

Yoga Corner
Melbourne, Victoria
27 studios offering yoga-therapy found within 25km of Melbourne
FindYoga lists 27 yoga-therapy studios and class providers in Melbourne and within 25km. Browse timetables, compare styles and find the right yoga-therapy session for your level — whether you're stepping on the mat for the first time or deepening an established practice.


Melbourne, Victoria


Melbourne, Victoria


Melbourne, Victoria


South Melbourne, Victoria


South Melbourne, Victoria


100 Hodgkinson St Clifton Hill (near cnr Gold St), Clifton Hill, Vic
REVITALISE & RESTORE......-GENERAL CLASSES - ASANA (POSTURES) & PRANAYAMA (BREATH REGULATION) YOGA CLASSES -- PERSONALIZED YOGA / YOGA THERAPY TUITION - MEDITATIVE COURSES - KIDS YOGA.


Middle Park, Victoria


Coburg, Victoria


Preston, Victoria

Thornbury, Victoria


Malvern, Victoria


Preston, Victoria


Ivanhoe, Victoria


Newport, Victoria


Brighton, Victoria


Brighton East, Victoria


Malvern East, Victoria


Camberwell, Victoria


Camberwell, Victoria


Reservoir, Victoria


Bentleigh, Victoria


Box Hill, Victoria


Moorabbin, Victoria


Gladstone Park, Victoria
Yoga therapy is a deeply personalized branch of the yoga tradition that uses postures, breathwork, meditation, and philosophy as tools for healing rather than simply for fitness or flexibility. Unlike a standard group yoga class, yoga therapy is tailored to the individual, addressing specific physical conditions, emotional imbalances, or chronic health challenges with precision and care. People are drawn to it because it meets them exactly where they are — whether they are recovering from injury, managing anxiety, navigating a serious illness, or simply seeking a deeper sense of wholeness. It is yoga at its most intimate and intentional.
The roots of yoga therapy stretch back to the teachings of Tirumalai Krishnamacharya, the revered Indian master often called the father of modern yoga. Krishnamacharya believed that yoga should be adapted to the individual, famously declaring that it is the yoga that must adapt to the person, not the person to the yoga. His son T.K.V. Desikachar carried this philosophy forward through a practice he called Viniyoga, which became one of the foundational pillars of the yoga therapy movement. In the West, pioneers like Gary Kraftsow and the formation of the International Association of Yoga Therapists in 1989 helped establish professional standards and brought yoga therapy into dialogue with modern medicine, psychology, and physical rehabilitation. Today it is practiced in hospitals, mental health clinics, and private wellness settings around the world.
A typical yoga therapy session is conducted one-on-one or in small groups, beginning with a thorough intake process in which the therapist listens carefully to a client's health history, goals, and current challenges. From there, a personalized practice may be prescribed that includes gentle movement sequences, restorative postures, guided breathing techniques such as pranayama, meditation, and sometimes lifestyle or dietary recommendations rooted in Ayurvedic wisdom. The benefits are wide-ranging and well-documented, including reduced chronic pain, improved respiratory function, lower levels of stress and cortisol, better sleep, and measurable improvements in mood and emotional regulation. It is particularly well-suited for those dealing with conditions such as back pain, PTSD, cancer recovery, depression, autoimmune disorders, and the cumulative effects of long-term stress. Yoga therapy asks nothing of the body that the body is not ready to give, making it accessible to people of all ages and all levels of physical ability. For anyone who has ever felt that conventional approaches have left something essential unaddressed, yoga therapy offers a profoundly human path toward healing.