For Yoga Teachers

    How to Create an Online Yoga Course

    Whether you teach vinyasa, restorative, chair yoga, or teacher training, this guide walks you through building an online course that works when students can't watch the screen — with live sessions for real-time guidance and community.

    Abe Crystal
    23 min read
    Updated March 2026

    Yes, yoga can be taught effectively online. The key challenge is different from most subjects: your students are physically moving and often can't watch the screen. That means your teaching approach needs to shift from visual demonstration to clear verbal cueing, thoughtful camera angles, and a course structure that blends pre-recorded sequences with live sessions for feedback and community. Movement educator Chantill Lopez, with over 20 years teaching body-based practices, has found that online teaching actually builds stronger student independence — because without hands-on adjustments, students develop their own body awareness.

    What you'll learn

    • Why Teach Yoga Online?
    • What Makes a Great Yoga Course?
    • Step by Step: Building Your Yoga Course
    • Real Story: Chantill Lopez
    • Common Mistakes to Avoid
    • Deep-Dive Guides for Yoga Teachers
    or keep reading below
    Your Progress0 of 6 chapters
    1Chapter 14 min

    Why Teach Yoga Online?

    Over 600 yoga and movement courses on Ruzuku serve 27,000+ enrolled students — from 200-hour teacher trainings to specialty workshops in prenatal, chair yoga, and yoga therapy. More yoga teachers are bringing their teaching online — not to replace studio classes, but to reach students who can't make it to the mat in person, and to build a more sustainable teaching career.

    Over 600 yoga and movement courses on Ruzuku serve 27,000+ enrolled students — from 200-hour teacher trainings to specialty workshops in prenatal, chair yoga, and yoga therapy. More yoga teachers are bringing their teaching online — not to replace studio classes, but to reach students who can't make it to the mat in person, and to build a more sustainable teaching career.

    Reach Students Beyond Your Studio

    Most yoga teachers are limited to whoever lives near their studio. An online course lets you reach students in rural areas without studios, people with mobility limitations who prefer practicing at home, busy parents who can't make class times, and anyone who connects with your specific teaching style but lives across the country.

    Teach on Your Schedule

    Studio teaching means early mornings, evenings, and weekends — the hours when students are free but you might not want to be. An online course combines pre-recorded sequences students can practice anytime with scheduled live sessions you choose. You decide when you're live, and students get your teaching whenever they need it.

    Build Income Beyond Per-Class Pay

    Teaching at a studio, you're typically paid per class — often $30-75 per session, regardless of how many students show up. An online course lets you serve 20, 50, or 100 students in a cohort while creating content once. It's not passive income (you'll still be actively teaching and supporting students), but it's more sustainable than trading hours for a per-class rate.

    Create a Hybrid Teaching Model

    Many yoga teachers already have a studio practice. An online course doesn't replace it — it extends it. Students who travel, move away, or can't always make it to class stay connected through your online content. Studio regulars deepen their practice with your course material between classes.

    Build a Real Community

    Drop-in studio classes create familiar faces, but online courses create deeper connections. When the same group moves through a structured program together — sharing breakthroughs, asking questions, supporting each other — you get the kind of community that keeps students practicing long after the course ends.

    Teach Your Way, Not the Studio's Way

    At a studio, you teach whatever class is on the schedule. Online, you build courses around your expertise and interests — prenatal yoga, yoga for chronic pain, meditation-focused practices, yoga philosophy, or whatever you're most passionate about and qualified to teach. Your unique voice becomes the draw.

    2Chapter 24 min

    What Makes a Great Yoga Course?

    The best online yoga courses solve the fundamental challenge: students are moving and can't watch a screen. Here's what sets great yoga courses apart.

    The best online yoga courses solve the fundamental challenge: students are moving and can't watch a screen. Here's what sets great yoga courses apart.

    Clear Verbal Cueing Over Visual Demonstration

    In a studio, students watch you and mirror your movements. Online, especially during flowing sequences, they can't keep their eyes on a screen. Great online yoga courses prioritize precise verbal cueing — naming each pose, describing the alignment, offering modifications — so students can follow with their eyes closed. Movement educator Chantill Lopez, who has over 20 years of experience teaching body-based practices, emphasizes that when you remove constant visual feedback, students actually develop stronger body awareness and proprioception.

    Thoughtful Camera Work

    Filming yoga isn't just pointing a camera at yourself. The best courses use multiple angles for complex poses, show modifications alongside the full expression, film from the student's perspective (not mirror-image), and ensure the full body is visible even in floor poses. Pre-recorded content should be filmed with care; live sessions can be simpler but still need a stable, wide-angle setup.

