Yes, $500 a session is real. The number is also the last thing to think about.
A yoga teacher really can earn $500 for a single session working with an athlete. No studio required, and no waiting to be added to someone else’s class schedule. In my latest video I walk through how that number works, why athletes are willing to pay it, and the question you have to answer before any of the math lands.
If you’ve ever stood a couple of blocks from a college athletic department or a masters swim team and thought “I could help those athletes,” then talked yourself out of it, this one is for you.
Lead with intent, not the rate
One line from my Professional Yoga Teacher’s Handbook matters more than any pricing tip: “Professionalism isn’t a function of hours or income—it’s a function of your intent.”
Hours don’t make you professional. Income doesn’t either. Your intent does: your intent to show up prepared, to honor your scope of practice, and to charge in a way that respects both your training and the athlete in front of you. Most teachers hear “$500 a session” and skip straight to “how do I get there.” That’s the wrong order. Build a private athlete practice rooted in intent, and the rate becomes a natural result of the value you deliver.
Why athletes pay premium
Athletes don’t need another workout. They need three things their training plan doesn’t give them: recovery, balance, and mental training. (For more on this, see what athletes actually want from yoga.)
When a college football team paid me to come in weekly for a season, they weren’t paying for a sweat session. They were paying for the recovery their training didn’t account for, the nervous-system reset before a high-stress practice, and the focus work their position coaches couldn’t deliver. Athletes—and the people who pay for athletes’ care—already understand premium pricing. They pay for physical therapy, massage, and strength coaching. Yoga taught with athlete-specific intent belongs in that company.
The math, with intent
A private session with an athlete usually runs 60–75 minutes, often starting with a 45-minute intake before any movement. Pricing in the Professional Yoga Teacher’s Handbook starts at $100–150 per private hour, with the upper end for niche expertise. Athletes are niche expertise.
A package of four sessions at $500 each comes to $2,000, with a small discount baked in. A team retainer works differently: for a college or pro team you might bill $15,000–20,000 for a season of weekly group sessions plus a handful of private sessions per athlete who opts in. That structure reaches $500 per encounter without billing it that way. As the handbook puts it, people value what they pay for.
How to land athletes without a studio
Working without a studio means working directly with athletes, teams, or private clients. The private lesson—built for one body, one history, one hour—is the unit of that work. The path has four steps:
- Your group classes are your marketing. The athlete in the back of your Saturday class is your future private client. (Your weekly class is a marketing channel.)
- Build a workshop. Workshops earn more per hour than group classes and let athletes sample private work. (Workshop ideas for yoga teachers.)
- Find a venue partnership where you’re a contractor, not an employee—an athletic department, a masters team, a running club, or a gym that wants recovery work.
- Run a free workshop so athletes and the people who hire them can experience your teaching before they pay.
Ready to go deeper? I’ve also written about how to sign more athletes for private lessons and how to teach private lessons with confidence.
Scope of practice is what makes the rate legitimate
One last piece, and it protects your professional standing. You are a yoga teacher: not a physical therapist, athletic trainer, sports medicine doctor, or nutritionist. Even with your own sports background, when you put on your yoga teacher hat, you teach yoga.
Scope of practice means recovery, balance, mental training, and breath work are yours. Diagnosis, treatment, and programming belong to the athlete’s other professionals. Stay inside that scope and deliver well, and premium pricing is earned. Wander outside it, and no rate protects you.
Build the work. The rate follows.
The $500 session is real, and it’s a result of intent held first, scope held cleanly, and value delivered consistently. If you want to start building that practice, I made a free workshop that walks you through it: How to Double Your Income Teaching Yoga to Athletes.

