Gravity Fitness Discount Code (NHS) & Keyworker Promotions July 2026

Active Blue Light promo codes & discounts ➤ for Gravity Fitness (July 2026)

No active offers available for this store, please try another.

Expired NHS Codes for Gravity Fitness

You may wish to try them anyway, sometimes they can still work!

Expired 10%off

Likely expired on: 31st March

Expired 10%off

Likely expired on: 11th February

Expired 10%off

Likely expired on: 10th Dec 2025

Expired £6 Off on Your Sitewide Items

Likely expired on: 2nd February

Expired 5%off

Likely expired on: 22nd March

Expired 10%off

Likely expired on: 30th March

Expired 10%off

Likely expired on: 31st March

Expired 10% Discount Available Now

Likely expired on: 14th Dec 2025

Expired Save 10% on First Order

Likely expired on: 18th Nov 2025

Expired 10% Off First Order

Likely expired on: 8th Dec 2025

For a certain kind of strength training—less about clanking plates and more about control, balance, and body mechanics—calisthenics has never really gone out of style. It’s the backbone of gymnastics, street workouts, and anyone who’s ever tried to do a straight-arm plank and regretted it immediately. Gravity Fitness is one of the rare retailers that leans fully into this philosophy: back-to-basics equipment with considered updates, priced reasonably, and built to take a beating—figuratively and occasionally literally.

They ship across the UK and EU, have a 5-year warranty on gear (which says quite a bit), and offer 60-day extended returns—long enough that even the most pragmatic NHS worker doing 12-hour shifts can test, return, or forget entirely. Shipping is free if you spend £100 or more in the UK mainland, which isn't a stretch given how quickly the bundles add up. Spend less and it’s still functional, never punitive. Discounts show up often enough, sometimes collecting quietly in multi-item kits or early pre-order campaigns rather than splashy sales pages. You won’t see “keyworker savings” mentioned outright on-site, but the practical tone of the place suggests they’ve thought about who will actually use this equipment—and how.

Gravity Fitness Portable Pull Up Rack & Bag

It’s oddly satisfying how much the Gravity Fitness pull-up rack does with so little. There’s no wall mounting, no bolts, and no lag screws; it assembles with a little patience and a few muttered words, then it’s ready to go. The portability pitch isn’t just fluff—it comes in a bag, packs down tidily, and suits anyone short on space or uninterested in permanent setups. Sturdiness holds up under full-body weight (and then some), so you won’t be babysitting it mid-set. The optional extension kit adds height, mostly useful for taller users or more dynamic movement work. Occasionally available as a slightly cheaper ‘graded’ version too—usually just cosmetic blemishes, worth it if you’re not precious.

Gravity Fitness Weighted Vest (10kg, 20kg & 30kg)

Nothing fancy here, in a good way. This is a training vest that does what it’s meant to, without scraps of Velcro everywhere or design overkill. Welded steel plates inside replicate a realistic training load, and the weight is well-distributed—practical for calisthenics, conditioning, or just adding low-key suffering to otherwise normal warmups. The 10kg version is entry-level; 20kg is where it starts to get interesting. Not too many wild discounts here, but at just under £80, it’s already less indulgent than many branded competitors. Holds up well to repeated use. Washable? Technically, though spot-cleaning is likely your best bet.

Gravity Fitness Wooden Gymnastic Rings

These aren’t reinventing the gymnastics wheel, but they don’t need to. Birch or maple (depending on batch), cleanly finished, and paired with straps that don’t fray or slip after a few sessions. What matters with rings is trust: you’ll feel it immediately or you won’t. These inspire it. Cheaper options exist, but most cut corners on the strap buckles or edges—Gravity’s don’t. At £37.95, they’re squarely in the “buy once, buy right” category. Some DBZ versions exist too, if that’s your lane. Otherwise, stick to the standard rings unless you really need Goku staring you down mid-ring dip.

Gravity Fitness XL Adjustable Parallettes / Dip Bars

Possibly the most versatile bit of gear they sell, and arguably the hardest to store discreetly, unless you’re fine with guests asking questions when they spot them in the lounge. These XL parallettes adjust height and handle wide stances without feeling sketchy under load. Well-balanced for both static holds and more dynamic pushing drills. At £79.95, they’re easier to justify than full dip stations, and less likely to be orphaned in the garage. They go on sale from time to time, but pricing is generally stable. Buy for durability, not flash.

Gravity Fitness Travellettes Small Parallettes

Lighter, lower, and much easier to toss in a bag, the Travellettes are designed for mobility and plume levels of cleverness. Ideal for L-sits, planche progression, and other exercises that seem easy until your triceps threaten to resign. They won’t wobble even on carpet, and the grip texture is reasonably forgiving on hands—even after a long shift. NHS staff or early-morning risers might appreciate their quiet footprint: drills without the doorframe shake. They’re often in stock, rarely discounted but not exorbitant either.

Gravity Fitness Resistance Bands – Set of 4

A familiar staple and often misjudged. Gravity’s bands are well constructed—layered latex, not the brittle kind that dies inside a month. The set covers all the usual resistance levels, color coded to save you squinting mid-session. Use them for assisted pull-ups, shoulder mobility, or the inevitable physio homework. Useful to tuck into a backpack, hospital locker, or glove compartment. £34.95 for the set is fair and occasionally folded into bundle deals or seasonal offers. Much better than supermarket knockoffs.

Small Space Calisthenics Bundle

This one’s a quiet win. If you’re training in a tight area—a shared flat, hospital accommodation, or that corner of the bedroom that technically counts as a “home gym”—this bundle is efficient. It includes the travel parallettes, a resistance band set, and gymnastic rings. Each piece is already multipurpose; together, they cover most of what you’d attempt with a full rack setup. There’s around £47 knocked off the combined price. Pre-assembled, this bundle reflects a someone’s been-where-you’re-at mindset. One of the few packages that doesn’t oversell its scope.

Dragon Ball Z Limited Edition Ultimate Bundle

This is essentially gravity gear in cosplay. You’re paying a little extra for the aesthetic, but if collecting limited editions is your thing—or if gravity-themed anime gear makes your inner child (or current teenager) quietly beam—it’s not a bad purchase. The bundle includes a weighted vest, rings, wrist wraps, and grips, all anime-branded, all functional. At £169.99, you’re saving about £35 compared to buying them individually. Fundamentally, it’s the same equipment as the standard line, just with some energy blasts printed on them. No harm in that, unless garish colours offend your minimalist sensibilities.

Gravity Fitness doesn’t waste time pretending to be lifestyle-first, community-driven, or viscerally transformational. Instead, it offers sturdy tools, a no-nonsense return policy, and enough bundles to convince even the most frugal caseworker or carer that bodyweight training doesn’t require a second mortgage. There’s no special NHS discount publicly advertised, but most pricing levels show a consideration for practical users—the ones squeezing sessions between shifts, not just selfies. It's not gear for everyone, and it doesn’t try to be.

What you need to know

Gravity Fitness NHS Discounts & Savings

  • Average discount at Gravity Fitness: Most orders save between £40 - £60 with a working offer.
  • Frequency of discounts: Based on our data, Gravity Fitness runs sales about 20% of the year.

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