    Progressive Sequence Building

    Great courses don't just string together random classes. They build progressively — starting with foundational poses and alignment, then introducing more complex sequences, variations, and eventually full practices that incorporate everything learned. Each module should have a clear focus and build on what came before.

    Live Sessions for Alignment Feedback

    The biggest limitation of online yoga is that you can't physically adjust students. Live Zoom sessions partially solve this: you can watch students practice, offer verbal adjustments, answer questions in real time, and create the group energy that makes yoga classes feel alive. Even one live session per week makes a significant difference in student outcomes.

    Practice Resources Students Actually Use

    Beyond video content, great courses include downloadable pose guides, printable sequence cards, audio-only versions of flows (so students can practice without a screen), and journaling prompts for reflection. These resources extend practice beyond screen time.

    Modifications and Accessibility Built In

    Not every student has the same body, flexibility, or experience level. Courses that include modifications for each pose, prop alternatives, and clear guidance about when to back off are more useful — and reach a wider audience — than courses that assume everyone can do the full expression of every pose.

    3Chapter 36 min

    Step by Step: Building Your Yoga Course

    Here's a practical roadmap for building your online yoga course, from planning through launch.

    Here's a practical roadmap for building your online yoga course, from planning through launch.

    Step 1: Define Your Niche and Student

    "Yoga" is too broad. Get specific about who you're teaching and what outcome you're delivering. "Gentle Yoga for Desk Workers" is a course. "Yoga" is a category. The more specific your focus, the easier it is to create content, find students, and price effectively.

    Tips:

    • Think about who already comes to your classes — what do they have in common?
    • Consider sub-niches: prenatal, chair yoga, yoga for athletes, yoga for anxiety, restorative, yoga philosophy
    • Define the transformation: what will students be able to do after 6-8 weeks that they can't do now?

    Step 2: Map Your Course Structure

    Plan 6-10 modules that build progressively. Most yoga courses follow a pattern: foundations and alignment principles, then increasingly complex sequences, with anatomy or philosophy woven in. Decide which parts are pre-recorded (asana sequences, guided meditations) and which need live interaction (alignment feedback, Q&A, community practice).

    Tips:

    • Start each module with a short lesson explaining the focus, then move to practice
    • Include both active practice and restorative/reflective elements
    • Plan 2-3 practice sequences per module at different lengths (15 min, 30 min, 45 min) so students can fit practice into their day

    Step 3: Set Up Your Filming Space

    You don't need a professional studio. A clean, well-lit room with enough space for a full mat (plus room around it for the camera to capture your whole body) works well. Natural light from a window to your side is ideal. A simple tripod and your phone camera are enough to start — upgrade later once you know what works.

    Tips:

    • Film in landscape mode with your full body visible, even in floor poses
    • Use a wireless microphone or lavalier mic — your voice needs to be clear even when you're facing away from the camera
    • Remove visual clutter from the background — a calm backdrop helps students focus
    • Test your setup by filming a short sequence and watching it as a student would

    Step 4: Create Your Content Mix

    The strongest yoga courses blend formats: pre-recorded practice sequences (the core content), live sessions for feedback and community, audio-only guided practices (for students who don't want to watch a screen), downloadable pose guides and sequence cards, and written reflections or journaling prompts.

    Tips:

    • Record full-length practice sequences AND shorter targeted segments (hip openers, shoulder work, etc.)
    • Create audio-only versions of key sequences — many students prefer practicing with just your voice
    • Film modifications alongside the full expressions of poses

    Step 5: Choose Your Platform and Set Up

    You need a platform that supports video content delivery, live session scheduling (Zoom integration), community discussion, and clean course navigation. Ruzuku handles all of these with zero transaction fees — you set up your course structure, upload content, schedule live sessions, and open registration.

    Tips:

    • Test your course flow by going through it as a student
    • Set up your sales page with a clear description of what students will learn and who the course is for
    • Configure your pricing and registration before you start promoting

    Step 6: Price Your Course Thoughtfully

    Pricing is one of the biggest challenges for yoga teachers going online. You're competing for attention (not necessarily the same students) with subscription apps like Alo Moves ($13/month) and Glo ($30/month). But your course offers something those apps don't: personal attention, structured progression, live feedback, and community. Price for the value of that personal, structured experience — not against the per-month cost of a content library.

    Tips:

    • A structured 6-8 week course with live sessions typically ranges from $97-397
    • Yoga teacher training programs (YTT) can range from $1,500-5,000+ depending on hours and certification
    • Consider offering a payment plan for higher-priced programs
    • Don't compete on price with subscription apps — compete on personal attention and outcomes

    Step 7: Launch with a Pilot Group

    Start with 5-15 students from your existing community — studio regulars, social media followers, or email list. Run through the full course, note where students get confused or stuck, gather feedback on pacing and content, and collect testimonials for your next launch.

