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FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Liability:
Data alert

New legislation is exposing weakness and potential liabilities in the management of customer data in health clubs, says Andy Chesterman

Published in Health Club Management 2026 issue 6
Gym guests at reception
Operators need to adopt a robust process that withstands close scrutiny / Shutterstock / Luis Rojas Estudio

Health clubs and leisure centres have become some of the most data-intensive operations when it comes to customer records.

Every member relationship generates sensitive data, including things such as direct debit mandates, PAR-Q and medical screening records, access control logs and CCTV footage. There may also be marketing preferences, cancellation records and – for sites with junior programmes – children’s activity data. In addition, if the operator has an app, then activity in this could also be recorded.

This is a significant volume of information, much of it relating to highly sensitive areas including health, payments and family.

Every member interaction leaves a trail and that data typically sits across several systems: booking apps, CRM platforms, payment processors, access control systems, marketing tools, CCTV providers and head office platforms.

Managing data across that many systems is normal for operators in the sector, but problems arise if a member challenges how their data has been used and there is no clear process for handling their query.

This is no longer acceptable in the UK and under the Data (Use and Access) Act 2026 – a piece of legislation that received Royal Assent on 19 June (www.hcmmag.com/DUA) – organisations must now have a clear and robust process for handling data protection complaints.

Andy Chesterman
Andy Chesterman

Penalties have increased, with fines potentially reaching £17.5m, or 4 per cent of global turnover

Complaints may not look like complaints

A member doesn’t need to use the words ‘data protection complaint’ for the club to have a data protection issue to deal with. Members are far more likely to ask things such as why they’re still receiving marketing emails after cancelling their membership, who has access to their medical screening form, whether CCTV footage of them has been retained or why their details are still on file after they left.

Once a member has raised such a query, the responsibility sits with the health club to recognise whether the complaint relates to the handling of personal data. If it is, it must be acknowledged, investigated, recorded and answered through the club’s own data protection complaints process.

This is where the sector has a practical challenge. A complaint might arrive through reception, a club manager’s inbox, a membership team call, a customer service form or a social media message and the first person to receive it may have no reason to treat it differently from any other member query.

Medical screening records are a good example. They’re used routinely in the sector, but they can include health information, which is treated as special category data under UK GDPR and requires stronger protection.

If a member challenges how that information has been stored, who’s seen it, how long it’s been retained or whether it’s been shared, the operator needs to do more than give general reassurance that the information is secure. It needs to report on exactly what happened, who checked it, what decision was made and how the member was informed.

The challenge is rarely that health club operators don’t care about member data, because most do. The challenge is that responsibility can become blurred between reception, club managers, regional teams, head office, technology suppliers and external processors.

The Information Commissioner’s Office will expect to see evidence of how a complaint was handled if it’s escalated

What 19 June actually changes

The Data (Use and Access) Act 2026 marks a structural change, and the Information Commissioner’s Office now expects operators to handle data protection complaints themselves initially, before a member can escalate their case to the regulator. This means operators must adopt a complaints process that’s visible, documented and followed reliably, not just a general intention to deal with member queries fairly.

For example, complaints must be acknowledged within 30 days, and dealt with without undue delay and the Information Commissioner’s Office will expect to see evidence of how the complaint was handled if it’s escalated at a later date.

The commercial stakes are significant. Penalties relating to the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations have increased under the new Act, with fines potentially reaching £17.5m, or 4 per cent of a company’s global turnover, for serious breaches.

Failure to handle data complaints properly can also increase regulatory scrutiny, cause reputational damage and – in serious cases – create enforcement risk, particularly where the data involved relates to health, children, payments or surveillance.

Operators must now know where a data complaint can arrive, who recognises it, who investigates it, how suppliers are involved, how the response is recorded and how the member is kept updated throughout.

This is not a compliance exercise that sits separately from the business. It’s part of running a modern operation that members can trust with their health information, payment details and, in many cases, their family’s data.

