Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (2024)

The beauty of yoga is that yoga is for everyone. And “every” body has a yoga body! Whether you are young or old, flexible or tight, fit or unfit, a regular practice of yoga strengthens the body and calms the mind.

Contrary to popular belief, physical flexibility is neither the prerequisite nor the ultimate goal to practice yoga. Striking a perfect pose is also not the goal. What matters at the end of a practice is the state of your mind and body. If you feel at peace and in the present moment, then you are practicing yoga.

Let’s dive in to learn more!

Topics covered:

  • Scientific Benefits of Yoga Infographic
  • Basic Yoga Poses
    • Mountain Pose
    • Chair Pose
    • Downward-Facing Dog
    • Warrior Pose
    • Triangle Pose
    • Tree Pose
    • Bridge Pose
    • Butterfly Pose
    • Seated Forward Bend
    • Child’s Pose
    • Adamantine Pose (Vajrasana or diamond pose)
    • Corpse Pose
  • Intermediate Yoga Poses
    • Upward-Facing Dog
    • Bow Pose
    • Camel Pose
    • Eagle Pose
    • Lotus Pose
    • Reverse Prayer Pose
  • Advanced Yoga Poses
    • Boat Pose
    • Fish Pose
    • Upward Plank Pose
    • Wheel Pose
    • Shoulder Stand
  • Yoga poses for beginners: Benefits and tips
  • How to practice yoga safely as a beginner
  • Common mistakes to avoid when practicing yoga
  • Yoga equipment for beginners: What you need
  • Yoga poses for kids: Benefits and tips
  • Supplement your yoga practice with the Art of Living
  • Related articles

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (1)

Basic Yoga Poses (Asanas)

An important thing to remember when starting a yoga practice is that there is no rush to learn everything or to master a posture. Yoga is about you and being in that space, stretching your body and your consciousness. Here are some great yoga poses for beginners.

Mountain Pose

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (2)

  1. Stand at the top of your mat with your big toes touching and a sliver of space in between your heels.

  2. Starting from the base of the pose, flex your toes, bringing your weight into the four corners of your feet. Make sure your weight is distributed equally.

  3. Activate your thigh muscles and lift your kneecaps. Tuck your pelvis.

  4. On an inhale, roll your shoulders up to your ears, and on an exhale, roll your shoulders down your back. This straightens your spine and improves posture.

  5. Hang your arms beside your torso with your hands gently engaged, fingers toward the floor.

  6. Imagine that a string is pulling the crown of your head towards the ceiling.

  7. Elongate your neck. Bring your chin parallel to the floor and gaze gently in front of you.

  8. Breathe evenly for the duration of the posture.

Chair Pose

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  1. Stand up straight with your feet together or hip-width apart and parallel to each other on the yoga mat.

  2. Reach your arms straight out in front of you with your palms face down, or you can bring your hands together over your head with your arms straight.

  3. Bend your knees deeply, and sink your pelvis toward the ground as though you are sitting down in an imaginary chair.

  4. Make sure that your knees are in line with your ankles and toes, with the weight of your body on your heels.

  5. Do your best to remain as comfortable as possible while maintaining the posture. A burning sensation in your quadriceps is normal.

  6. Inhale deeply to lengthen the spine, and sink your tailbone further down on every exhale.

  7. Hold the posture for 30 to 60 seconds.

  8. To come out of the posture, stand up straight, or sit all the way down on the mat.

Downward-Facing Dog

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  1. Start on your hands and knees in tabletop position with proper alignment. Place your hands shoulder-width apart and your knees directly underneath your hips.

  2. On an exhalation, lift your hips upward to come into an inverted V-shape position, with each leg as straight as you can comfortably make it.

  3. Press your hands firmly into the mat, draw the shoulder blades inward, and make sure the feet are hip distance apart and parallel. Take a deep breath.

  4. Relax your head and gaze toward the navel. With straight legs, each heel should come as close as possible to being flat on the yoga mat.

  5. If the spine is rounded at all, bend your knees to bring it into the correct alignment: it is important that the spine lengthens first.

  6. Hold the posture while taking deep, full breaths.

  7. On an exhalation, release each foot and each knee and come out of the down dog. Return to a resting pose like tabletop position or child's pose on the yoga mat.

Warrior Pose

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (5)

  1. Stand up straight in mountain pose with your feet hip-distance apart and your arms by the sides of your body. Breathe deeply and evenly, bringing your mind to the present moment.

  2. Separate your legs wide apart at a distance of at least three to four feet.

  3. Turn your right foot out at 90 degrees and your left foot in at 15 degrees, or keep it straight with your toes pointing forward.

  4. Align the heel of your right foot with the center of your left foot.

  5. Turn your upper body to the right.

  6. Breathe in and reach your arms up, keeping your hands shoulder-distance apart and your palms facing each other. Keep your gaze forward. You may bring your palms together and look up at your thumbs.

