9 People interested Intensive week: feel your health holistically Altenfelden, Austria $1,987 / 8 Days
6 People interested PILATES Body Balance inkl. Hotel Neumarkt in der Steiermark, Austria $1,540 / 8 Days 5.0
8 People interested Pilates meets yoga – strength, posture, and inner balance Montuïri, Spain $1,858 / 8 Days
10 People interested Pilates Bodymotion - body awareness with mindfulness in the Mühlviertel region Altenfelden, Austria $976 / 5 Days 4.0
11 People interested Retreat in Sicily - Time for Yourself Sant'Agata di Militello, Italy $1,701 / 6 Days
11 People interested Flow & Grow. Power, Waves & Balance - Yoga retreat with Tilla Schmitz at Goodtimes Surfcamp Gelfa, Portugal $1,292 / 8 Days
9 People interested ♡ Yoga or Pilates & Fitness: Your time to relax in Ibiza, in German, with ♡ (all levels) Ibiza, Spain $1,146 / 7 Days
5 People interested Nature Heals – Emotional Well-being & Mindfulness in Mallorca Montuïri, Spain $1,858 / 8 Days
13 People interested In your own flow of movement with yoga, Pilates, and dance Aschau im Chiemgau, Germany $664 / 4 Days
11 People interested Pilates & yoga retreat - true strength comes from the center Altenfelden, Austria $717 / 4 Days
15 People interested 8-day Pilates and wellness vacation in northern Tenerife Puerto de la Cruz, Spain $2,487 / 8 Days
9 People interested 5-day Pilates and wellness vacation in northern Tenerife Puerto de la Cruz, Spain $1,687 / 5 Days
What sets a pilates retreat apart from a studio class A pilates retreat is not a 60-minute studio class with a hotel attached. It is a continuous break, with pilates carrying the rhythm of the day, usually four to seven days in a quiet setting, two sessions per day, and breaks that matter as much as the practice itself. An alert morning session, a calmer sequence in the afternoon, and hours in between with no schedule pressing. What often still sits in your shoulders an hour after class at home loosens up across the whole day on a retreat, and the steadier posture does not vanish the moment you leave the studio. In the Retreat Urlaub catalogue the programmes run about five days on average, with the typical frame between four days and a full week. Most retreats are set up as group formats for eight to fourteen guests on the mat, a small number of venues add reformer work, a sliding carriage with spring resistance used to train stability and deep musculature with precise load. There are 22 pilates retreats currently bookable. Every programme page shows you the schedule, the trainer, the room type and the meal plan in detail.
What a typical day at a pilates retreat looks like Programmes differ in detail, but the daily frame at most retreat houses follows a similar pattern. Your day starts with a mat-based pilates session, often 60 to 75 minutes, set up calmly and focused on breathing, alignment and the conscious activation of the centre, the deep abdominal and back muscles known in the pilates tradition as the powerhouse. Breakfast follows, often vegetarian or built around fresh, light food. Late morning is often free, frequently used for a walk in the surrounding area. Around the Mühlviertel region in Austria or near the finca venues on Mallorca, that break translates straight into a hike. Around midday or in the early afternoon some programmes schedule an additional unit, for example fascia work to support tissue regeneration or a mindfulness sequence. The late afternoon brings your second pilates session. It tends to be more dynamic than the morning practice and uses wider movement ranges. After dinner the evening is either free or includes one extra element such as a guided meditation or a short stretching sequence to wind down. About half of the programmes in the catalogue include a wellness-oriented element, such as a massage during the stay. Group sizes typically fall between eight and fourteen guests. You will find the exact schedule, the meal plan and the room arrangement listed on each programme page, which lets you set realistic expectations before booking.
Methods and equipment in the catalogue Pilates is taught in different forms, and the programmes in the catalogue reflect that range. The clear focus is mat pilates, the classical form practised on the mat without machinery, where your body weight and controlled movement set the load. This form is the backbone of nearly all programmes, it is straightforward to schedule, group-friendly and adaptable to mixed levels. A small number of venues add machine pilates on the reformer. The reformer is a sliding carriage with springs that create resistance through a moving platform, so stability and deep musculature can be trained with high precision. In the current catalogue this format is offered mainly in one Tenerife-based programme, where reformer and mat sessions are combined. A second strand are programmes that combine pilates with other movement forms. Pilates programmes with complementary yoga sequences are particularly common, about ten of the available programmes integrate such yoga units, often as a gentle morning practice or as a calm element in the evening. Three programmes build meditation into the daily structure, four include hikes or mindful walking as a fixed element. Breathing techniques from the pilates tradition, where focused chest and lateral breathing guides the movement flow, are named explicitly in several programmes. Which method fits you depends on the priority: a deep dive into pure mat-based pilates, pilates practice complemented by yoga or meditation for a broader daily arc, or the rarer, training-heavy variant with reformer sessions.