
Pulse Yoga - Vinyasa & Prenatal classes
Lismore, New South Wales
9 studios offering prenatal found near Byron Bay

Lismore, New South Wales


East Coast Road, Point Lookout, QLD
Waves of Bliss in an Ocean of Energy


Paddington, Queensland
Specialised fertility, prenatal, & postnatal & yoga. Classes include fertility yoga, pregnancy yoga, active birth preparation for couples, and mum & bubs yoga classes. Teacher training courses are also available.


St Ives/Waitara, St Ives, NSW
Hatha/Vinyasa style, emphasis on safety and injury prevention, good alignment and enjoyment Prenatal courses - from 2nd trimester

Bondi Beach, New South Wales


Summer Hill, New South Wales
Creating a non-competitive space to nurture and nourish


Core Gymball Studio, Unit 18, Menai, New South Wales
Life is a journey, not a competition


13 Botany Street, Phillip, Australian Capital Territory
Connect, Revitalise, Create


Strathnairn, ACT
Find your own yoga practice
Prenatal yoga is a gentle, purposeful practice designed specifically for the extraordinary journey of pregnancy, meeting the body exactly where it is through each trimester and beyond. Expectant mothers are drawn to it for its rare combination of physical relief, emotional grounding, and community — a space where the changing body is not merely accommodated but genuinely celebrated. Unlike general yoga classes that require modification and adaptation, prenatal yoga is built from the ground up with pregnancy in mind, making it one of the most thoughtful and nurturing practices available to mothers-to-be.
While yoga itself stretches back thousands of years in Indian tradition, the dedicated prenatal form began taking shape in the West during the 1980s and 1990s, as yoga teachers and midwives began collaborating to address the specific needs of pregnant women. Figures like Judith Lasater, a renowned restorative yoga teacher and physical therapist, helped lay groundwork for therapeutic, body-aware yoga that influenced prenatal approaches. The practice draws heavily from Hatha and restorative traditions, prioritizing breath awareness, pelvic floor engagement, hip opening, and supported postures that relieve the common discomforts of pregnancy — lower back pain, swollen ankles, fatigue, and tension in the hips and shoulders. Breathing techniques taught in class, including ujjayi breath and slow diaphragmatic breathing, double as tools for labor preparation, giving women a tangible sense of empowerment as their due date approaches. A typical session moves through gentle standing postures, seated stretches, supported reclined poses, and closes with a deeply restorative savasana — often with bolsters, blankets, and blocks ensuring every shape feels safe and sustainable. Many classes also weave in guided relaxation, visualization, and brief discussion, creating space for emotional processing alongside the physical work.
Prenatal yoga is ideally suited for anyone who is pregnant, regardless of prior yoga experience — beginners are not only welcome but often find the most profound transformation in this practice. It is also well suited to those navigating anxiety, sleep disruption, or the emotional weight of impending parenthood, as the mindfulness component offers genuine tools for managing uncertainty and stress. Many practitioners find that the connections formed in prenatal classes — with teachers, with fellow mothers — become a meaningful part of their support network long after birth. Whether someone is seeking relief from physical discomfort, a calmer mind, or simply a devoted hour to connect with their growing baby, prenatal yoga offers something irreplaceable: a reminder that this season of change, in all its wildness and wonder, is worthy of deep and loving attention.