If you’re thinking about bodybuilding as something financially rewarding, forget it. This is not a business plan. This is an obsession.
The only people who make real money in bodybuilding are genetic freaks at the very top, and even then it’s usually not from prize money. It’s from social media, coaching, YouTube, brand deals, or building a personal brand. The stage itself rarely pays the bills.
High level amateurs? Sometimes they get small sponsorships. Usually it’s free gear, discounted supps, maybe a few hundred bucks here and there. It’s not life-changing money. Most of them still work normal jobs.
The harsh reality is this: bodybuilding rewards freak genetics. Hard work and discipline are mandatory, but they are not enough on their own. If your structure, muscle bellies, insertions, response to drugs, and ability to stay lean aren’t elite, you’ll hit a ceiling no matter how dialed in you are.
So if you want to compete because you love it, because you’re borderline obsessed with pushing your physique and testing yourself on stage, go for it. That’s the right reason.
If you’re thinking, “I’m going to risk my health and grind for years but at least it’ll pay off financially,” that’s the wrong mindset. The payoff for most guys is a trophy, some photos, and personal satisfaction. Not a salary.
As for prep, you’re right. Stage prep isn’t just deficit vs surplus. It becomes precision. Sodium, water manipulation, carb timing, digestion, stress management, posing practice, peak week strategy.
We do have experienced coaches on the forum. For example,
@Mac11wildcat. I don’t know if he’s taking new clients, but you can always reach out and ask. Worst case he says no. Best case you get real guidance from someone who actually knows the game.
Compete because you’re a fanatic. Not because you’re looking for ROI. That’s the truth.