
Finca Mia Retreat Center
Rivas, San José
29 studios offering accommodation included found near Costa Rica

Rivas, San José

Santa Elena, San José
Savegre, Provincia de Puntarenas
Manuel Antonio, Provincia de Puntarenas

Santa Bárbara de Heredia, Heredia Province

Alajuela, Provincia de Alajuela
Casual mountainside spa hotel offering dining, a wine bar & a wellness center with yoga classes.
Nosara, Guanacaste Province
Garza, Guanacaste Province

Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste
Nosara, Guanacaste Province

Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste
Tranquil resort with free breakfast & daily yoga, plus an outdoor pool & an Ayurvedic spa.

Guiones, Provincia de Guanacaste

Guiones, Guanacaste Province

Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste
Nosara, Guanacaste Province

Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste

Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste
Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste
Nicoya, Provincia de Guanacaste
San Juanillo, Provincia de Guanacaste
Quintana Roo
Minimalist-design casitas in a laid-back, beachfront option, plus yoga classes & free breakfast.

La Veleta, Quintana Roo

La Veleta, Quintana Roo

La Veleta, Quintana Roo
There is something quietly transformative about arriving at a retreat and knowing that everything has been taken care of. Accommodation Included offerings — yoga classes and retreats where lodging is bundled into the experience — have become one of the most cherished features in the modern wellness world. Rather than scrambling to find a nearby hotel or worrying about logistics, participants can arrive, exhale, and surrender fully to the practice. This seamless integration of rest and renewal is precisely why so many yoga seekers seek out retreats and programmes where accommodation comes as part of the journey. The ability to wake up steps from the shala, share meals with fellow practitioners, and fall asleep with the residue of a meaningful practice still humming in the body is an experience unlike any other.
The concept of immersive residential practice is as old as yoga itself. The ancient gurukul system of India placed students within the household of their teacher, creating an environment where yoga was not a class attended but a life fully inhabited. This philosophy carried forward through the lineages of revered teachers — from the ashrams of Tiruvannamalai to the hill stations of Rishikesh — and eventually shaped the modern retreat model as it exists today. When Western practitioners began travelling to India in the mid-twentieth century seeking authentic teaching, residential immersion was simply how deep learning happened. Over decades, that tradition evolved into the thoughtfully curated retreat formats now found across the globe, from Bali hillsides to Spanish farmhouses, where the container of shared living amplifies everything that happens on the mat.
Physically, an immersive residential experience allows the body to settle in ways a single weekly class never can. Without the commute home, the evening distractions, or the fragmented attention of ordinary life, the nervous system genuinely downregulates, making space for deeper flexibility, more easeful breathwork, and a meditation practice that actually takes root. Mentally and emotionally, participants frequently describe breakthroughs that months of drop-in classes could not produce, simply because continuity, community, and rest create the conditions for real change. These offerings suit anyone at a crossroads — whether a seasoned practitioner seeking to deepen their commitment, a burnt-out professional craving genuine restoration, or a curious beginner who wants to learn yoga in the most generous and supportive environment imaginable. There are no prerequisites beyond the willingness to show up and be present.
Choosing a retreat where accommodation is included is not simply a booking convenience — it is an invitation to experience yoga as a complete way of living, even if only for a few precious days.