A well-designed membership program does three things simultaneously: it converts one-time patients into recurring revenue, it increases the frequency of patient visits, and it creates a patient population that is harder to lose to a competitor. Most medspa membership programs accomplish none of these things — not because the idea is wrong, but because the design is.

The failure modes are consistent: programs built around discounts rather than value, pricing that doesn't survive contact with actual utilization rates, cancellation policies that alienate members, and structures that create patient confusion about what they're paying for and why. This guide is about avoiding those mistakes and building something that works — for your cash flow, for your operations, and for your patients.

Why Membership Programs Work — and When They Don't

The business case for a membership program is straightforward: monthly recurring revenue collected whether or not the patient books that month, combined with higher per-patient visit frequency than non-member patients. The clinical case is equally clear: patients on maintenance protocols — whether for hormone optimization, IV wellness, or aesthetic maintenance — produce better outcomes when they complete their treatment sequence. Membership programs create the financial structure that supports protocol compliance.

The programs that fail have one thing in common: they were designed as patient acquisition tools — specifically as discount programs — rather than as retention structures. A 20%-off membership built to attract price-sensitive patients will attract price-sensitive patients. They will stay until they find 25%-off somewhere else. Membership programs designed around access, experience, and outcome continuity attract patients who stay.

The question worth asking before designing any membership program: what type of patient behavior does this program reward? Discount-first structures reward price-consciousness. Credit-based structures reward utilization. VIP experience structures reward relationship and trust. Design for the patient population you want to keep.

The Three Structural Models

There are exactly three membership structures that appear in working medspa programs. Every program is a variant of one of these models, or a hybrid of two.

Model 1
Discount Membership
Monthly fee → percentage discount on all services + products
Pros
  • ✓ Easy to explain and sell
  • ✓ Low administrative complexity
  • ✓ No credit tracking required
Cons
  • ✗ Attracts price-sensitive patients
  • ✗ Provides no booking motivation
  • ✗ High churn when patient feels savings aren't "worth it" in a given month
  • ✗ Margin erosion without guaranteed utilization
Best for: product-heavy retail practices, adjunct to another model
Model 3
VIP / Concierge Model
Higher monthly or annual fee → priority scheduling, dedicated provider, bundled treatments, enhanced access
Pros
  • ✓ Highest revenue per member
  • ✓ Creates genuine patient-practice relationship
  • ✓ Works well for hormone and functional medicine practices
Cons
  • ✗ Provider time commitment is real
  • ✗ Difficult to scale beyond 30–50 members per provider
  • ✗ Requires defined service delivery at premium price point
Best for: hormone clinics, functional medicine, high-touch patient relationships

Tiered Membership — A Working Example

Most practices that run successful membership programs offer two or three tiers. Single-tier programs leave revenue on the table from patients willing to pay more for more access; more than three tiers creates decision fatigue and operational complexity. The example below is a functional model for a Phoenix metro medspa offering IV therapy, injectables, and wellness services:

Wellness Member
ENTRY TIER
$75 monthly credit toward any service or product · 10% off all additional treatments · Priority scheduling · Member pricing on retail products
$99/month
Premier Member
PREMIUM TIER
Two services monthly (IV + injectable neuromodulator or equivalent credits) · 20% off all additional treatments · Two complimentary add-ons per visit · Monthly wellness check-in with provider · Annual lab panel review · First access to new services
$399/month
Pricing Check
Confirm your tiers are margin-positive before launch.

For the Vitality tier at $199/month: if the included IV drip costs $35 in COGS and 45 minutes of clinical time, and overhead allocation is ~$30, your floor cost is approximately $65. At $199 with 15% discount available on additional services, you have a margin-positive model even if a member uses the full credit every month. Check every tier this way — standard IV COGS, time cost, overhead — before setting the monthly fee. Members who use everything they're paying for should still be profitable.

Membership Pricing Logic

The correct pricing question for a membership is not "what feels like a good deal?" but rather "what monthly fee is margin-positive given realistic member utilization?" Those are different questions and they produce different answers.

Most practices underestimate member utilization in their financial modeling. If you assume 50% of members will use their monthly credit and price accordingly, but 80% actually use it, you've created a program that's unprofitable at scale. Conservatively model 75–90% utilization for credit-based memberships — patients who join and pay monthly are more motivated than patients who buy packages.

Membership programs in Arizona medspas are generally lawful as service contracts — patients pay for access to services, not for the services themselves (which would implicate insurance regulation). But several specific requirements apply, and providers who skip them create legal exposure.

Attorney Review Required
Have your membership agreement reviewed before launch, not after your first dispute.

The $500–$1,200 cost of having an Arizona healthcare attorney review your membership agreement is trivially small compared to a single member dispute, a Consumer Fraud Act complaint, or a regulatory inquiry. Agreements downloaded from the internet or adapted from non-medical businesses routinely miss Arizona-specific disclosures. This is one place where the cost of getting it right is unambiguously worth it.

