Extreme heat and high-temperature alerts are increasingly common, creating new challenges for yoga teachers striving to maintain safe and effective yoga classes. Hot weather can quickly make any session, indoors or outdoors, risky for both teachers and students. Regardless of your teaching environment, it is essential to understand how heat affects the body and mind to ensure the safety of yoga practice.
High temperatures can reduce concentration, coordination, energy, and decision-making. This significantly increases the risk of dehydration, heat exhaustion, and other heat-related illnesses during yoga classes. As a yoga teacher, you are responsible for providing a safe, supportive environment for all participants and adapting your teaching approach based on weather conditions.
Certain students are more vulnerable to heat-related illness, including older adults, children, pregnant individuals, those with pre-existing health conditions or on specific medications, and anyone unaccustomed to exercising in high temperatures.
Before your class:
Teaching in a Studio/Gym:
There is no single maximum legal temperature for workplaces in the UK, but venues are required to manage the risks associated with excessive heat and take reasonable steps to protect the health, safety, and wellbeing of everyone using the space.
If you have concerns about the environment in which you are teaching, raise the issue with the venue manager or relevant contact and discuss any reasonable adjustments that can be made. Be prepared to adapt your class approach to suit the conditions, and if the environment remains unsafe, consider whether the session should continue.
Remember, maintaining a safe teaching environment is a shared responsibility between the studio/gym and the teacher. Open communication and early action are key to preventing heat-related illness and ensuring students can practise safely.
During your class:
Heat Exhaustion Symptoms:
If you notice these signs in a student (or yourself), stop the activity, move to a cooler area, encourage fluid intake, and allow time to rest.
Heatstroke Symptoms (Medical Emergency):
Call emergency services immediately if heatstroke is suspected.
A professional yoga teacher adapts their teaching to both the environment and students’ needs. Adjusting for extreme weather is essential to maintaining safe, responsible, and ethical yoga practice.
For further guidance on teaching yoga safely in hot weather, consult your venue’s health and safety procedures and ensure your teaching practices comply with local conditions.