The ClubRight Website is a ready-made public website for your club, built into ClubRight. It pulls your memberships, classes, opening hours, and contact details straight from your account, so visitors can find you, see what you offer, and join or book in a few taps. This article explains what it is, why it is designed the way it is, and how to set it up and go live.
This article is about your ClubRight Website, your public site for attracting new members. It is not about the ClubRight system your members and staff use day to day.
Why the site is built this way
The ClubRight Website is deliberately focused, so it does the job a club website actually needs to do:
Built to convert. Every part of the site is geared towards turning a visitor into a member or a booking, rather than filling the page with content that does not earn its place. The layout guides visitors towards joining, booking a class, or getting in touch.
Built to be found. The site is structured to rank well in local search and in AI-powered search, so people looking for a club in your area are more likely to find you.
Built to be low-maintenance. Your details, memberships, classes, and opening hours come straight from ClubRight, so the site stays up to date on its own. There is very little to manage, and no separate website system to keep in sync.
This is why some fields have character limits and suggested fallback text, and why the structure is fixed rather than a blank canvas. The site is designed to look professional and convert well without you having to be a web designer.
Most of your site is already done for you
Your site is built from information ClubRight already holds. Your memberships and prices, classes and timetable, opening hours, contact details, and branding are all pulled in automatically, and they stay in sync as you update them in ClubRight. Where you leave a field blank, the site uses sensible suggested text, and sections and menu links appear or hide themselves depending on whether they have content.
This means your site can go live with very little input from you. You can tweak headings, buttons, and wording to suit your club, but you do not have to: the only step that is genuinely required is connecting your own domain so the site is publicly visible. Everything else is optional polish.
✅ No more manually updating your website. When you change a class time, amend a membership package, or update your prices in ClubRight, your website updates itself. There is no separate site to log into and edit, and no risk of your website showing out-of-date classes or prices. Make the change once in ClubRight and your public site reflects it automatically.
What the ClubRight Website is, and is not
The ClubRight Website is a single, focused homepage built from a fixed template, designed to convert visitors into members. It is not a general website builder: you cannot add extra pages or change the layout beyond the options in the editor. This is deliberate, it is what keeps the site fast, easy to manage, and effective at converting, with no web design skills needed.
If you need a larger multi-page website (for example with separate pages for blogs, multiple locations, or detailed service pages), the ClubRight Website is not designed for that, and you would be better served by a dedicated website platform. Many clubs in that position keep their own website and use ClubRight's website widgets to embed their timetable, memberships, and enquiry form into it instead.
Finding the Website editor
Go to Settings, then Website. The editor opens with all your settings on the left and a live preview of your site on the right.
The live preview updates as you make changes, so you can see exactly how your site will look.
Use the Desktop and Mobile toggle above the preview to check both layouts.
At the top you will see your public site address with Open in new tab to view the real site.
When you make changes, click Save changes in the top right.
Your branding comes from Club Info
Your logo and brand colour are not set in the Website editor. They come from Club Info, and are used everywhere: your public site, your member area, and your emails. This means you set your branding once and it stays consistent across everything. To change your logo or brand colour, use the Edit in Club Info button, or see Editing your club info.
The parts of your site
The editor is organised into tabs, each controlling one part of your site. You do not have to fill in everything: where you leave a field blank, the site uses sensible suggested text so it still looks complete.
Top of page: the first thing visitors see, your headline, short description, hero image, and main call-to-action buttons.
Top bar & menu: your site's header and navigation.
Promo banner: an optional thin bar above the header to promote a deal for a set period.
Page sections: which sections appear on your homepage.
Memberships: how your plans are shown to visitors.
About: a short narrative about your club, with an optional image.
FAQ: frequently asked questions and answers.
Contact & hours: your contact details and opening hours.
Social & legal: links to your social profiles, and your privacy policy and terms.
Web address: connect your own custom domain (this is how your site goes live, see below).
Google reviews: show your Google rating and reviews.
Performance: see how your site is converting visitors into members and bookings.
Each of these has its own guide for the detail.
Going live
Your site goes live to the public when you connect your own custom domain (for example www.yourclub.co.uk). You set this up in the Web address tab. Connecting your domain is what makes your site publicly visible, so it is the key step to publishing your site. For the full process, see Connecting your custom domain.
Until then, you can build and preview your site as much as you like using the live preview, and nothing is shown publicly.
✅ A good order to set things up: start with Top of page and your call-to-action buttons, fill in About, FAQ, and Contact & hours, check the Memberships and Page sections tabs, then connect your Web address to go live. You can always come back and refine.
If something on your site is not looking right, see Website troubleshooting: common questions. If you get stuck at any point, contact the Customer Success team using the orange chat button in your application.
