Recommendation 16 People interested Soul & Yin Yoga, Mindfulness, Meditation at the KLOSTER (Eifel) - available as a preventive course Kall, Germany $282 / 3 Days 4.9
Recommendation 5 People interested Find Peace – Yoga, Meditation, Nature, Energy Healing | PREMIUM 4*S All-Inclusive in the Heart of Vorarlberg Brand, Austria $1,940 / 5 Days 5.0
Recommendation 8 People interested YOGA meets YOU – Detox and energy at the Deluxe Seehotel am Kaiserstrand, Lake Constance Lochau, Austria $1,293 / 5 Days
Recommendation 11 People interested YOGA TRIP TO ATTERSEE - DISCOVER THE UNIQUE YOGAWALK® METHOD SEEWALCHEN, Austria $1,399 / 4 Days
13 People interested THE POWER OF CALM - Soul & Relax Yin Yoga, Mind Detox & Hiking - at the monastery (Eifel) Kall, Germany $464 / 5 Days 4.7
14 People interested Kloster Auszeit (Münsterland): Soul & Yin Yoga, Mindfulness, Meditation – Cultivating Inner Peace Glandorf, Germany $288 / 3 Days
12 People interested Monastery Retreat: Mind Detox with Qigong, Mindfulness, Meditation & Hiking (with health insurance coverage) Kall, Germany $558 / 6 Days
6 People interested Soul & Yin Yoga, Hiking, Inner Harmony & Peace of Mind Kall, Germany $382 / 4 Days 5.0
9 People interested Winter in Sweden – Yoga, the Northern Lights, and Husky Adventures Ranea, Sweden $2,034 / 8 Days 5.0
7 People interested Soul & Yin Yoga - for more lightness & joie de vivre in the idyllic Münsterland region Steinfurt, Germany $299 / 3 Days 5.0
4 People interested Monastery time-out yoga/mindfulness/stress management - health insurance prevention subsidy Kall, Germany $276 / 3 Days
15 People interested 💫 Kundalini Awakening – Unleash Your Inner Energy Potential 🔥 Horn-Bad Meinberg, Germany $205 / 3 Days 5.0
13 People interested 3 or 4 days of yoga at the monastery: Strength for the body & peace for the mind Zell am Main, Germany $622 / 3 Days 4.9
10 People interested Spring, yoga, and warm encounters in the Mühlviertel region Altenfelden, Austria $423 / 3 Days 5.0
12 People interested LIVE YOUR S.E.L.F. Special: 2-Week Psychological Retreat with Coaching, Breathwork, and Yoga in Bali Bondalem, Indonesia $5,739 / 14 Days
12 People interested 5 Days of Yoga on Norderney – Between Wind and Open Spaces (Certified Prevention Course) Norderney, Germany $388 / 6 Days
10 People interested Soul & Yin Yoga/Mindfulness/Meditation—at the monastery (Münsterland)—strengthen your inner peace Warendorf, Germany $288 / 3 Days
11 People interested Journey to yourself Healing on all levels Bentota, Sri Lanka $2,314 / 17 Days 5.0
12 People interested Yoga and trekking in the desert M'Hamid el Ghizlane, Morocco $1,693 / 8 Days 5.0
What sets a yoga retreat apart from a yoga class A yoga retreat is not two yoga sessions plus a hotel stay. It is a deliberate break from daily routine, usually three to seven days in a quiet setting, with a practice that runs through the whole day instead of being squeezed into a single evening slot at a studio. That full-day rhythm is where the actual effect comes from. The yoga sessions form the structure, but the shift happens in the spaces between them. A shared meal without phones, quiet time between sessions, room to walk, read or simply do nothing. Anyone who has come home after three days of retreat knows the feeling that a single yoga class in a studio cannot produce. The Retreat Urlaub catalogue covers a wide range of formats. Most programmes run three to seven days, typically about five days. Compact weekend retreats from Friday evening to Sunday are common, full yoga weeks with a fixed daily schedule are equally popular, and a smaller share of trips reaches into longer international stays. Venues range from a large yoga ashram in North Rhine-Westphalia and monastery programmes in the Eifel region to smaller yoga farms in Bavaria and Upper Austria. The overview above lists the full selection, filterable by country, federal state and duration. There are currently 642 yoga retreats bookable. Each programme description shows the style taught, the teacher, the room type and the meal plan.
