength .
- Membership quality and engagement: average revenue per center membership rose to $844 (+13.3% YoY), with visits per membership at new highs; retention running at record levels per management .
- Balance sheet de‑risking and cash generation: net debt leverage improved to 2.0x; operating cash flow $183.9M (+103% YoY) and FCF $41.4M; fixed rate on entire term loan below 6% .
What Went Wrong
- GAAP EPS aided by one‑time tax benefit: net income +205.6% YoY to $76.1M benefited from $14.6M tax benefit tied to CEO stock option exercise; underlying Adjusted EPS provides purer run‑rate view .
- G&A inflation: G&A and marketing +18.2% YoY to $57.8M due to timing of stock‑based comp/benefits, center support overhead, IT costs, and costs tied to February secondary offering .
- Early Q2 demand color cautious: management noted slightly softer new member sign‑ups in April/May at some clubs (de minimis to overall revenue), and comp outlook incorporates macro conservatism despite strong in‑center trends .
Financial Results
Headline results vs prior quarters and vs S&P Global consensus
Estimates marked with * are Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment revenue mix
KPIs and operating metrics
Additional detail: CFO noted average monthly dues of ~$208 in Q1 (+11.8% YoY), reflecting limited legacy pricing in Q1 and mix shift to higher‑rate new joins .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
References: .
Management Commentary
- “We continue to see increased member engagement, with visits and revenue per membership at new highs… Our balance sheet is strong, positioning us well to capitalize on the opportunities ahead.” — CEO Bahram Akradi .
- “Comparable center revenue was 12.9%… benefit from last year’s legacy price actions and mix shift to higher‑rate new members… Adjusted EBITDA margin of 27.1% increased 260 bps YoY.” — CFO Erik Weaver .
- “We have raised our revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance but only modestly in recognition of the uncertainty in the macroeconomic environment… focus is to maintain a very strong balance sheet and positive free cash flow.” — CEO .
- “We have clear visibility into our cash interest expense for the next 3 years, having fixed the interest rate on our entire term loan to below 6%.” — CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Capacity and waitlists: Management is prioritizing experience, using waitlists (especially for third‑party payer channels) and focusing on full‑dues members; visits per club and in‑center revenue at records .
- Unit pipeline: 10–12 clubs per year remains the right cadence; optionality to accelerate/decelerate based on macro while preserving balance sheet strength and targeting a BB rating .
- Pricing/retention: Minimal Q1 legacy pricing (planned Q2 timing); retention at best levels in company history; average monthly dues ~$208 (+11.8% YoY) .
- Macro tone: Slightly softer new sign‑ups in April/May at some clubs (small revenue impact), but in‑center spend strong; full‑year comp raised with conservatism .
- Tariffs/sourcing: Minimal exposure; equipment sourced from Italy/Sweden; ongoing value engineering offsets construction cost variability .
- Amenity/programming: Expanding recovery/cold plunge, work lounges; dynamic personal training remains a standout .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 vs S&P Global consensus: Revenue $706.0M vs $683.0M*; Adjusted diluted EPS $0.39 vs $0.28*; Adjusted EBITDA $191.6M vs $178.8M* — broad‑based beat. Number of estimates: revenue (10), EPS (5) for Q1 2025* .
- Forward quarters: Street models continued growth through Q3–Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 (EPS and revenue trajectories positive). If management’s lowered interest and tax outlook holds, EPS revisions should bias upward .
Estimates marked with * are Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Quality growth: Higher dues, favorable member mix, and strong in‑center spend are expanding margins (Adj. EBITDA margin 27.1%) while comps remain double‑digit .
- Guidance momentum: FY25 revenue, net income, Adjusted EBITDA, and comp guidance raised; lower interest and tax assumptions provide incremental EPS leverage .
- De‑risked capital structure: Net leverage at 2.0x with visibility on interest costs (term loan fully swapped below 6%) and incremental liquidity from ~$150M sale‑leaseback LOI .
- Capacity discipline: Waitlists and emphasis on full‑dues members protect experience and monetization; near‑term sign‑up softness at some clubs is de minimis to revenue .
- Multi‑pronged growth: 10–12 club openings, modernization (recovery/cold plunge), and asset‑light adjacencies (LT Digital/L.AI.C, LTH supplements, MIORA) broaden the revenue stack .
- Watch items: G&A inflation (stock‑based comp, IT, support), and macro‑sensitive join trends; management is embedding conservatism into FY25 guide .
- Trading setup: Estimate revisions skew positive post‑guide raise; catalysts include execution on summer seasonality, completion of the Q2 sale‑leaseback, and continued margin expansion .
Notes and sources:
- Q1 2025 press release and 8‑K: ; .
- Q1 2025 earnings call transcript: .
- Prior quarter results (Q4 2024): .
- Prior quarter results (Q3 2024): .
- Estimates are Values retrieved from S&P Global.