  7. Exhale, and with your arms raised, bend your right knee and bring your right thigh parallel to the floor, feeling the stretch in your thigh and hip.

  8. Keep your right knee above your right ankle. Make sure that the knee does not extend beyond the ankle. Keep the back foot grounded and the back leg straight without bending at the left knee.

  9. Stay in the pose for about five to ten breaths.

  10. Breathing in, straighten your right knee. Breathing out, bring your arms down.

  11. Repeat the pose on the other side.

Triangle Pose

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  1. Start by standing in mountain pose facing the long edge of your yoga mat. Separate your feet 3-4 feet apart.

  2. Turn your right foot out 90 degrees and your left foot in 15 degrees, or you can have your left foot facing forward.

  3. Align the center of your right heel with the center of the arch of your left foot.

  4. Keep your weight equally balanced between both feet.

  5. Breathing in, extend your arms parallel to the floor at shoulder height.

  6. Breathing out, extend your upper body on the right side. Breathe in and as you exhale, fold at your right hip, bending your body to the right and lowering it down. Let your head, chest, and pelvis face forward. Raise your left arm straight up into the air, and extend your right arm down towards the floor. Keep the left shoulder stacked above the right shoulder.

  7. Comfortably rest your right hand on the shin, ankle, or knee of your right leg, or on the yoga mat. Stretch your left arm toward the ceiling in line with the tops of your shoulders. Keep your head in a neutral position, or turn it to the left, with eyes gazing softly at the left palm.

  8. Make sure that your body is bent sideways and not backward or forward. Tilt the pelvis backward if necessary to keep it from drifting forward on your extended side. Open your upper body to the sky.

  9. Focus your gaze, and stay in triangle pose for 5-10 breaths.

  10. As you inhale, come up, bringing your arms down to your sides.

  11. Repeat the triangle pose on the opposite side, extending your right arm up and your left hand down.

Tree Pose

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (7)

  1. Stand tall in the mountain pose with your arms relaxed by your sides.

  2. Bend your right knee and place your right foot high up on your left thigh. The sole of your right foot should be placed firmly against your left inner thigh (not your knee).

  3. Make sure that your standing leg (left leg) is straight. Find your balance.

  4. Once you feel steady, take a deep breath in and bring your palms together in Namaste (prayer pose) at your chest.

  5. Look straight in front of you and gently focus your gaze on an unmoving object.

  6. Ensure that your spine is straight, and continue breathing deeply. Hold the pose for five to ten breaths.

  7. On a slow exhalation, gently bring your hands down to your sides.

  8. Gently bring your right foot to the ground and return to mountain pose.

  9. Repeat on the other side.

Bridge Pose

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (8)

  1. To begin, lie on your back.

  2. Bend your knees so that your feet are flat on the floor in a parallel position in line with your sitting bones, about a foot’s distance away from your hips.

  3. Place your arms by your sides with your palms facing down.

  4. As you inhale, begin to roll your spine upward as you lift your hips toward the sky. Support the weight of your body through your feet, ankles, and thighs rooting down into the ground.

  5. Squeeze your buttocks to keep a lift through your hips and keep your legs in a parallel position without collapsing or splaying outward.

  6. Maintain an easy breath as you strengthen your body in this pose.

  7. Hold the posture for 1-2 minutes and then release on an exhalation.

Butterfly Pose

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (9)

  1. Start in a seated position with your spine erect and legs spread straight out.

  2. Bend your knees, and bring your feet towards your pelvis.

  3. The soles of your feet should touch each other.

  4. Grab your feet tightly with your hands (you may place your hands underneath your feet for support).

  5. Make an effort to bring your heels as close to your groin as possible without straining.

  6. Take a deep breath in and while breathing out, fold forward and press your thighs and knees down toward the floor.

  7. Make a gentle effort to keep pressing your thighs downward.

  8. Start flapping both of your legs up and down like the wings of a butterfly.

  9. Start slow, and gradually increase the speed, continue to breathe normally.

  10. Slow down and take a deep breath in, and as you exhale, bend forward, keeping your chin up with a straight spine.

  11. Press your elbows on your thighs or your knees, pushing your knees and thighs closer to the floor.

  12. Feel the stretch in your inner thighs, and take long, deep breaths, relaxing the muscles more and more.

  13. Take a deep breath in and bring the torso up.

  14. As you exhale, gently release the posture.

  15. Straighten the legs out in front of you and relax.

Seated Forward Bend

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (10)

  1. Sit cross-legged or in lotus or half-lotus.

  2. Bring the hands behind your back.

  3. Place the right hand in the Adi mudra position, where the thumb turns across the center of the palm, the tip of the thumb rests at the base of the pinky finger, and all four fingers bend to form a fist that covers the thumb.

