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Glossary›Chair Yoga

Glossary

Chair Yoga

A modified form of yoga practiced while seated or using a chair for support, designed to make traditional postures accessible to people with mobility limitations, arthritis, injury, or balance concerns.

What is Chair Yoga?

Chair yoga is a modified practice that adapts traditional yoga postures (asanas), breathing techniques (pranayama), and meditation to be performed while seated in a chair or using a chair for support. Created in 1982 by yoga teacher Lakshmi Voelker (later Voelker-Binder), who was given her first name by Muktananda, founder of Siddha Yoga, chair yoga emerged when one of her students—a woman in her thirties with arthritis—was unable to do floor poses. The practice maintains yoga’s core principles—breath awareness, mindful movement, postural alignment, and meditative focus—while eliminating the physical demands that place it out of reach for many populations.

Unlike traditional mat-based yoga, which requires practitioners to transition between standing, kneeling, and supine positions, chair yoga keeps most movements supported by a stable seat. Almost anything you can do on a mat can be done in a chair. Practitioners may perform poses entirely seated, or use the chair for balance support during standing variations. The practice is not “easier” yoga; it is adaptive yoga that meets practitioners where they are.

Origins & Lineage

Alice Christensen’s Easy Does It Yoga, first described in 1979, used “chair exercises” alongside others on floor or bed, and in later editions also in swimming pools, for older practitioners with restricted movement. However, the formalization of Chair Yoga as a distinct practice is attributed to Lakshmi Voelker, who created an approach named Chair Yoga in 1982, developing a method that could be practised sitting on a chair, or standing using a chair for support.

It was not until the late 20th century that chair yoga emerged as a distinct practice, responding to the aging demographics of Western yoga studios and the growing recognition that yoga’s health benefits should not be reserved for the able-bodied. The practice gained traction in senior centers, rehabilitation facilities, and care homes throughout the 1990s and 2000s. By the 2010s, it had expanded into corporate wellness programs, hospitals, and accessible yoga advocacy circles led by figures such as Jivana Heyman, founder of the Accessible Yoga movement.

Chair yoga draws from the same ancient lineages as modern postural yoga—Hatha, Vinyasa, Iyengar, and others—while incorporating props in the tradition of B.K.S. Iyengar, whose disciplined use of belts, blocks, and ropes revolutionized adaptive practice. The use of props in yoga has ancient precedent: the yoga strap (yogapaṭṭa) is depicted in temple sculptures and described in manuscripts from ancient and medieval times, used in seated meditation poses with the legs crossed and supported by the strap.

How It’s Practiced

A chair yoga session typically lasts 20–60 minutes and includes:

  • Centering and breathwork: Practitioners begin seated, establishing postural alignment (often called “seated mountain pose”) and engaging with the breath.
  • Warm-up movements: Gentle shoulder rolls, neck stretches, and spinal flexion/extension (e.g., seated Cat-Cow).
  • Seated asanas: Adaptations of twists, forward folds, hip openers (such as seated pigeon), and side bends.
  • Supported standing poses: Using the chair back for balance, practitioners may perform variations of Warrior II, Triangle, or Tree pose.
  • Pranayama: Breathing exercises such as ujjayi, alternate nostril breathing, or simple diaphragmatic breathing.
  • Relaxation and meditation: A brief savasana (seated or reclined) and guided meditation close the practice.

Lakshmi Voelker Chair Yoga is based on the 5000-year-old yoga postures (called asanas) and breathing techniques plus other Eastern and Western movements, modified for the chair to make the health and fitness benefits accessible to everyone. Modifications account for the fact that everyone has a different level of flexibility (or range of motion), and are presented in multiple Levels of Flexibility so practitioners can adapt them to personal needs.

Practitioners use a sturdy, armless chair—typically a kitchen or dining chair—placed on a non-slip surface. You need a stable, sturdy seat; a kitchen chair or almost any armless chair that isn’t too cushy will work. You should be able to sit with your feet on the floor and your knees bent at a 90-degree angle. Props such as blocks, straps, blankets, or a second chair may be incorporated for additional support.

Chair Yoga Today

Chair yoga is now offered in:

  • Senior centers and assisted living facilities: Where it addresses fall prevention, osteoporosis management, and social connection.
  • Corporate wellness programs: Office workers who spend a lot of time hunched over screens can do chair yoga right there in their chair at their desks, improving posture.
  • Hospitals and rehabilitation centers: As part of physical therapy, cardiac rehab, and chronic pain management.
  • Online platforms and streaming services: YouTube, specialized apps, and public television (e.g., PBS’s Happy Yoga with Sara Starr) have democratized access.
  • Community centers and yoga studios: Where it is increasingly integrated into class schedules alongside traditional formats.

A 2019 systematic review evaluated yoga, including three studies of Chair Yoga, finding that yoga provided “small to moderate benefits in balance, lower body flexibility, lower limb strength, depression, perceived mental health, perceived physical health, sleep quality, and vitality” compared to inactive practices. A 2012 study found that 15 minutes of chair yoga significantly improves physical and psychological markers for stress, and a 2023 study in the journal Healthcare indicates that chair yoga counters knee osteoarthritis in women 65 and older.

Common Misconceptions

It’s only for seniors. While older adults comprise a significant portion of chair yoga practitioners, the practice serves office workers, people recovering from surgery, individuals with chronic conditions (arthritis, multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia), wheelchair users, pregnant people, and anyone seeking a low-impact entry point to yoga.

It’s not “real” yoga. Whether yoga is done in a chair or on the mat, the practice still focuses on the same core principles: focusing on your breath, paying attention to your thoughts, and staying in the moment. Chair yoga is not diluted yoga; it is contextualized yoga.

It’s too easy to be effective. Chair yoga builds strength, flexibility, and balance. Chair yoga offers the same benefits as traditional yoga but in a way that’s more accessible and gentle, improving flexibility, building strength and balance, strengthening key muscle groups, improving posture, and reducing the risk of falls.

It’s just stretching. While chair yoga includes stretches, it also incorporates strength-building isometric holds, balance work, breathwork that regulates the nervous system, and meditation that cultivates awareness—all essential components of classical yoga.

How to Begin

Find a class or teacher: Look for chair yoga offerings at senior centers, yoga studios, or community colleges. Organizations like the Accessible Yoga network maintain directories of trained teachers. Online platforms such as YouTube (search “chair yoga for beginners”), YogaGlo, or PBS offer free or low-cost guided sessions.

Start with 10–15 minutes: Even 10-15 minutes of daily chair yoga can boost circulation, improve breathing efficiency, and enhance mental wellbeing through mindfulness. Consistency matters more than duration.

Consult a healthcare provider: Especially if you have chronic conditions, recent injuries, or balance disorders. Chair yoga is generally safe, but individual modifications may be necessary.

Prioritize alignment over achievement: The goal is not to “perform” a pose perfectly but to explore movement within your current capacity. Think of yoga poses as adaptable to a student’s body and not the other way around.

Resources to explore:

  • Chair Yoga: Sit, Stretch, and Strengthen Your Way to a Happier, Healthier You by Kristin McGee
  • Lakshmi Voelker Chair Yoga certification programs and videos (lvchairyoga.com)
  • PBS’s Happy Yoga series with Sara Starr
  • Accessible Yoga trainings and resources (accessibleyoga.org)

Related terms

hatha yogarestorative yogayin yogagentle yogatherapeutic yogapranayama
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