15 People interested Vipassana Island I Insight into the nature of all things I Meditation weekend near Cologne Leverkusen, Germany $329 / 3 Days
12 People interested Vipassana Island I Insight into the nature of all things I Meditation weekend near Dénia Dénia, Spain $199 / 3 Days
18 People interested 3-5 days of yoga, meditation, energy work | Deluxe Gourmet SPA Awards Hotel | Bregenzerwald, near Switzerland Mellau, Austria $1,491 / 4 Days 5.0
14 People interested (R)TIME OUT WITH HORSES - self-awareness and "being conscious" Wiesenburg/Mark, Germany $1,046 / 3 Days 5.0
12 People interested 7-DAY YOGA RETREAT featuring hiking, communication workshops, personal development, a cooking class, fun, and depth! Saint Jeannet, France $1,176 / 7 Days 4.9
11 People interested Individual retreat - Your time in essence - with and without mentoring Grebs-Niendorf, Germany $387 / 4 Days 5.0
13 People interested Yoga, meditation, energetics, thermal spa | The yoga break you're really longing for | Switzerland St. Margrethen, Switzerland $892 / 3 Days 5.0
8 People interested Yoga and hiking in the beautiful Algarve - on paradisiacal paths into the here and now Alvor, Portugal $1,292 / 8 Days 5.0
11 People interested FIND YOUR POWER - A Retreat for Voice, Soul, and Radiance / TUSCANY Aramo, Italy $635 $571 Frühbucher / 5 Days 5.0
What Vipassana is Vipassana comes from Pali and means insight or clear seeing. It is a Buddhist meditation technique from the Theravada tradition, not a form of yoga. In practice you direct attention systematically to bodily sensations: pressure, warmth, tingling, tension. You observe these sensations without judgment and without trying to change them. According to the tradition, this observation gives rise to insight into the impermanence of inner states. The method is more than 2500 years old and rooted in Buddhist tradition. Today it exists in different forms. There are strict traditional lineages that only sit and observe. There are Buddhist monastery formats that combine Vipassana with teaching talks and silent phases. And there are Western adaptations that pair the method with yoga, MBSR or breathwork. MBSR stands for Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, a secular eight-week program that translates Vipassana elements into a clinical framework. The catalogue here reflects this range. Some programs name Vipassana explicitly in the title, for example as a silent retreat in Vipassana tradition. Other retreats use the method as a foundation and combine it with heart yoga, ZEN silent courses or MBSR compact formats. Purely traditional Vipassana courses from a single school are less common here than mixed formats in which Vipassana is a load-bearing element alongside yoga, ZEN or MBSR. This has an upside: if you are new to meditation, you find easier entry points than the traditional ten-day silence. Anyone who is looking for Vipassana as a pure lineage practice should read each provider's daily schedule and method description carefully before booking.
Daily structure of a Vipassana retreat A day in a Vipassana-oriented retreat follows a clear rhythm of sitting phases, walking meditation and shared meals. The programs in the catalogue run for three, four, five, seven or ten days. On average it is five days. The classical ten-day format does occur but is not the norm here. A typical day starts early, often between six and seven in the morning. After a first sitting phase of 45 to 60 minutes there is a simple breakfast. In the morning and afternoon, sitting meditation and walking meditation alternate in blocks of 30 to 60 minutes. In total the formal practice time adds up to four to eight hours per day, depending on the provider and format. Meals are taken in silence. Most houses serve vegetarian food, with lunch as the main meal. The evening brings either a short teaching talk or another sitting phase, then night rest. Silence is part of almost every format but varies in strictness. The ten-day silent retreat in Vipassana tradition holds Noble Silence throughout, with no conversation, reading or writing. Shorter compact formats such as the seven-day MBSR course or the four-day workshop include teaching talks and reflection rounds. If you join such a format for the first time, the three- to five-day programs in the catalogue are a realistic entry length.
Who a Vipassana retreat suits Vipassana is a body-based meditation method that places real demands on sitting endurance and concentration. If you have ever consciously sat for a full hour, you know the sensations of aching knees, wandering thoughts and the urge to stand up. That experience is part of the practice. In retreat format it is extended to four to eight hours of practice per day. Beginners are well served by shorter formats of three to five days. The catalogue includes weekend and compact courses that introduce Vipassana as a method, often combined with yoga or breathwork. These mixed formats reduce the physical strain and help you meet the unfamiliar silence. Experienced practitioners benefit from longer silent retreats of seven to ten days that allow continuous sitting practice and deeper concentration. Physically, a Vipassana retreat is manageable if longer sitting on a cushion, bench or chair is possible without strong pain. Most houses provide cushions, kneeling benches and chairs. If you have chronic back or knee issues, check with the provider before booking. Mentally, an intensive silent retreat requires a stable baseline. If you are going through acute grief, a fresh separation or active burnout, you rarely find recovery in a silent format. The method surfaces unconscious material without therapeutic support. In such phases, formats that include yoga, teaching conversations or an MBSR structure are a better fit. When in doubt, a short pre-call with the provider clarifies whether the format is appropriate.
Where and how to book The Vipassana retreats in the catalogue cluster around a few hubs. The densest single location is Mondsee in Upper Austria. A retreat house there offers ZEN and silent courses, often in Vipassana tradition or with Vipassana components, plus MBSR compact courses, dark retreats and Sufi formats with a meditative base. In Germany, programs run in the Sauerland (Bestwig), in North Rhine-Westphalia (Horn-Bad Meinberg, Leverkusen) and in Rhineland-Palatinate (Vallendar). International retreats include Spain (Dénia) and Bali (Buleleng). The 15 programs range from €170 EUR for a three-day format to €2.960 EUR for longer silent and special formats. On average the price sits at €738 EUR including accommodation and meals. Availability is best in the shoulder seasons of spring and autumn. Popular dates around Christmas, New Year or Pentecost are often booked out months in advance. If you are flexible, three- to five-day formats remain accessible at shorter notice. Three filters help most before booking. First, the exact method: pure Vipassana style or mixed format with yoga, MBSR or ZEN. Second, the depth of silence, from continuous Noble Silence to structured teaching talks. Third, location and travel, since many houses sit in remote settings. Applying these three filters reliably narrows the choice to a fitting retreat.