    Tips:

    • Offer your pilot at a reduced rate in exchange for detailed feedback and testimonials
    • Pay attention to which practices students repeat most — that tells you what's working
    • Ask students about their home practice setup — their constraints will inform how you film and cue
    4Chapter 43 min

    Real Story: Chantill Lopez

    How Chantill Lopez brought yoga training online.

    Chantill Lopez has spent over 20 years teaching movement and body-based practices, earning her NCPT (Nationally Certified Pilates Teacher) and building expertise in nervous system education and Polyvagal Theory. She co-founded The Embodied Business Institute with Anne Bishop, where they teach other practitioners how to build online courses — using Ruzuku as their platform.

    When Chantill brought her teaching online, she discovered something counterintuitive: removing physical adjustments didn't weaken the learning experience. Students who relied on verbal cueing and their own body awareness developed more independence and proprioception than students she'd adjusted by hand. As she puts it: "If you are constantly putting your hands on somebody, they are reliant on your feedback to make choices."

    Her online programs now serve hundreds of students, and the business grew to the point where she and Anne split into two separate Ruzuku Pro accounts — each running their own course portfolios. Chantill's work through Nervous System Works focuses on brain-based coaching and behavior change education, while continuing to co-teach with Anne on movement and embodiment programs.

    Beyond her own courses, Chantill and Anne created the Embodied Course Creation Program and Embodied Launch Blueprint — programs specifically designed to help other practitioners build and launch courses on Ruzuku. They also maintain an affiliate relationship, actively referring their students to the platform.

    "We love working with Ruzuku and are excited for more collaborations."

    — Chantill Lopez, Co-Founder, The Embodied Business Institute · NCPT · 20+ Years Movement Education · Ruzuku Pro

    Key Results

    • Hundreds of students enrolled across multiple online programs on Ruzuku
    • Co-created the Embodied Course Creation Program — teaching others to build courses on Ruzuku
    • Business grew from one shared account to two separate Ruzuku Pro accounts
    • Developed verbal cueing methods that build student independence without hands-on adjustments
    • Part of a community of 600+ yoga courses serving 27,000+ students on Ruzuku

    Read the full story →

    5Chapter 54 min

    Common Mistakes to Avoid

    The most frequent pitfalls yoga teachers encounter when creating online courses — and how to avoid them.

    Trying to Compete on Price with Subscription Apps

    Seeing Alo Moves at ~$13/month and Glo at ~$30/month and thinking you need to match that price. Those are content libraries with thousands of classes and no personal interaction — a completely different product from your structured course with live feedback.

    How to fix it: Position your course around what apps can't offer: personal attention, structured progression, live sessions, and community. A yoga student pays for Alo Moves to follow along. They pay for your course to actually improve.

    Filming in Portrait Mode or Too Close

    Many yoga teachers grab their phone, prop it up, and start filming — often in portrait mode or zoomed too close. The result: students can't see your full body, especially in floor poses, inversions, or wide-stance postures.

    How to fix it: Film in landscape mode with your full body visible at all times, including in floor poses. Use a wide-angle lens or step the camera back. Check your framing before every session by doing the widest pose in your sequence.

    Relying on Visual Demonstration Without Verbal Cueing

    In a studio, students watch and mirror your movements. Online, especially during flowing sequences, students often can't look at the screen. If your teaching relies on "watch me and follow along," students get lost.

    How to fix it: Develop precise verbal cueing: name each pose, describe the alignment cues, note where they should feel the stretch, offer modifications. Practice teaching an entire sequence with your eyes closed — if your instructions are clear enough to follow blind, they'll work online.

    Skipping the Business Model

    Creating beautiful content without thinking about who will buy it, how they'll find it, or what you'll charge. Many yoga teachers build a full course before they've identified even 10 potential students.

    How to fix it: Before building your full course, validate the idea. Talk to your studio students and social media followers about what they'd want in an online course. Pre-sell a pilot cohort. Know your first 10 students by name before you film your first sequence.

    Ignoring YTT Certification Requirements

    If you're building a yoga teacher training (YTT) program, Yoga Alliance has specific requirements for online hours, contact hours, and curriculum content. Building a YTT program without understanding these standards means your graduates may not be able to register as certified teachers.

    How to fix it: Review Yoga Alliance's current standards for online teacher training before designing your YTT curriculum. Understand the distinction between contact hours and non-contact hours, and how live vs. pre-recorded content counts.

