Insights on pricing, marketing, hospitality, and the business behind transformational retreats. By Leni Cavazos.

A retreat waitlist is one of the highest-converting assets a retreat business can build, if it is architected correctly. A passive "join the waitlist" form converts at 5–10%. A hospitality-grade waitlist with the right positioning, communication cadence, and scarcity architecture converts at 40–60%. This is the playbook.
A retreat waitlist is a list of qualified prospects who have expressed specific intent to join a future cohort and have agreed to receive early access, bonus communication, or priority pricing.
It is not the same as an email list. It is smaller, more qualified, and far higher-converting.
The waitlist form should ask two to three questions that qualify the lead: what they want from the retreat, their timeline, and their readiness to invest. Vague entry produces a waitlist full of window-shoppers.
The best waitlists offer something specific: early access 72 hours before public enrollment, a bonus on deposit, a locked-in price, or a direct conversation with the leader. "Join to hear when it's ready" is not enough.
A waitlist that goes silent between launches loses 30–50% of its members. Send one valuable email every 2–4 weeks, content, case studies, or behind-the-scenes updates, to keep the list warm.
When enrollment opens, the waitlist receives a specific early-access window, real, honored, not just a marketing claim. This is what makes the waitlist feel earned and drives the high conversion rate.
The top 10–20% of the waitlist should receive a personal, direct outreach; email, DM, or call from the leader or a sales team member. This converts at 60–80% for qualified prospects.

The two work together, the email list feeds the waitlist, the waitlist converts into the cohort.
Matthew Brandt built a 76-person waitlist for his Camino de Santiago retreat. When enrollment opened, 21 people converted, a 28% conversion rate that filled the cohort in days and left more than 50 people ready for the next one. That is what a waitlist does when it is built properly.
1. Create a landing page with clear qualification questions
2. Offer a specific promise (early access, bonus, or priority pricing)
3. Drive traffic from email, podcast, partnerships, and social
4. Send a nurture email every 2–4 weeks
5. Launch to the waitlist 72 hours before public enrollment
6. Run direct outreach to the top 10–20% of waitlist members
A 50-person qualified waitlist is usually enough to fill a 10–12 seat retreat at mid-tier pricing. For luxury tier, 30 qualified members is sufficient.
Usually no. A free waitlist with a strong promise outperforms a paid one in most cases. A $47–$97 fee can work for very premium retreats to pre-qualify buyers.
Every 2–4 weeks during nurture mode. Daily during launch.
Yes, each retreat should have its own waitlist landing page and communication cadence. Do not recycle a generic list.
Audit the promise (was it specific enough?), the positioning (is the retreat clear?), and the launch cadence (did you honor the early-access window?). Usually one of these is the issue.
Ready to build a waitlist that sells out your next retreat? Save your seat in the free masterclass
Join the free Sold Out & Profitable Masterclass and learn the framework behind retreats that fill and profit consistently.