Teaching & Career
By Zama Institute | 13 May 2026 | 10 min read
The short answer
Yoga and Pilates share the same foundations — breath, body awareness, alignment, and mindful movement. Teachers trained in both attract more students, fill more class types, and earn more than those qualified in just one. And the training? Each one makes the other easier to learn.
In this article
They are more alike than most people realise
Here is a question worth sitting with: if you removed the Sanskrit from a yoga class and the springs from a Pilates studio, how different would the two practices actually look?
The honest answer is: not very. Both disciplines are built around the same core ideas. Breath drives movement. Alignment matters. The mind and body work as a unit. Strength and flexibility are developed together, not in opposition. The body is treated as an intelligent system, not a collection of parts to be worked in isolation.
Joseph Pilates drew from gymnastics, martial arts, and yoga when he developed his method in the early twentieth century. The overlap was not accidental. He was working with the same underlying principles of the human body that the yoga tradition had been refining for thousands of years.
Many of the foundational Pilates exercises — Swan, Rolling Like a Ball, the Teaser, leg circles, spinal twists — have direct equivalents in yoga. Students cross between the two all the time. The question is whether their teacher can guide them knowledgeably in both directions.
The tables below map more than 60 direct parallels across ten movement categories. For teachers, this is not just interesting — it is a practical framework for understanding how fluently the two systems translate.
Core and spinal flexion
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| The Hundred | Boat Pose (Navasana) | Sustained V-shape hold with deep abdominal engagement |
| Roll Up | Seated Forward Fold (Paschimottanasana) | Spinal articulation forward, hamstring lengthening |
| Rolling Like a Ball | Happy Baby (Ananda Balasana) | Rounded spine, knees to chest, massages the back body |
| Double Leg Stretch | Boat Pose (Navasana) | Limbs extending away from a tucked, braced centre |
| Single Leg Stretch | Wind-Relieving Pose (Pavanamuktasana) | Alternating knee-to-chest, supine core engagement |
| Teaser | Boat Pose (Navasana) | Sustained hip flexor and abdominal effort in a V-shape |
| Spine Stretch Forward | Seated Forward Fold (Paschimottanasana) | Seated, tall spine, forward hinge with elongation |
| Neck Pull | Seated Forward Fold with spinal articulation | Sequential spinal flexion followed by controlled extension |
Spinal extension and backbends
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Swan Prep | Sphinx (Salamba Bhujangasana) | Low-intensity prone backbend, forearms or hands down |
| Swan | Cobra (Bhujangasana) | Prone, hands under shoulders, lift through the chest |
| Full Swan | Upward-Facing Dog (Urdhva Mukha Svanasana) | Thighs lift off the mat, full thoracic extension |
| Breaststroke | Locust Pose (Salabhasana) | Arms sweep back, chest lifts, posterior chain activation |
| Superman / Back Extension | Locust Pose (Salabhasana) | Prone, all limbs lifting, full posterior chain engagement |
| Single Leg Kick | Half Bow / Locust variation | Prone, knee bends to activate hamstrings |
| Double Leg Kick | Bow Pose (Dhanurasana) | Prone, both knees bent, chest lifts, full body extension |
| Child’s Pose (rest position) | Child’s Pose (Balasana) | Identical — counterpose after spinal extension |
Lateral flexion and the side body
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Mermaid | Gate Pose (Parighasana) | Seated side stretch, one arm arcing overhead |
| Side Bend | Triangle Pose (Trikonasana) | Long lateral line from hip to fingertips |
| Side Kick Series — hip abduction | Warrior II / Extended Triangle | Hip opening in the frontal plane |
| Saw | Seated Spinal Twist with forward fold | Rotation combined with lateral reach and hamstring lengthening |
Rotation and twists
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Spine Twist | Seated Spinal Twist (Ardha Matsyendrasana) | Seated, tall spine, thoracic rotation |
| Criss-Cross | Supine Twist (Supta Matsyendrasana) | Oblique engagement with a twisting action |
| Saw | Revolved Seated Forward Fold (Parivrtta Paschimottanasana) | Rotation combined with forward fold |
| Corkscrew | Supine Twist with leg variation | Rotation through the hips and lower spine |
Hip opening and lower body
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Leg Circles | Reclined Hand-to-Big-Toe Pose (Supta Padangusthasana) | Supine single-leg hip mobility work |
| Clam | Fire Log Pose (Agnistambhasana) | Hip external rotation, glute medius engagement |
| Frog | Reclined Bound Angle (Supta Baddha Konasana) | Supine, soles together, inner groin release |
| Pilates Stance | Tadasana with turned-out feet | Hip external rotation as a foundational alignment position |
| Hip Circles | Cat-Cow with pelvic circles | Fluid pelvic mobility, exploration of range |
| Inner Thigh Lifts | Reclined Goddess / Wide-Leg variations | Adductor engagement in a supine open position |
| Bicycle | Supine cycling / reclined core variations | Alternating leg action with spinal rotation |
Balance and standing