    Creating One Long Video Per Module

    Recording a single 60-90 minute class as your entire module content. Students can't easily find specific sections, revisit particular poses, or fit practice into a busy day.

    How to fix it: Break content into segments: a short introduction (3-5 min), targeted practice sections (10-20 min), full-length flows (30-45 min), and optional guided meditation or savasana. Students can mix and match based on their available time and what they need that day.

    No Modifications or Accessibility Options

    Designing your course for students who already have a strong practice, without offering modifications for beginners, students with injuries, or those with different body types and mobility levels.

    How to fix it: Include modifications for every pose — not as an afterthought but as part of your primary instruction. Consider filming with a second person demonstrating modifications. Being genuinely inclusive widens your audience and produces better outcomes for all students.

    6Chapter 62 min

    Deep-Dive Guides for Yoga Teachers

    Explore in-depth articles covering specific topics for yoga teachers — pricing, curriculum design, platforms, student engagement, and more.

    Each of these guides explores a specific aspect of creating and running yoga courses in more detail.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can yoga really be taught effectively online?

    Yes. Over 600 yoga and movement courses on Ruzuku serve 27,000+ enrolled students, from 200-hour teacher trainings to specialty workshops. The biggest adjustment is shifting from visual demonstration to clear verbal cueing, since students are often moving and can't watch the screen. Structured online courses that combine pre-recorded sequences with live sessions produce better outcomes than free YouTube content because they offer progression, accountability, and personal guidance.

    What's the best platform for teaching yoga courses online?

    Ruzuku hosts 600+ yoga and movement courses serving 27,000+ students — from 200-hour teacher trainings to specialty workshops. It supports sequential content delivery, built-in Zoom integration, discussion spaces (yoga courses average 495 comments per course, the highest engagement of any niche), and zero transaction fees. Unlike subscription apps, you own your student relationships and course content.

    How do I handle the fact that students can't watch the screen while practicing?

    This is the central challenge of teaching yoga online. Three solutions: First, develop precise verbal cueing so students can follow without looking. Second, create audio-only versions of your sequences. Third, structure your course so demonstration and explanation happen separately from practice — teach the alignment first (screen time), then guide the practice with voice alone.

    How much should I charge for an online yoga course?

    Based on 323 paid yoga courses on Ruzuku, the median price is $297, with the middle 50% priced between $97 and $547. Short specialty courses (chair yoga, yoga for runners) typically price under $97. Structured programs with live sessions cluster in the $97-$297 range. Teacher training programs (200-hour and 500-hour) command $297-$547+. Payment plans are common — 230 yoga courses on Ruzuku offer installment options.

    Do I need special equipment to film yoga videos?

    Not to start. A smartphone on a tripod, filming in landscape mode in a well-lit room, captures plenty of detail. The one investment worth making early: a wireless lavalier microphone, since clear audio is more important than video quality for yoga instruction. You can upgrade camera equipment once you know your course works.

    Can I run a yoga teacher training (YTT) program online?

    Yes. Yoga Alliance updated their standards to allow online and hybrid YTT programs. You'll need to meet specific requirements for contact hours (live sessions count), non-contact hours (pre-recorded content), and curriculum content areas. Review the current Yoga Alliance standards before designing your program, and be transparent with students about how your online format meets the requirements.

    How do I compete with free yoga content on YouTube?

    You don't compete with YouTube — you offer something fundamentally different. YouTube provides individual classes; your course provides structured progression, personal feedback, accountability, and community. Students who want a random class will use YouTube. Students who want to genuinely improve their practice, learn proper alignment, or develop a specialty will invest in a course. Focus your marketing on the outcome, not the content.

    How long should my online yoga course be?

    Most successful yoga courses run 4-8 weeks with weekly modules. Specialty workshops (arm balances, inversions) can be shorter (2-4 weeks). Yoga teacher training programs are longer (several months to a year, depending on hours). The key is giving students enough time between modules to practice what they've learned — rushing through a yoga course defeats the purpose.

    Should I offer live classes or pre-recorded content?

    Both. Pre-recorded sequences are your core content — carefully filmed, well-cueing, with good angles and modifications. Live sessions add what pre-recorded can't: real-time alignment feedback, Q&A, group energy, and accountability. The combination is more valuable than either alone. Even one live session per week makes a significant difference in student engagement and outcomes.

    Can I build a membership program alongside my yoga course?

    Yes. Many yoga teachers use a course for their structured program (e.g., an 8-week foundation series or YTT) and a membership for ongoing practice. The membership might include weekly live classes, a library of recorded practices, community discussion, and monthly workshops. Ruzuku supports both models — courses with fixed start dates and memberships with recurring subscriptions.

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