Property A vs. Property B: Why Human-Led Wellness Activation Is Becoming a Retention Strategy in Multifamily - by Jennifer DiCecco
In 2026, multifamily performance is increasingly driven by occupancy protection and resident retention, not aggressive rent growth. That reality is forcing owners and operators to re-evaluate which amenities actually influence renewals.
One of the most overlooked levers is the fitness center—not the equipment, but the operating model behind it.
This article compares two real-world conditions:
- Property A: A 302-unit community where we conducted a 3-day, on-site wellness activation pilot with structured, human-led programming
- Property B: A comparable “amenity-only” condition—an underused gym with no activation (no on-site wellness staff, programming cadence, or accountability system)
Note: Property names are anonymized at the owner/operator’s request. The pilot referenced is real and was conducted on-site with measured results.
Property A (Activated): what residents told us
Before and during the pilot, Property A collected 48 resident responses, revealing:
- 79% of residents were not fully satisfied with the current gym experience.
- Gym usage split:
- 41% used it 3+ times per week
- 39% used it 1–2x per week or occasionally
The core issue wasn’t awareness—it was structure. Many residents want to be more active but lack confidence, consistency, or a plan.
What residents actually want (it’s not more equipment)
Residents repeatedly asked for human-led wellness services, including:
- Strength training
- Mobility & stretching
- Small-group training
- Personalized plans
- Nutrition guidance
- Accountability & consistency
- Community wellness events
This is the key operational insight: equipment doesn’t create adherence. Coaching and programming do.
The 3-day pilot: immediate engagement and demand
During Property A’s 3-day activation:
- 38 sessions were delivered in 3 days
- The property saw:
- continuous resident traffic
- immediate demand for recurring programming
Resident feedback was direct:
- “We need this regularly.”
- “This should be permanent.”
Satisfaction signal owners should pay attention to
Property A residents also made the retention connection clear:
- 95% said investing in wellness would increase satisfaction
- 62% significantly more satisfied
- 33% slightly more satisfied
In practical terms: residents are telling ownership that a staffed, structured wellness experience increases the perceived value of the building.
Property B (Amenity-only): the predictable plateau
Property B represents the common model: a fitness room that exists, looks fine on tours, but lacks programming and on-site guidance. In that environment, only the already-motivated residents engage consistently, while the larger “intent” population never converts into routine.
That is how an amenity becomes a quiet dissatisfaction driver—and a renewal risk—rather than a retention asset.
Owner takeaway
The conclusion is simple:
- Property A (Activated): Converts resident intent into engagement, creates demand for recurring programming, and increases satisfaction
- Property B (Amenity-only): Stagnates utilization and leaves satisfaction gaps unresolved
Owners don’t necessarily need a bigger gym. They need a gym that performs—supported by an on-site activation layer that drives utilization, experience, and retention outcomes.
Jennifer DiCecco is senior vice president of Strategic Partnerships at Elite Wellness Amenity Group.