Yoga Nisarga - Yoga Retreat & Yoga Teacher Training in Bali
Bali
34 studios offering residential found within 25km of Ubud
Bali

Bali

Bali
Bali

Bali
Bali

Bali

Bali
Bali

Bali

Bali

Bali
Bali
Bali

Bali

Bali

Bali

Bali

Bali
Laid-back suites in a polished wellness retreat offering free breakfast, plus 2 pools & spa therapies.

Bali

Bali


Bali

Bali

Bali
Bright rooms in a serene getaway offering an organic restaurant, a yoga studio & a spa.
Residential yoga retreats offer something that a single class or even a dedicated home practice rarely can: complete immersion. When students step away from the rhythms of daily life and spend several days or weeks living, breathing, and moving within a community entirely devoted to practice, something shifts. The noise of the outside world falls away, the body settles into a deeper state of openness, and the mind finds a quality of stillness that ordinary life tends to crowd out. It is little wonder that residential experiences have become one of the most sought-after formats in contemporary yoga, drawing everyone from curious beginners to seasoned practitioners who feel ready to go further than a weekly class allows.
The tradition of residential yoga study is ancient at its core. The gurukula system of India, in which students lived alongside their teacher for years at a time, represents one of the earliest and most revered models of immersive learning. This lineage-rooted approach influenced virtually every major modern yoga tradition. When Swami Sivananda established his ashram in Rishikesh in the 1930s, he formalized a residential structure built around sadhana, selfless service, and community that continues to draw thousands of seekers annually. Similar residential frameworks shaped the training centres of B.K.S. Iyengar in Pune and the Ashtanga lineage in Mysore, where students travel from around the world and commit to staying for weeks or months at a time. Today, residential retreats and teacher training programmes have evolved that same principle into formats accessible to modern practitioners of all backgrounds, spanning long weekends in the countryside to month-long immersions in dedicated retreat centres.
A typical residential experience weaves together multiple daily practices — morning meditation, pranayama, asana sessions, philosophy discussions, and often communal meals prepared with mindful attention. The cumulative effect of this structure is profound. Physically, the body responds to consistent daily practice by releasing long-held tension, improving flexibility and strength, and recalibrating sleep and energy levels. Mentally and emotionally, the combination of structured practice and uninterrupted time for reflection allows patterns of stress and reactivity to become visible and, gradually, to loosen. Residential yoga is particularly well suited to those navigating burnout, significant life transitions, or a genuine desire to deepen their understanding of yoga as a complete way of living rather than a fitness routine. It also offers a rare and nourishing sense of belonging, the simple joy of sharing meals and silence and laughter with others on the same path. For anyone who has ever felt that yoga has more to offer than a single hour can reveal, a residential experience may be exactly the invitation they have been waiting for.