Hampton
Hampton
Sweatpals
Sweatpals

Hampton vs Sweatpals

Hampton focuses on networking while Sweatpals is built around friendship. Both are available in 4 cities — here’s how they compare.

Side-by-side comparison  ·  Updated 2026

At a glance

CategoryNetworkingFriendship
Price$$$$ — Annual membership (pricing disclosed during application process)Free — Free to join and discover; hosts set their own ticket prices
Group Size8 per core groupVaries
MatchingManual / Self-selectInterest-based
Frequencymonthlyon-demand
Age Range18+
PlatformsWebiOS, Android
Cities13 cities4 cities
Founded20222022

Pricing

Hampton is priced at $$$$ (Annual membership (pricing disclosed during application process)), while Sweatpals comes in at Free (Free to join and discover; hosts set their own ticket prices).

Format & matching

Hampton uses groups of 8 per core group, compared to Sweatpals’s Varies, and Hampton relies on manual / self-select matching while Sweatpals uses interest-based matching.

How they work

Hampton: Head to joinhampton.com and submit an application. Hampton is invitation-only with an ~8% acceptance rate — you'll need to be an active founder or CEO of a tech-enabled business with at least $3M in annual revenue, $3M in capital raised, or a $10M+ previous exit. If accepted after a paper screening, structured interview, and community veto process, you pay an annual membership fee and get placed into a Core group of eight curated founders in your city. Your Core group meets in person ten times a year, facilitated by a trained moderator. Beyond that, you get access to local chapter events (dinners, workshops, signature experiences) and a private Slack network of 1,000+ members for rapid Q&A on business and personal topics.

Sweatpals: Download the app, set your location, and browse a feed of fitness and wellness experiences happening near you — everything from sunrise yoga to weekend hikes to pickleball meetups. Join a community built around your favorite activity and chat with other members. When an event catches your eye, book a ticket directly in the app. If you're a host, you can create events, manage memberships, collect payments and waivers, and even send SMS blasts to your community — all from one dashboard. The discovery feed also surfaces experiences you wouldn't have found on your own, which is where the magic happens.

What to love

Hampton: Extremely curated membership — ~8% acceptance rate ensures high-caliber peers. Core groups of 8 create real accountability and trust over time. In-person only meetings in your city — no Zoom calls pretending to be community. No-solicitation policy means nobody is trying to sell you anything. Bootstrapped company with long-term vision — not optimizing for a VC exit.

Sweatpals: Two-sided marketplace — great for both discovering events and hosting them. Built-in ticketing, payments, waivers, and SMS marketing for hosts is genuinely useful. Strong presence in Austin and Bay Area with 25K+ local users. Community chat and social feed create ongoing connection beyond single events. Free to discover and join — no subscription paywall for attendees.

Reality check

Hampton: Pricing is not transparent — you have to apply just to learn the cost. Strict eligibility requirements exclude early-stage founders. Currently in 16 cities — if you're not in one, you're out of luck. No app — everything runs through a website and Slack.

Sweatpals: Concentrated in a few cities — experience outside Austin, SF, and Miami is thinner. App can be buggy — multiple reviews mention glitches with profiles and photos. The 'Pals' matching feature is inconsistent and often shows no results. Host-dependent quality means some experiences are polished and others are bare-bones.

Søren's take

On Hampton: Hampton isn't for most people, and that's the point. If you're a tech founder doing $3M+ in revenue and you're tired of generic networking events full of people pitching you, this is the real deal. The Core group model — eight people, same group, ten meetings a year — creates the kind of trust and candor you can't get from a conference or a Slack community alone. The price tag and exclusivity will turn off a lot of people, but for the founders who get in, the ROI is reportedly massive. Just know that this is a long-term commitment, not a casual membership you dip into.

On Sweatpals: Sweatpals is trying to be the Eventbrite of fitness, and in the cities where it has traction — especially Austin and the Bay Area — it works. The dual focus on attendees and hosts is smart: hosts get real tools (ticketing, waivers, SMS), and attendees get a discovery feed that surfaces things they'd never find on Instagram. The app itself is still rough around the edges — reviews mention bugs and the matching feature barely works — but the core experience of finding a local run club or yoga class and just showing up is solid. If you're in one of their active cities and want to meet people through movement, it's worth downloading.

Compare Hampton with

Compare Sweatpals with