FAQ pages for coaches: the questions worth answering publicly
A practical FAQ guide for coach websites: pricing, fit, first sessions, cancellation, location, remote work, and what happens after a request.

Daniel Hart
Strength coach for runners returning from injury.
Cert
Certified strength coach
Quote
Clear plan after every session
FAQ
Who it is for, what to expect
A good FAQ removes friction
If a question appears in most first calls, it probably belongs on the website. Public answers help prospects self-qualify before they contact the coach.
Questions to answer
- Who is this coaching for?
- What happens in the first session?
- How does pricing work?
- Do you work remotely or in person?
- What if I need to reschedule?
- How do I know which service to choose?
Example FAQ answers
First session
What happens in the first session?
We review your goal, current situation, constraints, and timeline. You do not need a perfect plan before we speak; the first step is understanding whether coaching is the right fit.
Pricing
Do you show prices?
Yes, the page shows starting prices or ranges where possible. Final scope depends on the service, schedule, and level of support needed.
Remote format
Can coaching happen remotely?
Some coaching works fully remotely, and some sessions depend on location or equipment. The service page should explain which format applies.
Keep answers specific
FAQ answers should be short and direct. If the answer is long, it may deserve its own post with a link from the FAQ.
Do not hide important information
If price, cancellation, location, or availability affects the decision, the FAQ should answer it plainly. A prospect should not need to send a request just to discover basic constraints.
How Coloseos helps
Site keeps FAQ answers close to services, programs, legal pages, and the request form. Colos-AI can draft FAQ answers from the coach's services and common replies; the coach approves before publishing.