Why Generic Fitness Policies Don’t Work for Martial Arts
Why Generic Fitness Policies Don’t Work for Martial Arts

Why Generic Fitness Policies Don’t Work for Martial Arts
Gym Insurance Brokers and MAAIS have long highlighted this mismatch. Most fitness or recreation policies are designed for:
- Low-contact environments (e.g., yoga, Pilates, personal training).
- Equipment-based risk, not person-to-person interaction.
- Minimal bodily impact between participants.
Martial arts, however, inherently involve:
- Direct physical contact.
- Variable intensity (light, moderate, or full contact).
- Complex liability (instructors, assistants, and even event organizers).
That’s why martial arts schools require specialized policies that acknowledge these realities — not generic fitness coverage.
The “Grey Areas”: Controlled vs. Full Contact
Not all contact is equal.
Part of your own research should be to ask questions about your policy as some policies draw distinctions between:
- Pad Holding: Students holding pads for other members for selected techniques
- Controlled Contact: Drills, light sparring, grappling with supervision.
- Full Contact: Competition-level sparring, Muay Thai, MMA, or hard-contact tournaments.
Even within specialized martial arts coverage, these distinctions affect your premium and reporting duties. That’s why it's important to have your own:
- document sparring intensity levels in training manuals.
- waivers aligned with MAAIS risk management templates.
- record keeping of safety gear inspections and participant briefings.