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Standing Leg Pump / Arabesque | Warrior III (Virabhadrasana III) | Single-leg balance, hip hinge, spine long and level |
| Side Kick Kneeling | Wild Thing / Side Plank with leg lift | Kneeling or side-lying hip abduction and balance |
| Standing Footwork / Wall Squat | Chair Pose (Utkatasana) | Quad loading, hip hinge, upright torso |
| Pilates Squat | Garland Pose (Malasana) | Deep knee bend, upright spine, hip crease below knee |
| Wall Roll Down | Standing Forward Fold (Uttanasana) | Sequential spinal articulation, hamstring lengthening |
All-fours and quadruped
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Cat-Cow on all fours | Cat-Cow (Marjaryasana-Bitilasana) | Identical — spinal flexion and extension |
| Bird Dog | Balancing Table (Dandayamana Bharmanasana) | Opposite arm/leg extension from a stable quadruped base |
| Fire Hydrant | Hip external rotation lift from all fours | Hip abduction and external rotation from quadruped |
| Donkey Kicks | Kneeling Leg Lift / Scorpion prep | Prone hip extension from quadruped |
| Thread the Needle | Thread the Needle | Identical name and movement — thoracic rotation from all fours |
Plank and push-up variations
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Plank | Plank Pose (Phalakasana) | Identical — high plank, neutral spine, full body tension |
| Push-Up | Chaturanga Dandasana | Lowering phase with elbows tracking back, scapular control |
| Pike / Elephant | Downward-Facing Dog (Adho Mukha Svanasana) | Inverted V-shape, hamstrings and shoulders loading |
| Knee Hover | Extended Puppy Pose / Low Plank | Core bracing, spine neutral, knees just above floor |
| Side Plank | Vasisthasana (Side Plank) | Identical — lateral body line, stacked or scissored feet |
| Forearm Plank | Dolphin Pose (Ardha Pincha Mayurasana) | Forearms down, spine long, shoulder girdle engaged |
Inversions and shoulder loading
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Roll Over | Plow Pose (Halasana) / Shoulderstand entry | Legs travel overhead from supine, spinal articulation |
| Jackknife | Shoulderstand (Salamba Sarvangasana) | Legs vertical overhead, weight on upper back and shoulders |
| Control Balance | Scorpion Prep / Shoulderstand with split legs | Balance on upper back with leg extension work |
Breath, centring, and foundational awareness
| Pilates | Yoga equivalent | What they share |
|---|---|---|
| Lateral thoracic breathing | Ujjayi / Dirga (three-part) breath | Structured breathwork integrated with movement |
| Imprint and release / pelvic floor activation | Mula Bandha | Foundational engagement at the base of the pelvis |
| Centring / finding neutral spine | Samasthiti / Tadasana awareness | Bringing attention inward before practice begins |
This is not a curiosity. It is a practical advantage for every teacher willing to train in both.
Training in both makes you a better teacher
When you train in yoga, you develop something that pure Pilates training rarely touches: a framework for understanding the relationship between the physical body, the breath, and the mind. You learn to sequence not just for muscular balance but for energetic arc. You learn to hold space for a student’s inner experience, not just their outer form.
When you train in Pilates, you develop something that yoga training rarely prioritises: an understanding of biomechanics precise enough to identify and correct movement dysfunction. You learn to observe the body with a clinical eye. You learn how to modify exercises for people with injuries, weakness, or asymmetry — and why those modifications matter.
Each system fills in what the other leaves out.
What yoga teachers gain from Pilates training
- A sharper understanding of spinal mechanics — which makes adjustments safer and more effective
- Corrective exercise principles that allow better modification for students with injuries or limitations
- A greater focus on the deep stabilising muscles — transversus abdominis, multifidus, pelvic floor — that yoga often addresses through bandha but rarely explains anatomically
- A new population of students who would never walk into a yoga class but are already doing Pilates
What Pilates teachers gain from yoga training
- A philosophy of movement that gives their teaching greater depth and longevity — both for themselves and their students
- Breathwork techniques that extend well beyond lateral thoracic breathing and offer genuine tools for stress, anxiety, and nervous system regulation
- A framework for class arc and energy management that goes beyond exercise selection and repetition count
- Access to a tradition with thousands of years of accumulated knowledge — and a global community that draws on it
Students notice the difference between a teacher who knows one method and a teacher who understands movement. The latter can meet them where they are — whatever that looks like on any given day.
You will attract more students
There is a practical reality that every self-employed movement teacher eventually confronts: your class list is limited by what you can teach. The teacher who can only offer yoga loses every student who wants Pilates. The teacher who can only offer Pilates loses every student who wants yoga. The teacher who offers both loses almost no one.