What a typical day at a yoga retreat looks like Programmes differ in detail, but the daily flow at most retreat houses follows a similar frame. The day starts early, often between six and seven in the morning, with a quiet first practice of 75 to 90 minutes. This opening session is meditative and meant to ease the body into the day rather than push it. Breakfast follows, mostly vegetarian or vegan. Some hosts keep the morning meal silent on purpose, others leave space for conversation. The late morning is usually free for walks, reading or a short rest. Around midday or in the early afternoon many retreats schedule a workshop or a focused session on one topic. Common topics include pranayama, the breath techniques drawn from the yoga tradition, meditation, or anatomy applied to the practice. The late afternoon brings the second yoga session. It tends to be more dynamic than the morning practice, often built around flowing sequences. After dinner the evening is either free or includes one extra element such as a sound journey, a mantra round or a short yin session to wind down. Yin yoga uses long-held postures of two to five minutes and works on the connective tissue, leaving the body settled before sleep. Group sizes typically range between eight and fourteen guests. The exact schedule, the meal plan and the room arrangement are described in detail on each programme page, which lets every guest set realistic expectations before booking.
Who a yoga retreat is suitable for, from beginners to experienced A yoga retreat is not reserved for experienced yogis. A large share of the programmes in the catalogue are open to beginners. Examples include yoga and meditation introductory weekends at the ashram in Horn-Bad Meinberg, retreats at Kloster Steinfeld monastery in the Eifel region, and weekend formats at small yoga farms in the Mühlviertel area in Upper Austria. These houses work at a calm pace, with clear instruction and postures that are accessible without prior experience. People who have practiced regularly for one or two years will find suitable formats as well. Longer yoga weeks with a thematic focus, pranayama deepening courses, or seven-day meditation and yoga combinations are aimed at practitioners who want to go deeper without committing to a full teacher training. A pranayama deepening course focuses on the breathing techniques of the yoga tradition and assumes a steady, regular practice. For solo travellers, yoga retreats are among the most accessible travel formats available. A large share of guests arrive alone, single rooms are bookable at most houses, and the fixed group rhythm creates contact almost on its own. Couples and small groups of friends often book together as well. Instruction language in German-speaking countries is mostly German, while international destinations are often taught in English depending on the host. Anyone going through a physically demanding phase, pregnant guests, or those with acute health issues should contact the host before booking. Most houses are very open about whether a given programme is the right fit at the moment.
Yoga styles and focal points in the catalogue Yoga is not a single discipline, and the range of styles on Retreat Urlaub reflects that. Several focal points appear particularly often in the programme titles. Meditation combined with yoga is by far the most widely represented focus, especially in the programmes of the ashram in Horn-Bad Meinberg and in retreats hosted by the Eifel monasteries. Asana practice, breath work and silent sitting flow into each other. A typical seven-day programme weaves morning meditation, yoga sessions in the late morning and afternoon, and a guided evening meditation into a coherent rhythm. Hatha and Vinyasa form the two classical yoga styles in the catalogue. Hatha describes a slower practice with longer-held postures and works well for beginners and experienced practitioners alike. Vinyasa stands for flowing sequences where every movement is paired with one breath, and is physically more demanding. Both appear on their own and inside combination programmes that pair yoga with hiking or meditation. Pranayama, the targeted breath work of the yoga tradition, appears in many programmes as a deepening element. Pranayama literally means control of the life force and uses breathing techniques such as alternate-nostril breathing or extended exhalation. Kundalini yoga works heavily with breath, mantras and dynamic movement sequences and is more meditative than most newcomers expect. Yin yoga rounds out the picture as a calm complement defined by long-held postures of two to five minutes, often placed as an evening session after physically demanding daytime sessions. Pilates complements selected yoga programmes as a second movement pillar with a focus on core stability.