

Folde Yoga Hobart
Hobart, Tasmania
36 studios offering teacher-training found near Hobart
FindYoga lists 36 teacher-training studios and class providers in Hobart. Browse timetables, compare styles and find the right teacher-training session for your level — whether you're stepping on the mat for the first time or deepening an established practice.


Hobart, Tasmania


Sandy Bay, Tasmania


733 Turnbull-Woolamai Road, Woolamai, Victoria
the road to quiet contentment


Braeside, Victoria

Clayton, Victoria


Oakleigh South, Victoria


Bentleigh, Victoria

Brighton East, Victoria


482 High Street Road, Mount Waverley, Victoria
Meeting you where you are


Dockland hubs , Dockland , Victoria
Yoga Classes


Brighton, Victoria


Balaclava, Victoria


Malvern, Victoria


Prahran, Victoria


Middle Park, Victoria


Melbourne, Victoria


Port Melbourne, Victoria


Newport, Victoria


Melbourne, Victoria


Melbourne, VIC
Leading Kids Yoga specialists in Early Learning Centres, Primary and Secondary Schools throughout Melbourne.


Fitzroy, Victoria


Point Cook, Victoria


Carlton, Victoria


North Melbourne, Victoria
Yoga teacher training is one of the most transformative journeys a practitioner can undertake — a deep dive not just into postures and breathwork, but into the very philosophy, anatomy, and art of sharing yoga with others. Far more than a certification course, it is an immersive experience that reshapes how students understand their own bodies, minds, and purpose. Those who complete a teacher training often describe it as a turning point in their lives, regardless of whether they ever step to the front of a classroom. The appeal is universal: a chance to go beyond the surface of a weekly class and explore yoga in its fullest, most luminous form.
The modern teacher training model owes much to the visionaries who formalized yoga's transmission in the twentieth century. B.K.S. Iyengar developed a rigorous, detail-oriented approach that influenced how alignment and therapeutic application are taught worldwide. K. Pattabhi Jois brought structured apprenticeship to the forefront of Ashtanga practice, emphasizing the guru-student relationship as the foundation of authentic learning. Yogi Bhajan, who introduced Kundalini yoga to the West in 1969, created one of the first widely accessible teacher training systems in North America, opening the path to thousands of certified instructors. The Yoga Alliance, established in 1999, later standardized the 200-hour and 500-hour training frameworks that most programs follow today, giving students a recognized credential and a shared language of study.
A typical teacher training unfolds over several weeks or months, blending asana practice with studies in pranayama, meditation, Sanskrit, yogic philosophy, and the fundamentals of human anatomy. Students learn how to sequence a class, offer safe and supportive adjustments, and cultivate the presence that makes a great teacher. The benefits extend well beyond the professional. Trainees consistently report reduced anxiety, greater body awareness, improved communication skills, and a profound sense of community forged through shared vulnerability and growth. The training environment encourages honest self-inquiry, and many participants find that old patterns and limiting beliefs begin to dissolve as the practice deepens. Teacher training is ideally suited for dedicated practitioners ready to commit to meaningful study, curious explorers craving a structured path inward, and anyone called to serve others through the gift of movement and mindfulness.
For those who feel yoga has changed their lives and wonder what might lie on the other side of that change, teacher training is the invitation waiting to be answered.