Andy Chesterman is MD at Privacy Helper

Woman in high plank position
Consumers trust fitness, health and wellness operators with their health and personal data / Shutterstock / WellStock

Read more from this issue of HCM magazine

View contents of HCM 2026 issue 6
Sign up for FREE ezines & magazines
Operators need to be aware of new legislation that’s exposing weaknesses and potential liabilities in the handling of members’ data, says Andy Chesterman
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Lisa Starr tries the Ammortal Chamber to see whether layering 10 modalities into one experience really delivers more
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People on weight loss drugs reduce their activity levels, according to a team at St John’s Hospital Illinois
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The new CEO of UK Active talks to HCM about the gym-curious and why he believes the sector can double in size by the end of the next decade
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Shaping the future of the sector with a clear mission, unified voice and open channels of communication. This is the ambition of UK Active’s new chair
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Fuel the debate about issues and opportunities across the industry. We’d love to hear from you. Write to [email protected]
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features

Liability:
Data alert

New legislation is exposing weakness and potential liabilities in the management of customer data in health clubs, says Andy Chesterman

Published in Health Club Management 2026 issue 6
Gym guests at reception
Operators need to adopt a robust process that withstands close scrutiny / Shutterstock / Luis Rojas Estudio

Health clubs and leisure centres have become some of the most data-intensive operations when it comes to customer records.

Every member relationship generates sensitive data, including things such as direct debit mandates, PAR-Q and medical screening records, access control logs and CCTV footage. There may also be marketing preferences, cancellation records and – for sites with junior programmes – children’s activity data. In addition, if the operator has an app, then activity in this could also be recorded.

This is a significant volume of information, much of it relating to highly sensitive areas including health, payments and family.

Every member interaction leaves a trail and that data typically sits across several systems: booking apps, CRM platforms, payment processors, access control systems, marketing tools, CCTV providers and head office platforms.

Managing data across that many systems is normal for operators in the sector, but problems arise if a member challenges how their data has been used and there is no clear process for handling their query.

This is no longer acceptable in the UK and under the Data (Use and Access) Act 2026 – a piece of legislation that received Royal Assent on 19 June (www.hcmmag.com/DUA) – organisations must now have a clear and robust process for handling data protection complaints.

Andy Chesterman
Andy Chesterman

Penalties have increased, with fines potentially reaching £17.5m, or 4 per cent of global turnover

Complaints may not look like complaints

A member doesn’t need to use the words ‘data protection complaint’ for the club to have a data protection issue to deal with. Members are far more likely to ask things such as why they’re still receiving marketing emails after cancelling their membership, who has access to their medical screening form, whether CCTV footage of them has been retained or why their details are still on file after they left.

Once a member has raised such a query, the responsibility sits with the health club to recognise whether the complaint relates to the handling of personal data. If it is, it must be acknowledged, investigated, recorded and answered through the club’s own data protection complaints process.

This is where the sector has a practical challenge. A complaint might arrive through reception, a club manager’s inbox, a membership team call, a customer service form or a social media message and the first person to receive it may have no reason to treat it differently from any other member query.

Medical screening records are a good example. They’re used routinely in the sector, but they can include health information, which is treated as special category data under UK GDPR and requires stronger protection.

If a member challenges how that information has been stored, who’s seen it, how long it’s been retained or whether it’s been shared, the operator needs to do more than give general reassurance that the information is secure. It needs to report on exactly what happened, who checked it, what decision was made and how the member was informed.

The challenge is rarely that health club operators don’t care about member data, because most do. The challenge is that responsibility can become blurred between reception, club managers, regional teams, head office, technology suppliers and external processors.

The Information Commissioner’s Office will expect to see evidence of how a complaint was handled if it’s escalated

What 19 June actually changes

The Data (Use and Access) Act 2026 marks a structural change, and the Information Commissioner’s Office now expects operators to handle data protection complaints themselves initially, before a member can escalate their case to the regulator. This means operators must adopt a complaints process that’s visible, documented and followed reliably, not just a general intention to deal with member queries fairly.

For example, complaints must be acknowledged within 30 days, and dealt with without undue delay and the Information Commissioner’s Office will expect to see evidence of how the complaint was handled if it’s escalated at a later date.

The commercial stakes are significant. Penalties relating to the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations have increased under the new Act, with fines potentially reaching £17.5m, or 4 per cent of a company’s global turnover, for serious breaches.

