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Aerial Yoga

Is Aerial Yoga Safe? Benefits and What to Know Before You Try

By Sailaja Anand·12 June 2026·6 min read

Aerial yoga is safe for most healthy beginners when it is taught properly. In a good beginner class, the hammock hangs just above the floor, an experienced teacher spots you, and you build confidence with simple supported poses before anything advanced. It is not suitable for everyone, though, so a few conditions mean you should speak to your doctor first. We will walk through all of it honestly.

What aerial yoga actually is

Aerial yoga uses a soft fabric hammock that hangs from a secure frame to support part or all of your body weight. The hammock lets you move into familiar yoga poses with less pressure on the wrists, knees and spine, and it makes gentle inversions, where the head goes below the heart, possible without strain.

It feels playful, but it is taught with the same care as any yoga class. At Anand Yoga Centre this is the only aerial yoga in north Chennai, which is why so many women come to us simply curious to try something they cannot find anywhere else nearby.

How a beginner aerial class is kept safe

Safety in aerial yoga is mostly about the setup and the teaching, not about being strong or experienced. Here is how risk is kept low in a beginner class.

  • The hammock is hung low, often just a few inches above a padded floor, so there is very little distance to fall.
  • Equipment is professional grade, securely anchored, and checked regularly for wear.
  • You start with simple, supported poses and only progress when you feel ready.
  • An experienced teacher guides and spots you, and corrects your alignment in person.
  • We keep aerial batches very small so each woman gets close attention.

The benefits women notice

Because the hammock takes some of your weight, aerial yoga can feel kinder on the joints than mat work while still asking the body to engage. Many students find these benefits over regular practice, though everyone is different and yoga is not a treatment for any condition.

  • Gentle decompression of the spine, which some find eases everyday stiffness from sitting.
  • Steady building of core and upper-body strength as you support and steady yourself.
  • Improved flexibility as the hammock helps you ease into stretches.
  • A real sense of fun and lightness, which many women say lifts their mood.

Do I need upper-body strength to begin?

No. This is the second question we hear after safety. You do not need to arrive strong. Beginner classes are designed to build strength and confidence gradually, and the hammock supports you so you are never holding your whole body weight with your arms on day one. If you can sit into a supported hammock and follow guidance, you can start.

Who should check with a doctor first

Aerial yoga suits most healthy women, but the gentle inversions and changes in blood flow mean it is not right for everyone. Please speak with your doctor before trying aerial yoga, and tell us beforehand, if any of the following apply to you.

  • Pregnancy, or trying to conceive (our prenatal yoga is a safer fit during pregnancy).
  • High or low blood pressure, heart conditions, or glaucoma.
  • Recent surgery or a current injury that is still healing.
  • Vertigo, inner-ear problems, or a strong fear of heights.
  • Severe joint conditions such as advanced arthritis.

Trying it for yourself

The honest truth is that the only way to know how aerial yoga feels for you is to try one supervised beginner session. We will settle you into the hammock slowly, stay close, and let you go entirely at your own pace.

You can book a first class for ₹199 and see our full aerial yoga page for what a session involves. If you are expecting, our prenatal yoga is the gentler, safer option to start with.

Keep exploring
Questions

Common questions

Is aerial yoga safe for complete beginners?
Yes, for most healthy beginners, when taught properly. The hammock hangs just above a padded floor, you start with simple supported poses, and an experienced teacher spots you. We keep aerial batches small so each woman is closely guided.
Do I need upper-body strength to start aerial yoga?
No. Beginner classes build strength gradually, and the hammock supports much of your weight, so you are never holding your full body weight with your arms on the first day. You start at your own level.
Who should not do aerial yoga?
Please consult your doctor first if you are pregnant, have high or low blood pressure, a heart condition, glaucoma, vertigo, a recent surgery or injury, or severe joint problems. During pregnancy, our prenatal yoga is a safer fit.
Where can I do aerial yoga in north Chennai?
Anand Yoga Centre in Kolathur offers the only aerial yoga in north Chennai. You can try a first class for ₹199 in a small, women-only batch before deciding on a membership.

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