Yoga studios in Singapore quote a single drop-in at roughly $30 to $40 as of June 2026, but almost nobody serious pays that. The same class falls to the mid-$20s on a pack, into the teens on an intro deal, and to $0 if you use the free routes the studios never advertise. What you actually pay depends far more on how you buy than on which studio you pick. This guide lists the verified going rates, ranks the cheapest legitimate paths from free trials up to unlimited memberships, and works out the real cost-per-class so a $190-a-month membership does not quietly become the most expensive yoga on the island.
Yoga pricing in Singapore clusters into three honest tiers: free community options, pay-as-you-go drop-ins and packs, and unlimited monthly memberships. The headline drop-in rate is the worst deal in every case, because the whole studio model is built to push you onto a pack or a recurring membership where the per-class number drops but you hand over cash upfront.
Boutique studios and chains land at similar single-class prices, around $30 to $40, so the brand matters less than the buying route. Where studios differ sharply is on intro offers and membership maths. Treat a yoga membership the way you would any recurring charge: a low monthly rate is only cheap if you attend often enough, the same trap people hit with an under-used gym membership.
| Route | Sticker price | Real cost / class | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free community / HPB / volunteer | $0 | $0 | Total beginners, tight budgets |
| First-timer intro deal | $19-$65 | $10-$25 | Trying a specific studio |
| Single drop-in | $30-$40 | $30-$40 | One-off, travelling |
| Class pack (5-50 classes) | $140-$1,000 | $18-$30 | Regular, one studio |
| Unlimited monthly | $120-$300 | $10-$30 if you go 8x+ | Heavy attenders |
Before paying anything, you can practise for weeks at $0. The Health Promotion Board runs free morning sessions through Sunrise In The City, held at partner studios and outdoor spots around the island, and you only need to register a slot. ActiveSG community programmes and some community clubs also list low-cost or free wellness classes that you can browse and book online.
Outside the government schemes, Nikam Guruji Yoga Kutir runs volunteer-led traditional Hatha yoga as a free 12-week programme across many neighbourhood locations, and Meetup hosts park sessions that are either free or a token $10 to $15. None of this costs studio money, so it is the obvious starting point if you are new and not sure yoga will stick. Park the dollars you would have spent into a savings goal instead and see how the habit holds before you commit to a pack.
Once the free options run dry, intro deals are the best value per class, and they let you test a studio's instructors before sinking money into a pack. Freedom Yoga prices a first class at $19, the lowest single-class entry point among the chains. Yoga+ sells a two-class intro for $50 and a one-week unlimited pass for $65, which is the standout deal if you can squeeze in five or six classes inside that week, dropping the effective rate close to $11.
Boutique studios run their own first-timer packs: Yoga Bar lists a three-class first-timer pack at $50, On Good Ground offers a three-class beginner trial over ten days for $50, and Yoga Mala has a one-week trial at $50. Many chains, including Jal Yoga, Pure Yoga and Yoga Movement, also give a genuine free first class. These offers get pulled and reinstated without notice, so confirm each figure on the studio's own booking page on the day you book.
| Studio | Intro offer | Effective cost / class | Locations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yoga+ | $65 one-week unlimited | ~$11 if you go 6x | Chinatown, Bugis, Tanjong Pagar |
| Freedom Yoga | $19 first class | $19 | Multiple |
| Yoga+ | $50 two-class intro | $25 | Chinatown, Bugis, Tanjong Pagar |
| Yoga Bar | $50 three-class first-timer | ~$17 | Orchard |
| On Good Ground | $50 three-class / 10 days | ~$17 | Joo Chiat |
| Jal / Pure / Yoga Movement | Free first class | $0 | Multiple |
If you have settled on a studio and plan to attend weekly, a class pack is the lowest steady cost. The bigger the bundle, the lower the per-class rate, but the longer the expiry clock you are committing to. Yoga+ runs five classes for $140 ($28 each) up to 25 classes for $500 ($20 each). Yoga Bar scales from six classes at $170 (~$28) to 40 classes at $800 ($20). On Good Ground goes from five at $140 down to 50 classes at $1,000 ($20), and Yoga Mala from five at $150 to 50 at $900 ($18 each).
