Wellness
Yoga Classes Bristol: Which Style Suits You
Find the right yoga style for your Bristol lifestyle. Local studios report surge in classes for stress relief and work-life balance.
2 min read
Wellness
Find the right yoga style for your Bristol lifestyle. Local studios report surge in classes for stress relief and work-life balance.
2 min read

Over 12,000 Bristol residents registered for yoga classes in the first half of 2026, up from previous years at studios tracking attendance through the British Wheel of Yoga network.
Wellness coaches in the city point to longer commutes along the M32 and extended office hours near Temple Meads as drivers for residents seeking structured movement that also builds mental focus. Local surveys conducted by the Bristol Health and Wellbeing Board in May showed that 42 percent of adults aged 25 to 45 cite stress from hybrid work as the main reason they tried yoga for the first time this year.
Two Bristol venues illustrate the range available. The Yoga Place on Whiteladies Road runs weekday morning vinyasa sessions aimed at professionals heading into the city centre, while the Clifton Yoga Collective on Gloucester Road offers slower yin classes on weekday evenings for parents after school pick-ups in the surrounding terraces.
Vinyasa flows, built around continuous breath-linked movement, suit people with tight schedules because a 60-minute class on Whiteladies Road can be slotted between 7am and 8am before the workday begins. Hatha classes, which hold poses longer and emphasise alignment, work better for those recovering from desk-related stiffness and are offered on Park Street at The Practice Rooms three times a week. Yin yoga, with supported floor poses held for several minutes, appeals to residents in Bedminster who finish late shifts and need passive stretching rather than active effort.
Prices at most Bristol studios range from £9 for a drop-in session to £72 for an eight-class monthly pass, according to listings updated on 1 July. A 2025 national survey by Yoga Alliance UK found that participants who chose a style matching their weekly time availability attended 30 percent more sessions than those who selected classes at random.
Residents can check current timetables at the two studios mentioned or contact the Bristol Yoga Teachers Network for a short consultation that matches personal constraints to available sessions before committing to a pass.
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Published by The Daily Bristol
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