The wellness market in Australia has expanded significantly, and the students coming through the door are more informed and more discerning than previous generations. They have practised yoga, they have done Pilates, they have formed opinions. They are looking for teachers who can speak credibly across both.
The referral effect
When a student trusts you as their yoga teacher, they are far more likely to try your Pilates class than they are to go searching for a stranger. And vice versa. Dual qualification does not just add a second revenue stream — it compounds the existing one. Your current students become your first Pilates clients. Your current Pilates students become your first yoga students.
Retreats and workshops
The retreat and workshop market strongly favours teachers who can hold multiple formats across a weekend or week-long programme. A yoga retreat that includes a morning Pilates session for core conditioning is a more complete offering than either discipline alone. Studio directors and retreat coordinators know this — and they book accordingly.
The career case is undeniable
Movement teaching is a competitive profession. The difference between a full class list and a half-empty schedule often comes down to a single question: can you offer what this studio, this client, or this retreat needs? Dual qualification tips that question decisively in your favour.
More venues, more income
A yoga-only teacher can teach at yoga studios, wellness centres, and corporate wellbeing programmes with a yoga focus. A dual-qualified teacher can do all of that — and also teach at Pilates studios, physiotherapy clinics, gyms, barre studios, aged care facilities, and corporate wellness programmes with a functional movement focus. The range of available venues almost doubles.
Private clients pay more
Private session rates for dual-qualified teachers are consistently higher than for single-discipline instructors, for a straightforward reason: a client working privately gets more. You can address their yoga practice, their movement foundations, their core conditioning, and their breath — all in one session. That versatility has real value, and clients recognise it.
A more resilient business
Single-discipline teachers are exposed to the natural ebbs of their particular market. When trends shift or a new studio opens nearby, the effect is immediate. The dual-qualified teacher has a broader base. When one stream quietens, the other often compensates. This is not just a career advantage — it is a business stability advantage.
Yoga and Pilates are among the fastest-growing wellness industries in Australia. Teachers who can operate across both are positioned at the intersection of two growing markets — not just one.
How to get started
If you are already a yoga teacher, your existing knowledge of anatomy, alignment, breath, and sequencing gives you a genuine head start in Pilates training. The concepts are familiar. The learning curve is shorter.
If you are already a Pilates teacher, your precision in movement and understanding of biomechanics means you arrive at yoga training with skills that other students spend months developing. You will move through anatomy and postural analysis faster than most.
At Zama Institute, both qualifications are fully online and self-paced. You can study around your existing teaching schedule — and many Zama students complete both, either concurrently or within a year of each other.
- The Zama 200-Hour Yoga Teacher Training is registered with Yoga Australia
- The Zama Certificate in Pilates Teaching is accredited with Physical Activity Australia
Both programmes are designed for working adults who want to build a serious career in movement — not just add a certificate to a wall.
Ready to teach both?
Explore Zama’s yoga and Pilates teacher training programmes — fully online, self-paced, and built for working movement professionals.
Frequently asked questions
Can you train in both yoga and Pilates at the same time?
Yes. Many students complete yoga and Pilates teacher training concurrently or back to back. Online self-paced programs make this straightforward — you study each qualification on your own schedule without having to choose between them.
Does yoga training count towards Pilates certification?
Yoga and Pilates are separate qualifications with different accrediting bodies in Australia. A yoga certificate does not substitute for Pilates training. However, yoga teachers find Pilates training significantly easier because of their existing anatomy, alignment, and breathwork foundations.
Do yoga and Pilates teachers earn more with dual qualifications?
Yes. Teachers qualified in both can teach across more venues, offer a wider range of class formats, take on more clients, and charge higher rates for private sessions. Dual-qualified teachers are also more attractive to studios looking for versatile staff who can cover multiple class types.
Is Pilates based on yoga?
Pilates was not directly based on yoga, but the two systems share significant common ground. Both emphasise breath, body awareness, spinal mobility, core stability, and mindful movement. Many of the foundational exercises in Pilates — including Cat-Cow, Plank, Swan, and Child’s Pose — appear in virtually identical form in yoga practice.
Which should I do first — yoga or Pilates teacher training?
There is no single right answer. Yoga teacher training tends to be broader, covering philosophy, anatomy, breathwork, and sequencing — an excellent foundation for any movement discipline. Pilates training is more specialised in biomechanics and corrective exercise. Many teachers find yoga first gives them a strong conceptual base, with Pilates adding precision and structure.
Can a Pilates teacher teach yoga without additional training?
No. Teaching yoga professionally in Australia requires a recognised yoga teacher training qualification — typically a minimum of 200 hours — registered with a body such as Yoga Australia. A Pilates certificate does not qualify a person to teach yoga classes.
Zama Institute
Zama Institute is an Australian accredited online wellness teacher training school, operating since 2013. Zama offers yoga, Pilates, barre, meditation, breathwork, and somatic movement teacher training programmes, registered with Yoga Australia and accredited with Physical Activity Australia.