The pattern is consistent across studios: the per-class price floor sits around $18 to $20 once you buy a large bundle, versus $28 to $30 on a small pack and $30 to $40 on a drop-in. The catch is expiry. A 50-class pack that runs out in 10 to 12 months only saves money if you actually attend that often, otherwise the lapsed classes push your true cost-per-session back above drop-in. Apply the same opportunity-cost thinking you would to any prepaid commitment, and slot a regular yoga spend into your personal budget so it competes honestly with everything else.
| Studio | Small pack | Large pack | Lowest cost / class |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yoga+ | 5 for $140 ($28) | 25 for $500 | $20 |
| Yoga Bar | 6 for $170 (~$28) | 40 for $800 | $20 |
| On Good Ground | 5 for $140 ($28) | 50 for $1,000 | $20 |
| Yoga Mala | 5 for $150 ($30) | 50 for $900 | $18 |
Unlimited monthly memberships look like the premium tier, but they are the cheapest per-class option for anyone going three or more times a week. Sky Yoga advertises unlimited yoga at $133 a month as of June 2026, with a free trial, and bundles in mat pilates, barre and salt-heat yoga across its Tanjong Katong and Balestier outlets. Real Yoga and Platinum Yoga sit in the $120 to $200 a month unlimited range, and Pure Yoga lands around $150.
Yoga Movement is a useful warning case on how the headline number works. Its single class is $35, but its unlimited membership renews at $190 a month after the intro period. Attend twice a week and that is roughly $24 a class; attend once a fortnight and it is the most expensive yoga in Singapore at $95 a session. The deciding number is always attendance, not the sticker. This is the same conditional-saving logic that governs an under-used spin class package: the membership wins only if you keep showing up.
| Studio | Unlimited monthly | Free trial | Cost / class at 8 visits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sky Yoga | $133 | Yes | ~$17 |
| Real Yoga | $120-$200 | Yes | $15-$25 |
| Platinum Yoga | ~$100-$130 | Yes | $13-$16 |
| Pure Yoga | ~$150 | Yes | ~$19 |
| Yoga Movement | $190 | Free first class | ~$24 |
Class style changes the price. Standard mat formats such as Hatha, Vinyasa and Yin sit at the base rate. Hot or infrared-heat yoga and aerial yoga usually cost more because of the equipment, the heated rooms and the smaller class sizes, so a studio's drop-in for aerial can run $40 against $30 for a regular flow.
If you only want to try a heated or aerial class, use an intro deal rather than a drop-in, since the per-class gap is widest at the single-session level. For ongoing practice, an unlimited membership at a studio that includes hot and specialty classes is usually cheaper than paying the specialty drop-in premium each time.
A low per-class rate means nothing if the fine print claws it back. Four things quietly raise your real cost: short pack-expiry windows, auto-renewing memberships that keep billing after you stop attending, peak-slot booking limits, and one-off joining or admin fees on some memberships.
Read the terms the way you would any contract. A $500 pack that expires in months forces a pace you may not keep, and a membership with a discounted intro period reverts to full price the moment the promo lapses. Calculate the cost across the whole commitment, not the promo window, and cancel auto-renewals the day you stop going. The discipline is identical to managing any recurring subscription you no longer use.
Match the route to how often you will realistically go, not to the studio with the nicest branding. A beginner unsure of the habit should exhaust the free options first, then spend one cheap intro deal before paying for anything bigger. A weekly attender at one studio almost always pays least on a class pack. A three-plus-times-a-week practitioner gets the lowest per-class rate from an unlimited membership.
A single drop-in at most yoga studios in Singapore runs roughly $30 to $40 as of June 2026. On a class pack the rate falls to about $18 to $30, first-timer intro deals such as Freedom Yoga's $19 class or Yoga+'s $65 one-week unlimited cut it lower, and free options like HPB's Sunrise In The City bring it to $0. What you pay depends mostly on how you buy, not which studio you choose.
The Health Promotion Board runs free morning yoga through Sunrise In The City at partner studios and parks, and ActiveSG and community clubs list low-cost or free wellness classes. Nikam Guruji Yoga Kutir offers a free volunteer-led 12-week Hatha course across many locations, and Meetup hosts park sessions that are free or a token $10 to $15. These are the cheapest legitimate ways to start before paying for a studio.
Only if you attend often. An unlimited membership at $133 to $200 a month is the cheapest per-class option once you go roughly eight or more times a month, dropping below $20 a class. At one or two visits a month it becomes the most expensive yoga in Singapore. For example, Yoga Movement's $190 unlimited works out to about $24 a class at twice weekly but $95 at fortnightly. Buy a pack instead if your attendance is light.
Hot and infrared-heat yoga need heated rooms and more energy to run, while aerial yoga requires rigged equipment and smaller class sizes for safety. Both push the studio's costs up, so the drop-in for these styles can run around $40 versus $30 for a standard mat flow. If you only want to try them, use an intro deal rather than a single drop-in, since the price gap is widest at the single-class level.
This is general financial information for Singapore, not personal financial advice. Figures change — verify current rates against the official sources above before acting. See our full disclaimer.