Inside Tramp Health : The World’s Most Exclusive Nightclub Just Opened a Luxury Wellness Club

For 56 years, Tramp has built its reputation on the unforgettable night, the music, the chaos, the kind of evenings that become Mayfair folklore. Now the club that gave London chandelier-swinging and celebrity feuds has turned its attention to the morning after, and the result is more considered than anyone might have predicted.

Tramp Health is the work of Luca Maggiora, the entrepreneur who bought Tramp at the end of 2023, and it announces itself with the same confidence as its parent club, a club whose guest list has included Frank Sinatra, The Beatles, Mick Jagger, Princess Margaret, Joan Collins and Jack Nicholson in its early years, later joined by Prince William, David Beckham and Rihanna.

Tramp Health lounge
All photos are courtesy of  © Tramp Health 
Tramp Health gym
All photos are courtesy of  © Tramp Health 

Inside Tramp Health

Spanning approximately 16,000 square feet, the club is built around a 3,000 sq ft gym, equipped by Technogym, Eleiko, Panatta, Watson, Hammer Strength and Precor, alongside a Pilates studio with 15 reformers and a dedicated personal training studio. A hot yoga/Pilates studio and a mindfulness space round out the movement side, built to accommodate sound healing, breathwork and meditation.

The concept rests on six words : Assess, Nourish, Move, Restore, Strengthen, Belong, and walking through the space, that’s exactly the order it plays out in. Members move between zones for breathwork, relaxation, diagnostics and IV therapy, with further treatments available via hyperbaric oxygen and red light therapy.

Health assessments sit at the centre of the offering, Medical and longevity care is overseen by Dr Mark Mikhail, covering blood testing and concierge-style health programmes. Pair that with mindfulness and yoga programming, and the club reads as much like a longevity studio as a fitness space.

Recovery is just as serious, a 15-person steam room, cold plunges, a 20-person sauna and hyperbaric oxygen therapy anchor the spa offering. Four treatment rooms handle physiotherapy, TCM and aesthetic services, with red light therapy and dedicated mobility and stretching areas alongside them. Tech runs quietly underneath all of it, an AI concierge syncs with a WHOOP or Oura ring to surface sleep, recovery and strain data directly inside the club’s own app, so the insight is waiting before a member even asks for it.

The social heart of the building is the ground-floor café and terrace which offers indoor and outdoor seating with a menu from Kalinik and head chef Marco Sanna, some of the highlights include smoothies, light brunch plates and kefir bowls built around functional ingredients like collagen, creatine, MCT and lion’s mane. The interiors, designed by Tomèf Design, centre on a bronze “Tree of Life” sculpture, with circadian lighting reinforcing the longevity focus throughout.

Tramp Health spa
All photos are courtesy of  © Tramp Health 
Tramp Health mindfulness studio
All photos are courtesy of  © Tramp Health 

What distinguishes Tramp Health from the wave of wellness clubs currently opening across London is its refusal to disown its own history. Maggiora has been clear that this isn’t a correction of Tramp’s nightlife identity but a counterpart to it, a place for “meaningful mornings of clarity” that complement “unforgettable nights.” The wager is that the same person who closes down the dance floor on Friday wants somewhere serious to recover by Saturday morning, and that the two impulses aren’t in conflict so much as in conversation.

It’s a shrewd read of where luxury London is heading. The Sloane Club is reworking its wellbeing space. Soho House is rolling out health clubs across its portfolio, along with Six Senses Place, Surrenne, Lanserhof at The Arts Club, Bodyism and Grey Wolfe being recent examples, wellness members’ clubs have moved from trend to category, and Tramp Health enters it with a credibility few competitors can match, a brand already synonymous with hedonism, choosing to build longevity into the same address rather than starting from scratch elsewhere.

Tramp Health cafe

Membership reflects that ambition. Non-Tramp members pay £10,000 a year plus a £5,000 joining fee; existing Tramp members pay £390 a month, and every applicant is interviewed before being admitted.

The café and terrace opened first this spring with is an early indications suggesting that Tramp Health is positioning itself less as a fitness studio and more as Mayfair’s new social headquarters for a particular kind of member, one who recovers with the same intensity they socialise.

Whether Tramp Health becomes the model other clubs follow, or remains a singular, well-funded experiment, Maggiora has clearly read what London’s luxury set wants next. The city asked for balance. He built it an address.

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