  4. With the left hand, loosely grasp the right wrist.

  5. Allow both hands to rest on the lower back.

  6. Bend forward as far as you can, resting your forehead comfortably on the floor, a pillow, or a block if possible.

  7. Feel the stretch in the lower back muscles.

  8. Breathe in and slowly bring your body out of the posture, one vertebra at a time, head and neck coming up last. Release the hands once your spine is erect again.

Child’s Pose

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (11)

  1. Sit on your heels and bend forward and lower your forehead to the floor.

  2. Keep your arms alongside your body with your hands on the floor, palms facing up. (If this is not comfortable, you can place one fist on top of the other and rest your forehead on them).

  3. Keep breathing.

  4. Slowly raise your abdomen, uncurling your spine vertebrae by vertebrae, and come up to sit on your heels.

Adamantine Pose (Vajrasana or diamond pose)

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (12)

  1. From a sitting position on your yoga mat, fold your right leg and your left leg underneath you.

  2. Gently sit your hips down onto your heels, with your toes pointing behind you, and your big toes touching.

  3. Sit with your spine erect and your buttocks resting in the pit formed by your parted heels.

  4. Keep your chin parallel to the floor.

  5. With the arms relaxed, place your palms face-up on your thighs.

  6. This pose is ideal for breathing exercises like bellows breath.

  7. To come out of the pose gently straighten your legs one at a time.

Corpse Pose

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (13)

  1. Lie down flat on your back on top of your mat with your legs straight.You can use a folded blanket or a small pillow under your neck or knees if needed to make your entire body completely relaxed and comfortable.

  2. Keep your legs spread comfortably about hip-width apart, and let your feet, knees, and toes relax completely (your feet may rotate slightly outward).Close your eyes.

  3. Place your arms alongside your body with your palms facing upward. Let your hands and fingers relax. Gently tuck your shoulder blades so they are flat on your mat, and let the chest softly open up.

  4. Simply be with your body and breath. Take a couple of deep, slow breaths, becoming aware of your chest and abdomen rising and falling.After a few breaths like this, begin to breathe normally. Relax and feel as though your whole body is melting into the earth beneath you. Completely surrender and let go. Keep your body totally still for a few minutes.

  5. Without much effort, scan the entire body, taking your awareness to different body parts one by one. Slowly release tension from your feet, calves, knees, thighs, pelvis, hips, abdomen, chest, shoulders, left arm and hand, right arm and hand, neck, face, tongue, head, and scalp.

  6. As you scan your body, feel yourself sinking deeper and deeper into relaxation. In the beginning, your mind may wander, but it will slowly settle down into stillness.

  7. Remain still for at least 5 to 10 minutes.

  8. To begin to come out of the corpse pose, keep your eyes closed and gently wiggle your fingers and toes.

  9. Slowly roll onto your right side, and rest in that position for a few moments.

  10. Using the support of your right hand, gently come up into a seated position.

  11. Keep your eyes closed, and take a few deep breaths in and out as you gradually become aware of your environment and body. When you feel complete, slowly and gently open your eyes. This is a great time to practice pranayama and meditation.


Intermediate Poses

When you feel you are ready to try more challenging postures, these asanas are also great for beginning yoga depending on your health, just remember not to strain and keep breathing!

Upward-Facing Dog
Bow Pose
Camel Pose
Eagle Pose
Lotus Pose
Reverse Prayer Pose


Advanced Yoga Poses

When you’re ready to advance on this yogic journey, here are a few asanas to take you to the next level. As always, be mindful of what your body is capable of and BREATHE!

Boat Pose
Fish Pose
Upward Plank Pose
Wheel Pose
Shoulder Stand

For more yoga postures for all levels, browse our library of 50 Yoga Postures for Health, Flexibility, and Inner Strength.

Yoga poses for beginners: Benefits and tips

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (14)

Benefits

Unlike stretching, the benefits of a yoga practice extend beyond only physical fitness. Yoga practice involves a mind-body connection. When we do yoga asanas, we connect the movement and stretching of the body to the rhythm of the breath and to the state of the mind.

Comprehensive Guide to Yoga Poses for Beginners: From Basic to Advanced (2024)

FAQs

How do I go from beginner to advanced yoga? ›

How to Move from Beginner to Intermediate & Advanced in Yoga
  1. Be Consistent. The first step in moving up from beginner's yoga to intermediate classes is to be on your yoga mat consistently. ...
  2. Try New Things. ...
  3. Ask Questions. ...
  4. Build Your Core Strength. ...
  5. Be Patient with Yourself. ...
  6. Breathwork. ...
  7. Meditate.
Feb 4, 2020

Is there an order to yoga poses? ›

Start with gentle stretching before warming up with some standing postures or sun salutations. Move into deeper poses, such as backbends and hamstring stretches, once you are fully warm. End the practice by cooling down with some relaxing poses (such as forward bends or gentle twists) before settling into savasana.

