

First Pilates Alice Springs
The Gap, Northern Territory
244 studios offering pilates found near Australia
FindYoga lists 244 pilates studios and class providers in Australia. Browse timetables, compare styles and find the right pilates session for your level — whether you're stepping on the mat for the first time or deepening an established practice.


The Gap, Northern Territory


Port Adelaide, South Australia


Mawson Lakes, South Australia


Queenstown, South Australia


Modbury, South Australia


Henley Beach, South Australia


Croydon, South Australia


Walkerville, South Australia

Torrensville, South Australia


Adelaide, South Australia


Adelaide, South Australia


Kensington Park, South Australia


Keswick, South Australia


Saint Morris, South Australia

Glenelg East, South Australia


Glenelg, South Australia


Erindale, South Australia


Unley, South Australia


Toorak Gardens, South Australia


Fullarton, South Australia


Somerton Park, South Australia


Hove, South Australia


Aldgate, South Australia


Woodcroft, South Australia
Pilates is a precise, mindful movement practice that has earned a devoted global following for its remarkable ability to build strength from the inside out. Unlike high-impact workouts that push the body to exhaustion, Pilates works with the body's natural mechanics, cultivating deep core stability, graceful alignment, and a quality of movement that practitioners carry with them long after they leave the mat or reformer. People love it because results are both visible and felt — a longer, leaner posture, less back pain, greater ease in everyday movement, and a calming mental clarity that comes from the intense focus each session demands.
The practice was developed in the early twentieth century by Joseph Pilates, a German-born fitness innovator who originally called his method Contrology. Growing up with various health challenges, Pilates became obsessed with physical rehabilitation and human movement, drawing inspiration from gymnastics, boxing, yoga, and ancient Greek ideals of the body. During World War One, while interned in England, he began working with injured soldiers and bedridden patients, attaching springs to hospital beds to create resistance-based exercises — a concept that directly inspired the Reformer machine still used in studios today. He later emigrated to New York City in the 1920s, where his studio attracted dancers, athletes, and performers who prized his method for its rehabilitative power and its ability to enhance performance without creating bulk or rigidity.
A typical Pilates session, whether mat-based or using specialized equipment like the Reformer, Cadillac, or Wunda Chair, focuses on controlled, intentional movements coordinated with conscious breathing. Sessions generally emphasize spinal articulation, hip stability, shoulder alignment, and the activation of deep postural muscles that most conventional exercise routines overlook. Classes can range from gentle and restorative to genuinely challenging, making Pilates exceptionally adaptable. It is particularly well suited for people recovering from injury, those managing chronic back or joint pain, athletes seeking to improve their functional movement, older adults looking to maintain mobility and balance, and anyone who simply craves a more thoughtful, sustainable approach to physical fitness. Because Pilates meets practitioners wherever they are physically, it is one of the rare movement disciplines that genuinely serves beginners and seasoned athletes alike.
For anyone ready to move with greater intention, build a resilient and balanced body, and discover the quiet confidence that comes from knowing how to use one's own physical form wisely, Pilates is an extraordinary place to begin.