Pricing Overview

Door Pricing

Single class: £15 — your anchor price, premium but justified by quality.

Two classes, same night, same venue: £25 — effectively £12.50/class, a clear reward for staying. The £5 discount is enough to encourage doubles without devaluing the product.


Class Cards (1 credit = 1 class entry, always)

CardPricePer CreditSaving vs single doorDouble night (2 credits) vs £25 door
5-credit£65£13.0013% off£26 vs £25 — no saving, not designed for doubles
10-credit£110£11.0027% off£22 vs £25 — saves £3/night

The 5-credit card at £65 is the “I liked the taster, I’m coming back” commitment. It works well for single-class students who aren’t sure about a full term. At £13/credit it’s a modest but real saving over £15 door. It deliberately doesn’t save money for doubles — that’s fine, it’s not the product for them.

The 10-credit card at £110 is your main workhorse product. For single-class students that’s 10 weeks at £11/class — a genuine 27% saving over the door. For double-class students burning 2 per night, they’re paying £22 for both classes vs £25 at the door — still a meaningful saving (£3/night, £15 over 5 weeks), but not so good that it cannibalises the term pass.


Term Pass (unlimited classes within the date range)

Per term (~10 weeks): £130

Student typeEffective costvs Doorvs 10-credit card
Single, 10 weeks£13.00/classSaves £20 (13%)£20 more than card
Double, 10 weeks (20 classes)£6.50/classSaves £120 (48%)Saves £90 vs two 10-cards
Single, misses 2 weeks (8 classes)£16.25/classSlightly worse than doorCard would’ve been better

This is where the pricing strategy gets intentional. A single-class student who attends every week is slightly better off with a 10-credit card (£110) than a term pass (£130). And that’s by design — the term pass isn’t competing with the card for reliable single-class students. The term pass value is:

  • For double-class students: it’s overwhelmingly the best deal, at £6.50/class.
  • For single-class students who want flexibility: no stress about burning credits, and if they ever fancy popping into the other class on a whim, it’s free.

This creates a natural upgrade funnel that matches the student journey you described: try at the door → buy a 5-card → commit to a 10-card → start doing doubles → switch to the term pass.


Workshops

These are standalone skills intensives, typically 2–3 hours, so the pricing reflects the concentrated learning and the cachet of the instructor.

FormatPrice
In-house workshop (2 hours, your own teachers)£25
Guest instructor workshop (2 hours)£30–35
Extended workshop (3 hours or masterclass)£35–40
Workshop + social dance after+£5 on top of workshop price

A 2-hour guest instructor workshop at £30–35 puts you in the premium tier for London without being exclusionary. You’re already positioned at 50% above the industry norm for classes (£15 vs £10), so workshop pricing should reflect that same premium. Bundling a social dance afterwards for £5 more is a nice upsell that extends the evening.


Festivals (multi-day events)

These vary hugely, so I’d recommend a tiered structure with early bird incentives. UK Lindy Hop festivals typically run £80–180, depending on duration. With your premium positioning, aim for the upper-mid range.

Pass Type2–3 day weekend4–5 day bank holiday
Early bird full pass£90£130
Standard full pass£110£160
Day pass£45£45
Evening/social-only pass£20/night£20/night

Early bird pricing (available until, say, 6 weeks before) drives early cash flow and commits people. The day pass and evening-only options lower the barrier for locals who can’t commit to the full event. For the longer bank holiday events, the per-day rate drops to reward the full commitment — £160 for 5 days is £32/day vs £45 for a single day.


Summary — the upgrade funnel

StageProductPricePer class
CuriousDoor (single)£15£15.00
Coming back5-class card£65£13.00
Regular (single class)10-class card£110£11.00
Regular (doubles)Term pass£130£6.50
Door doubleTwo classes, one night£25£12.50

Each tier is meaningfully better than the one above it, but only for the right student. A casual student would waste money on a term pass. A double-class regular would waste money on class cards. The pricing naturally guides people to the right product for their attendance pattern.