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Benefits, honestly

The real benefits of aerial yogawhat the evidence actually supports

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Aerial Yoga Benefits at Anand Yoga Centre, Kolathur

The best-supported aerial yoga benefits are spinal decompression during inversion, better flexibility, and a gentle full-body workout. When you hang gently, pressure in the lower-back discs can drop by roughly 35 to 50% at full inversion. Many people also feel calmer and more mobile, though that evidence is softer. At Anand Yoga Centre in Kolathur you explore all of this safely, in a class of only four with every inversion optional.

The real, well-supported benefits

These are the gains research backs most clearly.

Spinal decompression

Hanging gently unloads the spine, and intradiscal pressure in the lower back can drop by roughly 35 to 50% at full inversion, which many people feel as a release.

Better flexibility

With the hammock supporting you, you can ease further into stretches over time, and flexibility gains are among the clearer benefits.

A moderate workout

Aerial yoga is a moderate-intensity session, and one study measured around 300 kcal burned in about 50 minutes.

The calm side

Less measurable, but the part many people come back for.

Being cradled

Resting fully supported in the hammock at the end of class is deeply soothing, and many people find it the most restful part of their week.

A gentle reset

Being gently inverted and held may help you feel calmer and lift your mood for some people, though this is harder to measure.

Core and balance

Stabilising in the moving fabric can build core strength and balance, though the evidence here is mixed.

Honest limits

Relief, not a cure

For short-term low-back relief, aerial work may help as part of a wider routine, but it is not a standalone cure for back problems.

Results vary

How much you feel depends on your body, your starting point and how often you practise. Small studies mean we should stay modest about claims.

Not medical care

If you have a specific health condition, treat aerial yoga as gentle movement alongside your doctor's advice, not as a treatment.

Good to know

What the evidence shows

Grouped by how strong the evidence is.

  • Solid: spinal decompression, with lumbar disc pressure dropping roughly 35 to 50% at full inversion.
  • Solid: better flexibility over time as you ease into supported stretches.
  • Solid: a moderate workout, around 300 kcal in about 50 minutes in one study.
  • May help: short-term low-back relief as part of a routine, not a cure on its own.
  • May help: a calmer mood and a sense of reset for some people.
  • May help: core strength and balance, though the evidence here is mixed.

Research on aerial yoga is still limited and most studies are small, individual results vary. This is general wellbeing information, not medical advice.

Questions

Aerial Yoga Benefits: common questions

What is the strongest proven benefit of aerial yoga?
Spinal decompression during inversion is the best-supported benefit, with pressure in the lower-back discs dropping by roughly 35 to 50% when you hang fully inverted. Better flexibility and a moderate workout are also well supported. At Anand Yoga Centre in Kolathur you explore these in a small class of four, with every inversion optional.
Does aerial yoga really help your back?
Gently unloading the spine can ease the back for many people, and aerial work may help with short-term low-back relief as part of a wider routine. It is not a cure for back conditions, and you should treat it as gentle movement alongside your doctor's advice. Research on this is still limited and most studies are small, individual results vary.
Is aerial yoga a good workout?
Yes, it is a moderate-intensity workout that gently uses the whole body, and one study measured around 300 kcal burned in about 50 minutes. It also builds flexibility and, for some people, core strength and balance. Because the hammock supports part of your weight, it stays accessible even as it works you.
Can aerial yoga help with stress?
Many people find being cradled and gently inverted calming, and it may help lift mood and ease stress for some. This part is harder to measure than the physical benefits, so we keep our claims modest. The floating rest at the end of class is the part most people describe as the most soothing.
How many calories does aerial yoga burn?
One study found aerial yoga burned around 300 kcal in about 50 minutes, placing it at moderate intensity. The exact figure depends on your body and how much you move, so treat it as a guide rather than a promise. Research on aerial yoga is still limited and most studies are small, individual results vary.

Reviewed by Sailaja Anand, yoga instructor at Anand Yoga Centre, Kolathur. Last updated 2026-06-15.

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