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Derrimut gyms to be sold as debts spiral

All three properties are encumbered by loans with business lenders including N1, Vance Finance and Bizcap.

Real estate agency Stonebridge Property Group has been appointed to manage the sale of the 18,100 square metres worth of land. The agents declined to comment.

Solomos at a poker tournament in 2024.Credit: Instagram

The news will be further pain for Derrimut gym members – of which there are about 200,000 – who have been dealing with a souring experience.

Many members have complained of deteriorating facilities and have demanded refunds over badly maintained facilities and poor bathroom hygiene. Insiders say the company struggles to keep up with bills for toilet paper and hand towels, which WorkSafe has flagged as a concern.

Social media pages for the gyms in Thomastown and Ravenhall (which is referred to as the Caroline Springs branch) were promoting as recently as Tuesday the company’s latest membership deal of $399 for a year or $9.95 each week.

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Solomos was contacted for comment but did not respond by The Age’s deadline.

The tax office is seeking to appoint liquidators to Derrimut’s primary entity to claw back $12.5 million in tax debts, including unpaid superannuation and penalties.

The matter is scheduled to be heard in the Federal Court on Friday but has been adjourned several times as Solomos scrambles to secure financing.

Major partners of the business are supporting the tax office’s case with claims totalling $2 million. Creditors include gym equipment suppliers Life Fitness and Bench Fitness, sponsored basketball team Melbourne United, government authority ReturnToWorkSA, power company AGL, Del-Re National Food Group and former landlord Bourke Street Properties. They are a fraction of the businesses chasing late payments from Derrimut.

Solomos is facing multiple court battles. Del-Re National Food Group filed a claim in the County Court last month of more than $141,000 over invoices that were allegedly unpaid between November 2024 and January 2025.

The ATO is also separately seeking to wind up a now-dormant company owned by Solomos with a claim of another $2.9 million in unpaid taxes.

Nick Solomos (left) with Adrian Portelli during an auction on The Block.Credit: Nine

Meanwhile in South Australia, the company has been trying to prevent a landlord from shutting its Melrose Park gym and has been hit with a demand by construction company Ikonstruct SA over claims the gym failed to pay for building works.

Finance sources have estimated that to settle his tax debts, Solomos will require about $15 million, and at least another $15 million to clear tardy debts owed to creditors.

Billionaire businessman Adrian Portelli, who is nicknamed “Lambo Guy” and is a prolific buyer on The Block, last month said he was in negotiations to own part of Derrimut.

“We haven’t put pen to paper just as yet, however work has begun in the background,” Portelli said at the time, before noting that Derrimut had a “very complex structure with multiple entities”.

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