Booking a badminton court or pilates class should be as easy as ordering a takeaway, says Sports Minister as she bemoans obstacles that put people off exercising
- Sport England quizzed almost 2,000 adults living in England for the survey
- Two thirds of respondents said they found it easy to order a takeaway online
- While only 34 per cent said the same about booking sport or fitness activities
People living in England find it easier to order takeaway food than to book a fitness class online, a poll suggests.
Sport England quizzed almost 2,000 adults on whether they found it simple enough to complete certain actions on the internet.
Two thirds said they found it easy to order a takeaway online, while only 34 per cent said the same about booking sport or fitness activities.
The UK’s Sports Minister, Mims Davies, today called it for to become just as easy to get booked onto sports classes, which may include Pilates.

Sport England quizzed almost 2,000 adults on whether they found it simple enough to complete certain actions on the internet
Ms Davies said: ‘It should be as easy to book a court, football pitch or exercise class as it is to order your favourite takeaway or hire a cab.
‘Not being able to easily plan and book online potentially puts many people off doing more physical activity.’
The poll of 1,815 adults was commissioned by Sport England, a spin-off body of the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport.
It also found around one in five adults have been put off sport because it was too difficult to find or book online.
The complete findings of the survey will be revealed at an event at the Wellcome Collection in London tomorrow.
On the back of the poll, Sport England will give £1.5million to leisure centres and sports clubs to help make booking classes easier.
Sport England’s chief executive Tim Hollingsworth said: ‘Our survey shows that at the moment there are too many barriers to entry.
‘So, this is about giving the public the choice to find sport and physical activity in a way that meets the expectations they have in all other aspects of their lives.
He added that this was a ‘real tipping point moment’, adding that now is the time to ‘supercharge’ the health of the nation.
Britain is one of the three fattest nations in Europe, with two thirds of adults being classed as overweight and a quarter being obese. Only Malta and Turkey are fatter.
Obesity is defined as a body mass index (BMI) score of more than 30. A tally higher than 25 is seen as overweight.
It is known to raise the risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease, stroke, dementia, joint and back problems and cancer.
And it is not just British adults who are fat. A third of children are overweight and 10 per cent are obese when they leave primary school.