🏋️ Garage Gym Conversion Planner

Get your step-by-step conversion plan in under 3 minutes

Step 1 of 7

Tell us about your garage

We'll tailor your conversion plan based on the size and current state of your space.

Garage size

Current state

Attached or detached?

Step 2 of 7 — Phase 1

Damp-Proofing & Waterproofing

This comes first, always. If you insulate before sorting damp, you'll trap moisture behind the boards and end up with mould within months.

What's involved:

Tanking slurry on walls (2 coats), DPM on the floor, and checking/repairing any visible water ingress points. For detached garages or those below the water table, a cavity membrane system may be needed.

⚠️ Building Regs — Part C If you're converting to a habitable space, the conversion must meet Part C (Site Preparation and Resistance to Moisture). A gym-only space is a grey area, but damp-proofing properly now avoids problems if you ever want to change use.
Typical cost
DIY feasibility: Moderate
💡 Tip Tanking slurry is a straightforward DIY job — just messy. Allow 24 hrs between coats and at least 48 hrs curing before insulating over it.
Step 3 of 7 — Phase 2

Insulation

Without insulation, your garage gym will be unusable in winter and a sauna in summer. This is the single biggest comfort upgrade you'll make.

What's involved:

Walls: 50mm rigid PIR board (like Celotex or Kingspan) fixed to battens, then plasterboarded over. Gives you the best thermal performance per cm of thickness — important when you don't want to lose too much floor space.

Floor: 25–50mm rigid insulation under a floating chipboard or OSB deck. Adds a little height, so check your headroom.

Ceiling/roof: Mineral wool between joists if you have a pitched roof, or rigid board if flat. Don't forget to insulate the garage door if you're keeping it — foil-backed foam boards work well.

⚠️ Building Regs — Part L If treated as a habitable conversion, walls need a U-value of 0.28 W/m²K or better. 50mm PIR board achieves around 0.30 — close enough for a gym, but add 75mm if you want full compliance.
Typical cost (walls + floor + ceiling)
DIY feasibility: High
Step 4 of 7 — Phase 3

Electrical Work

Get the wiring done before the plasterboard goes up. You'll need a dedicated circuit for gym equipment, especially anything with a motor (treadmill, air bike, rower fan).

What's involved:

A new radial or ring circuit from your consumer unit (fuse board), typically on a dedicated 32A breaker with RCD protection. Plan for at least 4 double sockets — more than you think you need. Position them at waist height to avoid blocking with equipment.

⚠️ Building Regs — Part P All new circuits in a garage must be either installed by a registered electrician (Part P self-certifying) or inspected and signed off by Building Control. This is not optional — non-compliant electrical work is illegal and will cause problems if you sell the house.
Typical cost
DIY feasibility: Low — needs qualified electrician
Step 5 of 7 — Phase 4

Ventilation & Climate Control

A well-insulated garage with no ventilation becomes a condensation nightmare — especially when you're generating heat and sweat. This is the step most people skip, and most people regret.

What's involved:

Minimum: An extractor fan (bathroom-style, 100mm) on one wall, plus a louvred vent on the opposite wall for cross-ventilation. This is cheap and effective.

Better: A larger inline extractor (150mm) on a humidity sensor, so it kicks in automatically when moisture levels rise during training.

Heating: Electric panel heaters or infrared panels mounted high on the wall. Infrared panels are brilliant for gyms — they heat objects (you) rather than air, so you feel warm quickly without heating the whole room.

⚠️ Building Regs — Part F Habitable rooms need adequate ventilation. For a gym, an extractor providing at least 30 litres/second with a background trickle vent will satisfy requirements.
Typical cost (ventilation + heating)
DIY feasibility: Moderate
Step 6 of 7 — Phase 5

Lighting

Good lighting makes a surprising difference to how your gym feels. Dim, shadowy garages feel grim. Bright, even lighting makes the space feel professional and motivating.

What's involved:

LED panels are the best option — 600x600mm ceiling panels give even, shadow-free light. For a single garage, 2–3 panels at 4000K (cool white) will give you around 300–500 lux, which is ideal for a gym. Double garages need 4–6 panels.

Mount them flush to the ceiling to maximise headroom. Avoid downlights — they create hot spots and shadows, which is annoying when you're lying on a bench looking up.

💡 Tip 4000K colour temperature is the sweet spot — bright enough to feel energising but not the harsh blue-white of a hospital. Avoid warm white (3000K) as it feels sleepy.
Typical cost
DIY feasibility: Low — part of electrical cert
Step 7 of 7 — Phase 6

Flooring

The last step before you move equipment in. Gym flooring protects your concrete floor (and the floor insulation beneath it), reduces noise, and gives you a proper training surface.

Options:

Rubber tiles (20mm): The standard choice. Interlocking tiles are easy to lay, durable, and provide decent impact protection. Good for most home gyms.

Rubber tiles (30–40mm): If you're doing Olympic lifting or dropping heavy weights, go thicker. 30mm minimum under a platform, 40mm if there's no platform.

EVA foam tiles: Cheap and fine for bodyweight, yoga, or light dumbbell work. Not suitable for heavy barbells — they compress and shift.

Rolled rubber: Professional look, no joins to separate, but heavier to handle and more expensive. Best for double garages where tile joins across a large area can be annoying.

💡 Tip Buy more than you think — allow 10% extra for cuts and fitting around door frames and sockets. Rubber tiles from UK gym flooring suppliers (not generic Amazon mats) will last years longer.
Typical cost
DIY feasibility: High — a satisfying afternoon job

Your Garage Gym Conversion Plan

📅 Project Timeline

💷 Estimated Costs

📋 Building Regulations Checklist

  • !
    Part P (Electrical): Must be done by a registered electrician or signed off by Building Control. Non-negotiable.
  • !
    Part C (Damp): Required if classified as habitable. Good practice regardless — protects your investment.
  • Part L (Insulation): Technically required for habitable conversions. A gym sits in a grey area. Insulate to spec anyway — your heating bills will thank you.
  • Part F (Ventilation): Required for habitable rooms. An extractor fan + background vent covers it.
  • Planning Permission: Generally not required unless you're changing the external structure or building an extension. A garage-to-gym internal conversion is usually permitted development.

🏋️ Equipment — What to Buy Once the Room Is Ready

Starter Setup

£300 – £800

Adjustable dumbbells, flat/incline bench, pull-up bar, resistance bands, yoga mat. Enough for a solid workout covering all muscle groups.

Intermediate Setup

£1,000 – £2,500

All of the above plus a barbell + weight plates (100–150kg), squat stands or half rack, dip station. This covers serious strength training.

Full Gym

£3,000 – £6,000+

Full power rack, Olympic barbell set, cable machine or functional trainer, cardio machine (rower, bike, or treadmill), mirrors. Commercial-quality home gym.

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