TITLE Boxing Club is a boxing-focused fitness studio in Oklahoma City that blends cardio-heavy group classes with personalized ring instruction for amateur competitors and serious hobbyists. Unlike CrossFit boxes or conventional gyms, TITLE occupies a specific niche: it markets primarily to people who want boxing fitness (punching bags, mitt work, conditioning) without necessarily pursuing amateur or professional competition, while also supporting fighters who do. The studio operates as a membership-based facility with drop-in options, pricing it between a standard gym and specialized coaching environments like dedicated boxing gyms.
TITLE is a boutique fitness chain, and the Oklahoma City location operates as a group-class studio rather than a traditional boxing gym. The space combines heavy bag stations, speed bags, double-end bags, and mitt-work areas alongside cardio equipment and bodyweight stations. Classes run in rotation, with an instructor leading 45- to 55-minute sessions that typically include a warm-up, heavy bag or mitt work in rounds, and conditioning finishers. The studio does not house a full sparring ring; it is designed for pad work and bag work rather than amateur bouts.
TITLE offers three membership tiers. The foundational option is unlimited group classes, priced at approximately $179 per month or $15 per drop-in class. A mid-tier membership adds one personal training session per month for roughly $229 per month. The premium tier includes two personal training sessions monthly for about $279 per month. Personal training sessions outside a membership package run approximately $60 to $80 per session depending on whether you book solo or small-group options.
Group classes follow a structured format: warm-up (usually 5 minutes), skill block teaching combinations or footwork (10 minutes), round-based bag or mitt work (20 to 30 minutes), and conditioning finisher (5 to 10 minutes). Classes cap at 12 to 15 people per instructor to ensure adequate bag and mitt access.
Oklahoma City has two distinct boxing environments. Traditional amateur boxing gyms, such as established clubs that emphasize competitive training and sparring, cater to fighters pursuing amateur or professional ranks; they typically charge $50 to $100 per month and assume you are building ring skills. TITLE, by contrast, is a fitness-first model with boxing tools. You attend for conditioning, coordination, and the appeal of bag work, not because you are training for an amateur card. A second comparison point is CrossFit boxes that occasionally incorporate heavy bag work: these studios lack dedicated boxing equipment, coaching specific to boxing mechanics, and the repetition necessary to develop even casual proficiency with glove handling or footwork.
Choose TITLE if you want structured group fitness built around boxing movements, consistent coaching on stance and combinations, and a social class environment. Choose a traditional boxing gym if you are serious about amateur competition or need a coach evaluating your fight readiness. Choose CrossFit if you are primarily seeking varied functional fitness and boxing is one element among many.
TITLE suits people who enjoy high-intensity interval training and prefer the boxing format to rowing or cycling, people with some hand-eye coordination ambition (learning combos, improving speed), and people who find the sensory feedback of hitting a bag satisfying or stress-relieving. It also works for casual hobbyists who want the option of one-on-one coaching without committing to a full boxing gym membership.
TITLE is not ideal for serious amateur fighters in active training cycles, people who need daily sparring partners, or those seeking in-depth technical coaching on footwork and ring positioning (beyond what a group class can deliver). It is also not a good fit if you cannot sustain $15 to $179 per month or prefer drop-in-only access without paying the per-class rate.
Most TITLE locations require you to book a class in advance via their app or website. Arrive 10 to 15 minutes early for your first session; the instructor will briefly cover stance, guard position, and how to wrap your hands (wraps are provided or you can bring your own). You will be assigned a heavy bag station and shown how to adjust the glove fit. The class then proceeds through the standard format. Expect to feel your shoulders and forearms the next day if you are new to boxing; the repetitive punching motion taxes stabilizer muscles that desk work does not engage.
Verify current hours directly with the location, as group fitness studios often adjust opening times seasonally and by membership demand. Most TITLE locations operate Monday through Friday with evening classes (5 p.m. to 7 p.m. slots typical) and limited weekend morning availability. Parking is usually lot-based or street parking depending on the neighborhood; ask about bike racks if you commute by bicycle. The studio typically provides hand wraps, heavy bags, and gloves, though many members bring their own gloves once they know their fit.
TITLE Boxing Club fills a legitimate gap in Oklahoma City's fitness landscape: it offers boxing movement and equipment in a group-class setting without demanding competitive ambition, and it allows drop-ins as well as membership commitment. For people drawn to boxing conditioning but wary of joining a sparring-focused gym, it provides accessible entry.
