Best Site for Yoga

Summary

The best site for yoga is Yoga With Adriene — genuinely free, comprehensive, and the most-watched yoga channel ever for valid reasons. Down Dog is the best app-based option with strong customization and a generous free tier. Glo is the right pick for serious students wanting class variety and respected teachers. Alo Moves is the polished commercial option backed by the Alo Yoga apparel brand. Most listicles default to paid apps with affiliate revenue; we lead with Yoga With Adriene because the quality genuinely matches paid options.

Top 5 at a glance

Best Site for Yoga — ranked comparison
#SiteBest forPrice
1 Yoga With Adriene Free comprehensive yoga from the most-watched yoga teacher online Free; donation-supported plus Find What Feels Good paid community
2 Down Dog Customizable yoga app with generous free tier Free tier with limits; paid Membership
3 Glo Serious students wanting class variety from respected teachers Subscription pricing
4 Alo Moves Polished commercial option from the Alo Yoga apparel brand Subscription pricing
5 Asana Rebel Yoga-fitness hybrid for users wanting workout intensity Subscription pricing

Detailed rankings

#1

Yoga With Adriene

Free comprehensive yoga from the most-watched yoga teacher online

The default for online yoga. The free model is real and the quality matches paid alternatives.

Pros

  • Genuinely free with massive video library
  • Adriene Mishler is an accessible teacher with broad following
  • Monthly themed practice schedules included
  • Strong for beginners through advanced

Cons

  • YouTube format — ads unless you have YouTube Premium
  • Less suited for users who want strict structure
  • Single-teacher style — variety from other teachers requires other sources

Price: Free; donation-supported plus Find What Feels Good paid community

Sources: yogawithadriene.com, www.youtube.com

Visit Yoga With Adriene →

#2

Down Dog

Customizable yoga app with generous free tier

The right pick when customization matters and you want app-based practice rather than YouTube videos.

Pros

  • Generative practice — each class generated based on your preferences
  • Customize duration, level, focus, music, and instructor voice
  • Generous free tier
  • Multiple apps in the Down Dog family covering meditation, HIIT, prenatal

Cons

  • Generated practice can feel less curated than instructor-led
  • Free tier limits restrict daily use
  • Subscription cost adds up

Price: Free tier with limits; paid Membership

Sources: www.downdogapp.com

Visit Down Dog →

#3

Glo

Serious students wanting class variety from respected teachers

The right pick for committed students who want depth across teachers and styles.

Pros

  • Multiple respected teachers across yoga styles
  • Strong meditation and Pilates content alongside yoga
  • Class variety for serious students
  • Reasonable monthly subscription

Cons

  • Subscription required
  • Less suited for casual practitioners
  • Less marketing presence than competitors

Price: Subscription pricing

Sources: www.glo.com

Visit Glo →

#4

Alo Moves

Polished commercial option from the Alo Yoga apparel brand

Functional with strong production. Yoga With Adriene delivers comparable practice quality for free.

Pros

  • Polished production quality
  • Multiple teachers and styles
  • Tied to Alo Yoga brand for consistent aesthetic
  • Free trial period

Cons

  • Subscription required after trial
  • Brand-marketing channel for Alo Yoga products
  • Pricing climbs

Price: Subscription pricing

Sources: www.alomoves.com

Visit Alo Moves →

#5

Asana Rebel

Yoga-fitness hybrid for users wanting workout intensity

The right pick for users specifically wanting yoga-fitness fusion. Traditional yoga practitioners are better served by the alternatives above.

Pros

  • Yoga-fitness hybrid approach
  • Strong for users wanting workout intensity alongside flexibility
  • Polished app
  • Multiple program tracks

Cons

  • Less suited for traditional yoga practice
  • Subscription only
  • Marketing-heavy

Price: Subscription pricing

Sources: asanarebel.com

Visit Asana Rebel →

How we chose

  • Free tier completeness for ongoing practice.
  • Teacher quality and depth of instruction.
  • Class variety — different styles, durations, focus areas.
  • Personalization for level and goals.
  • Privacy of practice data.
  • Honest representation of physical capability requirements.

Frequently asked questions

Can I really learn yoga from YouTube?

Yes for most levels and styles. Yoga With Adriene specifically has trained millions of practitioners through home practice. The limitation is that YouTube can't correct alignment — for users with injuries or specific concerns, in-person classes remain valuable. For general home practice, the free options are sufficient.

Should I take in-person classes too?

Periodically yes if budget allows. Direct alignment feedback from a teacher catches issues that home practice can develop over time. The pattern of home practice plus periodic in-person classes works well for many committed practitioners.

What about Peloton's yoga content?

Peloton has expanded into yoga and meditation alongside its cycling and running content. Quality is reasonable but the platform is best for users who already pay for the broader Peloton subscription. For yoga-only, dedicated platforms above are more compelling.

Is paid yoga worth it?

Depends on what you want. For variety across teachers and styles, paid platforms add value. For continuous practice with one trusted teacher, Yoga With Adriene free is sufficient. Many practitioners combine — free for daily practice, paid for occasional variety.

What about yoga retreats and intensive workshops?

Different category — for serious practitioners who want immersive experience and direct teacher interaction. Online platforms don't replace this. Build home practice first, attend retreats to deepen specific aspects you can't address alone.