Failure to handle data complaints properly can also increase regulatory scrutiny, cause reputational damage and – in serious cases – create enforcement risk, particularly where the data involved relates to health, children, payments or surveillance.

Operators must now know where a data complaint can arrive, who recognises it, who investigates it, how suppliers are involved, how the response is recorded and how the member is kept updated throughout.

This is not a compliance exercise that sits separately from the business. It’s part of running a modern operation that members can trust with their health information, payment details and, in many cases, their family’s data.

Andy Chesterman is MD at Privacy Helper

Woman in high plank position
Consumers trust fitness, health and wellness operators with their health and personal data / Shutterstock / WellStock

Read more from this issue of HCM magazine

View contents of HCM 2026 issue 6
Sign up for FREE ezines & magazines
Operators need to be aware of new legislation that’s exposing weaknesses and potential liabilities in the handling of members’ data, says Andy Chesterman
Latest News
Walnuts Leisure Centre in Orpington, in the London Borough of Bromley, has reopened following a ...
Latest News
The Gym Group, has announced that it's sustained positive trading momentum has continued through the ...
Latest News
Hyrox has announced it will be working with a second charity in the upcoming season ...
Latest News
US low-cost operator, Amped Fitness, has launched a flagship location in Texas, debuting its multi-sensory ...
Latest News
Luxury boutique Pilates and wellness studio, X-Club, officially launches a 4,000sq ft flagship at Marylebone ...
Latest News
The LifeFit Group continues its buy and build strategy with the acquisition of the Fitness ...
Latest News
An ambitious women’s only strength and lifting studio concept is set to launch in Dallas this ...
Latest News
Finnish outdoor fitness equipment specialist, Omnigym, has partnered with charity, Emmaüs Solidarité, to launch an ...
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Virgin Active has officially opened its redesigned Mayfair club, unveiling its latest Social Wellness Club ...
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Europe’s largest low-cost operator, Basic-Fit, has agreed to acquire 41 Wellyou clubs in Germany for ...
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Longevity is the most important motivator for today’s exercisers and social connection is key, according ...
Opinion
promotion
Strength training has moved from the margins to the mainstream.
Opinion: Building smarter strength spaces for today’s operators
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right client in under 10 seconds.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Cornerstone Connect helps Active Blackpool tackle health inequalities
Active Blackpool is deploying Cornerstone Connect, a new digital interface allowing disparate information from multiple systems to be aggregated into one dataset, to support its focus on reducing health inequalities and improving healthy life expectancy.
Company profiles
Company profile: Output Sports
Output Sports provides performance technology for modern training facilities. Our integrated platform combines testing, monitoring ...
Company profiles
Company profile: FS Commercial Division
Now the UK’s leading specialist fitness equipment supplier, Fitness Superstore started from humble beginnings in ...
Supplier Showcases
Supplier Showcase - Future-proofing
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
BLK BOX press release: Inside the build: Move360
Move360 was created with one clear goal: to provide an intelligent training environment where members can build strength, improve movement quality and train with confidence. To help bring their vision to life, Move360 partnered with BLK BOX to design, manufacture and install a facility that reflects the quality of coaching delivered every day.
Featured press releases
Elevate Arena press release: Elevate 2026 celebrates record attendance
Elevate’s 10th anniversary event has officially concluded after two lively days at Excel London, 17–18 June.
Directory
Spa and beauty equipment
Oakworks Inc: Spa and beauty equipment
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Hot tubs
MSpa International Ltd: Hot tubs
Fitness tracking platform
SpiviTech: Fitness tracking platform
Industrial washing machines
Miele Company Limited: Industrial washing machines
Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Aquaform s.r.l.: Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Property & Tenders
Stratford, East London.
Lee Valley Regional Park Authority
Property & Tenders
Y Felinheli, LL56 4QN
Newmark
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
21-24 Sep 2026
The Langham Huntington Pasadena , Pasadena, United States
Diary dates
06-08 Oct 2026
Messe Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
22-22 Oct 2026
QEII Conference Centre, London,
Diary dates
26-29 Oct 2027
Koelnmesse Exhibition Centre, Cologne, Germany
Diary dates
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