How long does it take to go from beginner to advanced yoga? ›

This might be months or years as you practice and improve the various components, including strength, flexibility, and mindfulness. Ultimately, duration on its own doesn't mean much without frequent, focused, and consistent practice.

What should a beginner of yoga learn first? ›

Start with postures, or yoga asanas, such as downward-facing dog, child's pose, and savasana. In each pose, focus on pressing your hands or feet into the floor, lengthening your spine, and relaxing your hips.

How do you know what level you are in yoga? ›

Class Levels Defined
  1. Level 1 - Beginner. Level 1 classes are designed for those who have had no previous exposure to yoga, but are eager to learn and start experiencing the amazing benefits of a yoga practice. ...
  2. Level 2 - Experienced Beginner. ...
  3. Level 3 - Intermediate. ...
  4. Level 4 - Advanced-Intermediate. ...
  5. All Levels.

What is the most advanced form of yoga? ›

Ashtanga Yoga

The Path: The most dynamic and vigorous form of yoga, Ashtanga approaches yoga with a continuous flow of movement. Top athletes who seek a more intense workout enjoy this form of yoga, sometimes called vinyasa or power yoga.

What are the 5 sequences of a yoga class? ›

An Introduction to Yoga Sequences
  • Opening.
  • Warm up.
  • Standing poses.
  • Peak pose(s)
  • Floor poses.
  • Cool down.
  • Final relaxation, or Savasana.
Nov 17, 2023

What is the king of all yoga poses? ›

Shirshasana (Sanskrit: शीर्षासन, IAST: śīrṣāsana) Salamba Shirshasana, or Yoga Headstand is an inverted asana in modern yoga as exercise; it was described as both an asana and a mudra in classical hatha yoga, under different names. It has been called the king of all asanas.

What is the sequence of 12 yoga poses called? ›

Surya Namaskar also known as Sun Salute or Salute to the Sun, is an all-time favorite of many yogis. It is a very systematic technique which combines the twelve asanas in a yoga sequence.

How many times a week should a beginner do yoga? ›

As a beginner, you can start off by doing yoga 2 or 3 times a week and work up to 5, if it feels right. And over time, depending on your needs and goals, the frequency with which you do yoga may change.

What happens to your body when you start doing yoga? ›

Yoga improves strength, balance and flexibility.

Slow movements and deep breathing increase blood flow and warm up muscles, while holding a pose can build strength. Balance on one foot, while holding the other foot to your calf or above the knee (but never on the knee) at a right angle.

How many times a day should a beginner do yoga? ›

If you're new to yoga, starting with a gentle approach is important. Begin with no more than two or three sessions a week. This allows your body to get used to new movements and helps you focus on mastering the basics, like breathing techniques and pose alignments.

How do you structure a beginners yoga class? ›

  1. Pick just one philosophical aspect to share per class. ...
  2. Teach them how to breathe. ...
  3. Stick to a short 60 minute class. ...
  4. Demonstrate as little as possible to cultivate that inner awareness from the beginning. ...
  5. Keep the savasana short and guided.

How long should a beginner yoga session be? ›

Yoga is a low-impact exercise that can help burn calories and reduce stress. You can commit to a consistent routine and see results faster by doing yoga daily. Daily sessions of at least 30 minutes are a great way to start. Vinyasa-style classes are the best for weight loss.

How do I prepare my body for yoga? ›

Before The Practice

Yogic practice should be done on an empty stomach or light stomach. Consume small amount of honey in lukewarm water if you feel weak. Bladder and bowels should be empty before starting Yogic practices. A mattress, Yoga mat, durrie or folded blanket should be used for the practice.

How do I take my yoga practice to the next level? ›

You can try out different yoga styles, advance your teaching and sequencing through workshops, read more philosophy and yoga postural books, go on a meditation retreat or take another yoga training course.

What are the 8 stages of yoga? ›

What are the eight limbs of yoga?
  • Yamas. Yamas are the principles that teach us how to treat others and the world around us. ...
  • Niyamas. Niyamas are the standards by which we should practice self-discipline. ...
  • Asana. Asana is the practice of the yoga postures. ...
  • Pranayama. ...
  • Pratyahara. ...
  • Dharana. ...
  • Dhyana. ...
  • Samadhi.
Jul 7, 2021

How do I turn my yoga into a career? ›

Follow these steps to become a yoga teacher:
  1. Learn yoga. ...
  2. Complete a training course. ...
  3. Get registered. ...
  4. Become certified in CPR. ...
  5. Decide what type of yoga teacher you want to be. ...
  6. Begin teaching classes. ...
  7. Maintain certifications.
Sep 29, 2023

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