The people you train with aren't followers. They're your Circle.
Linkup doesn't have a public community feed. After you complete sessions with someone and trust is established, you can invite them to your Circle — a small, private network of people you've actually trained with.
Circles are built from sessions, not follows.
A Circle starts with one completed session. After three, you can invite them in. No deposits needed inside your Circle — trust is already established.
Complete a session together
Every Circle starts with a real workout. Two people, one deposit, one QR scan. You now have history.
Complete three. Send the invite.
After three completed sessions, you can invite them to your Circle. They choose to accept. It's bilateral.
Train without deposits. You've earned it.
Circle members skip the deposit requirement. You've already proven you both show up.
From people who've been flaked on before
These are the people Linkup is built for.
I've been burned twice — confirmed, then bailed an hour before. When I heard Linkup requires a deposit before the session exists, I signed up immediately. That's the only thing that was ever going to get me back on an app like this.
Marcus T.
Remote worker, Chicago
On the waitlist — Chicago launch
Your Circle, your rules.
Circles don't have member counts or activity feeds. They have people you've sweated with.
No public feed
Sessions and history are private to Circle members. Nothing is broadcast. Nothing is posted.
No deposits with your Circle
Three completed sessions replaces the deposit requirement. You've both shown up. That's the proof.
Shared activity history
Circle members see each other's session history. You know exactly who you're training with.
Flexible scheduling
Plan sessions directly with Circle members without going through the full matching flow every time.
You choose who's in
Circle membership is bilateral. You invite. They accept. Both people have to agree. No one gets added without consent.
Linkup is launching in three cities.
NYC, LA, and Chicago are the first three cities. Join the waitlist to get early access before the public launch in your city.
New York City
Coming 2026
Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens — Linkup's first city goes live with a full partner matching pool across all five boroughs.
Los Angeles
Coming 2026
LA's fitness culture built Linkup. The deposit system was designed for a city where 'let's work out' too often means nothing.
Chicago
Coming 2026
Chicago goes live with NYC and LA. All three cities launch together.
Get in before your city goes live.
NYC, LA, and Chicago launch together. Join the waitlist for early access.
Join the Waitlist