Southeast
350+ studios across Miami-Dade County. Year-round heat, Latin American influences, and a beach culture that shapes how—and why—people practice here.
350+ verified studios
“Miami's yoga scene exists at an intersection—Latin American wellness traditions meeting North American studio culture, tourist-oriented offerings alongside neighborhood studios serving local practitioners. The result is eclectic, sometimes confusing, occasionally exceptional.”
— Lisa Marie, Viveka Yoga Studio
Each neighborhood has its own yoga culture. Find the vibe that fits your practice.
45 studios
The Beach Vacationer
Tourist-heavy, hotel studios, beach yoga options. Sunrise sessions on the sand, hotel-affiliated wellness programs, accessible drop-in classes. Beautiful settings with variable teaching depth. Know whether you're seeking vacation relaxation or serious practice.
Explore South Beach→40 studios
The Flexible Practitioner
Mix of tourist and residential, varied quality. The island between South Beach glitz and residential neighborhoods. Studios here serve both populations—check class descriptions to identify focus.
Explore Miami Beach→35 studios
The Urban Professional
Financial district, condo buildings, lunch-hour classes. Urban Miami's professional core. Studios in high-rises, early morning and lunch sessions for workers, streamlined practice for busy schedules.
Explore Brickell→30 studios
The Creative Spirit
Arts district energy, creative spaces, trendy studios. The neighborhood where Miami's art scene meets wellness culture. Industrial-chic studios, creative teaching approaches, younger practitioners.
Explore Wynwood→30 studios
The Family Practitioner
Residential, family-friendly, community-oriented studios. The suburb where families practice. Prenatal classes, kids' yoga, established teachers with local roots. Accessible pricing, neighborhood commitment.
Explore Coral Gables→25 studios
The Rooted Local
Established community, experienced teachers, local focus. Miami's oldest neighborhood maintains studios with roots. Year-round practitioners, teachers with decades of experience, less tourist influence.
Explore Coconut Grove→20 studios
The Luxury Seeker
Upscale, boutique studios, higher price points. Where luxury retail meets wellness. Premium facilities, designer aesthetics, professional operations. Pricing reflects the district.
Explore Design District→15 studios
The Cultural Connector
Spanish-language options, community studios, affordable. Where Miami's Cuban heritage meets wellness practice. Classes taught in Spanish, cultural integration, accessible pricing. Genuine Latin American teaching traditions.
Explore Little Havana→Quick answers about yoga in Miami
YogaNearMe maps 350+ active yoga studios across Miami-Dade County, distributed across 15 neighborhoods from South Beach to Coral Gables, Wynwood to Little Havana. South Beach leads with 45+ studios (largely tourist-oriented), followed by Miami Beach (40+ studios), Brickell (35+ professional-focused studios), and Wynwood, Coral Gables, and Coconut Grove (25-30+ studios each). The distribution reflects Miami's dual nature: beach-adjacent tourist areas have high studio density but variable teaching quality, while residential neighborhoods (Coconut Grove, Coral Gables) offer more consistent year-round communities. Spanish-language classes are genuinely available, particularly in Little Havana and areas with strong Latin American populations.
Drop-in classes in Miami range from $22-38, with most studios charging $25-30. South Beach and Design District studios trend highest at $32-38 due to tourist traffic and upscale positioning. Residential neighborhoods (Coral Gables, Coconut Grove, Little Havana) offer $22-28 classes. Intro packages run $50-70 for 2 weeks unlimited—higher than many U.S. cities. Monthly unlimited memberships cost $160-200 at most studios. Beach yoga and outdoor classes sometimes operate on donation basis ($15-20 suggested). Tourist-oriented studios charge premium rates year-round; seasonal resident patterns (November-April) can affect pricing. Always verify online; hotel-affiliated studios may charge resort rates ($40+).
"Best" depends on whether you're visiting or building long-term practice. For established teaching and year-round community: Coconut Grove (experienced teachers, local focus, less tourist influence). For family-friendly residential studios: Coral Gables (prenatal classes, kids' yoga, neighborhood commitment). For professional lunch-hour practice: Brickell (condo studios, convenient schedules). For Spanish-language classes and cultural integration: Little Havana (genuine Latin American traditions, affordable pricing). For creative arts-district energy: Wynwood (trendy spaces, younger practitioners). For beach yoga experience: South Beach (sunrise sessions, beautiful settings, but variable teaching quality). Avoid choosing studios based solely on ocean proximity or Instagram aesthetics—Miami's image-conscious culture can prioritize looks over teaching substance.
Yes. Miami's majority-Latino population has created genuine Spanish-language yoga offerings, not just tokenized translation. Little Havana studios frequently teach in Spanish, and many Coral Gables, Wynwood, and Coconut Grove studios offer bilingual instruction. Teachers trained in Argentina, Colombia, Mexico, and Brazil bring different lineages—some blending yoga with other Latin American wellness traditions. When researching Spanish-language classes, verify the teacher's training background (not just language fluency) to ensure quality instruction. The cultural integration is real in Miami, unlike many U.S. cities where Spanish yoga is marketing rather than substance. Look for studios with roots in Latin American communities, not just Spanish keywords on their websites.
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