
Mornington Meditation Centre
Mornington, Victoria
54 studios offering therapeutic found within 100km of Mornington Peninsula
FindYoga lists 54 therapeutic studios and class providers in Mornington Peninsula and within 100km. Browse timetables, compare styles and find the right therapeutic session for your level — whether you're stepping on the mat for the first time or deepening an established practice.

Mornington, Victoria
Somerville, Victoria
McCrae, Victoria

Cranbourne, Victoria


Bentleigh, Victoria

Brighton East, Victoria


Brighton East, Victoria


Mount Waverley, Victoria


Malvern East, Victoria
Balaclava, Victoria
Malvern East, Victoria


Malvern, Victoria


Middle Park, Victoria


Albert Park, Victoria


Camberwell, Victoria


Camberwell, Victoria


South Melbourne, Victoria


South Melbourne, Victoria


South Melbourne, Victoria

Richmond, Victoria

Vermont, Victoria


Melbourne, Victoria


Leopold, Victoria


Northcote, Victoria
Therapeutic yoga is a practice defined not by a single style or sequence, but by the intention behind it and the people it serves. Unlike general fitness-oriented classes, therapeutic yoga is specifically tailored to individuals who are working through physical injury, chronic illness, mental health challenges, or the aftermath of trauma. It is a space where the practice meets the person exactly where they are, prioritising healing over performance and restoration over effort. People are drawn to it because it offers something rare in modern wellness culture: genuine permission to slow down, to listen to the body, and to use ancient tools with precision and compassion for a deeply personal purpose.
The roots of therapeutic yoga stretch back to the teachings of T. Krishnamacharya, the revered twentieth-century Indian master widely regarded as the father of modern yoga. Krishnamacharya held a profound belief that yoga should be adapted to suit the individual, not the other way around. This philosophy was carried forward by his son T.K.V. Desikachar, who developed Viniyoga, a highly individualised approach that became one of the cornerstones of the therapeutic tradition. B.K.S. Iyengar also contributed enormously to this field, using props, precise alignment, and longer holds to make yoga accessible to people with a wide range of physical conditions. Over time, Western medical researchers and clinicians began collaborating with yoga teachers, lending scientific credibility to the therapeutic applications of breathwork, posture, and meditation. Today, therapeutic yoga is practised in hospitals, rehabilitation centres, mental health clinics, and private studio settings around the world.
A typical therapeutic yoga session looks quite different from a standard class. Sessions are often one-to-one or held in very small groups, allowing the teacher to assess individual needs and customise every element of the practice. Supported postures held with the aid of bolsters, blankets, and blocks are common, as is a strong emphasis on pranayama, conscious relaxation, and mindfulness. The pace is unhurried and the atmosphere is one of safety and trust. The benefits are wide-ranging and well-documented, encompassing reduced chronic pain, improved mobility, lower anxiety and depression, better sleep, and a strengthened sense of bodily agency. It is ideally suited to those recovering from surgery or injury, people managing conditions such as arthritis, fibromyalgia, or PTSD, older adults, and anyone who has felt that conventional yoga simply was not designed with them in mind. For anyone seeking a practice that truly heals from the inside out, therapeutic yoga can be a quietly transformative beginning.