What Actually Drives Retention

Member retention is not primarily a pricing problem. Practices that focus on pricing when members start cancelling are addressing the symptom rather than the cause. The actual drivers of membership retention, in order of impact:

5 Design Mistakes That Kill Membership Retention

1
Building a discount program and calling it a membership

A membership is not a loyalty discount card. If the entire value proposition is "pay $49/month and get 15% off," you have a discount program with a monthly fee. It will attract price-sensitive patients who calculate monthly whether the math is working in their favor. The month it isn't — because they didn't come in — they cancel. A true membership delivers ongoing value regardless of whether the patient visited: appointment priority, provider relationship, access to new services, a credit toward something they want. Build that, and the price sensitivity disappears.

2
Pricing based on feeling, not math

The most common financial error in membership design: pricing is set at a number that "feels like a good deal to patients" without calculating whether that number is margin-positive at realistic utilization rates. Practices discover this error at month 4 or 5, when member count has grown and the program is visibly losing money. Do the cost math first. Price second. Adjust the benefits if the math doesn't work — don't adjust the math to fit the price.

3
Launching without a written agreement and cancellation policy

Providers who launch membership programs on handshakes and verbal descriptions — or who hand patients a one-page overview that doesn't specify cancellation terms — create disputes that are expensive to resolve and damaging to review profiles. The first member who tries to cancel and can't get a clear answer about what they're owed will document the experience publicly. Write the agreement before you sell the first membership.

4
No operational system for member management

Membership programs require operational infrastructure: a way to track who is a member, at what tier, with what credits, billing on what date, with what balance. Practices that run memberships through informal spreadsheets and manual billing reliably make errors — double-billing, missing credits, wrong tier discounts — and each error is a retention event. Before you sell your first membership, decide how you're managing it: your EMR's membership module, a dedicated platform, or a system that's been explicitly scoped for the task.

5
Never reviewing or updating the program

A membership program that was well-designed in year one will drift out of alignment with your service mix, your costs, and your patient base by year two. Annual membership program reviews — checking margin at current utilization rates, checking member satisfaction, checking whether the tier structure still maps to how patients actually behave — are not optional maintenance. They're how you avoid the slow erosion that turns a profitable program into a cost center. Protect your ability to grandfather existing members at current pricing while adjusting for new members: this is both legally defensible and operationally clean.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should a medspa membership program cost? +
Phoenix metro membership programs typically range from $99–$199 for entry-tier (primarily IV access and discounts), $199–$349 for mid-tier programs with a monthly treatment credit, and $349–$599 for premium programs with multiple monthly treatments and enhanced access. The right price is always the one that is margin-positive given what members receive. Calculate: COGS of the services included × projected utilization rate + overhead allocation = your floor. Monthly fee must be above this floor with enough cushion to handle months of full utilization and program administration overhead. Don't start with a price and work backward; start with the math and work forward.
Are medspa membership programs legal in Arizona? +
Yes, with specific requirements. Membership programs structured as service contracts — monthly fee in exchange for treatment access, credits, or discounts — are generally legal in Arizona. They do not constitute insurance. The key legal requirements: a written agreement specifying inclusions, exclusions, fee, billing date, cancellation policy, and credit handling; automatic renewal disclosure in accordance with Arizona's Consumer Fraud Act; and for programs that include medical services, review by a healthcare attorney to confirm the structure doesn't implicate licensure or fee-splitting issues. Have the agreement reviewed by an Arizona healthcare attorney before launch.
What is the best medspa membership model? +
The monthly credit model consistently outperforms discount-only and prepaid-series models for medspa patient retention. Members pay a flat monthly fee and receive a monthly credit toward services plus a discount on additional treatments. Revenue is collected whether or not they book. The credit creates booking motivation. The discount rewards additional utilization. And the value proposition is clear: members always know what they're paying for and what they're getting. Discount-only memberships produce price-sensitive populations with high churn. Credit-based memberships produce engaged, outcome-invested patients who book consistently and refer frequently.
How many membership tiers should I offer? +
Two to three tiers is the functional range for most medspas. A single tier leaves revenue from patients who would pay more for enhanced access. More than three tiers creates decision complexity that reduces conversion — when patients have to choose between four options, they sometimes choose none. The classic structure: an entry tier at a price point that's accessible and clearly worthwhile, a mid-tier at the price point you'd want most members at (typically the most profitable combination of utilization and fee), and a premium tier for patients who want maximum access and are willing to pay for it. Price the tiers with meaningful gaps — a $10 difference between tiers produces no differentiation. A $100–$150 difference between tiers creates a clear value ladder.
The Bottom Line
Design for the patients you want to keep, not the patients you want to attract.

A membership program is not primarily a patient acquisition tool. It's a retention and revenue stabilization tool. The design question is not "what would attract the most new patients?" but "what would make my best existing patients want to stay forever?" Answer that question honestly, build a program that delivers on it, price it to be margin-positive, write a clear agreement, and give it 90 days to stabilize before making major changes. The programs that fail do so because they were designed for the wrong purpose — to look like a deal rather than to deliver an experience worth paying for month after month.