
Fahrenheit Yoga: heat-driven yoga that challenges body and mind in Nashville.
Fahrenheit Yoga, located at 2909 12th Ave S in Nashville, offers hot yoga experiences including Hot 26 sessions. Reviews describe a transformative, high-heat practice and a strong sense of community, with instructors and class vibes varying. Some feedback mentions class timing, parking, and facility aspects, but many patrons praise growth in flexibility and dedication to the practice.
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A 90-minute intense hot yoga class in a heated room, focusing on 26 postures and two breathing exercises for deep stretching and detoxification.
Challenging sessions designed for experienced practitioners to deepen their practice with complex flows and advanced poses.
Regular gatherings and social activities to build connections and foster a supportive yoga community among members.
Accessible classes for newcomers, offering guidance on basics and modifications to ensure a safe and welcoming start.
Educational workshops focusing on proper alignment and techniques to prevent injuries during yoga practice.
Just meh. Classes could be a lil more challenging rather than sitting in stretches for too long. A lot of small changes would make the place a lot better. Floor mat markers would make a HUGE difference. I have yet to take a class that has started on time and it’s not compensated by adding additional time. There is only one toilet in the locker room and no lockers to lock items. Parking is minimal which is fine because I don’t mind walking, but it makes it difficult to time out when they keep the doors locked so you wait outside in the cold. I want to love this place but sometimes the small things add up and stress me out. On the plus side- lots of people who go here are advanced and it motivates you to do some work at home. The studio is also very bright and open.
So grateful to call Fahrenheit my yoga home for the last 3 years! My yoga practice has grown tremendously as I've learned from the most incredible teachers who continue to inspire me class after class. Fahrenheit truly feels like such a community the second you walk through the doors and I'm grateful for all of the friendships I've made. Highly recommend to anyone looking to deepen their practice and find aligned community.
I do not recommend this studio at all and I've been practicing yoga for 15 years. There are so many issues, they try to lock you in contracts with awful customer service. Most instructors do not do anything for injury prevention and its likely you will get injured - Annie and Rolland in particular do this. They don't make adjustments to students so not true instructors, and they flows they choose are out of order before the body is warmed up. I've heard them say bad things about people when you are walking in many times, not very namaste. I was scolded for drinking water in a class before the water break - they don't care what the client is going through. I've watched instructors get mad at other students and never seen that before as well. The instructors take the classes and do a completely different flow - very distracting. The parking is very limited (so expect to have to pay for parking in a near lot) and the classes are so close together you are stressed before you get there with how chaotic it is which means even if you come early you can't get a parking spot. There are a lot of other issues but this should explain some top things when you are selecting your yoga studio.
I love Fahrenheit yoga and have had great experiences yet I found the instructor named Nikki was just a bit rude and snotty. It wasn’t necessarily what she said but the way she said it. I typically love everyone and I would not write a review saying this if it didn’t bug me to the point that it did. I have heard multiple people say Niki is rude. so maybe try some of the other instructors when you go! Overall love the studio.
I’ve been doing yoga for about a year. For reference: I’m an Arab immigrant. A man. With functioning knees (formerly). Walking into Fahrenheit Yoga already felt like I was betraying at least three generations. Somewhere, an uncle just shook his head for no reason. Hot 26(Bikram)at Fahrenheit is not yoga. It’s a 90 minute hostage situation with stretching. The room is so hot your thoughts immediately file for divorce. First 10 minutes: confidence. Minute 20: regret. Minute 40: spiritual bargaining. Minute 60: God has left the chat, science is fake, and time is a social construct. By the end, you’re just a damp, enlightened noodle. This class will: -delete your ego -uninstall your personality -defrag your spine -and factory-reset your soul I walked in with knee pain, back pain, hip pain, elbow pain, emotional stiffness, and a strong sense of masculinity. I walked out flexible, peaceful, and unsure who I used to be. This is better than pizza in Naples. Better than stouts in Ireland. Better than therapy, because therapy never made me sweat, cry, shake, hallucinate, and spiritually ascend while staring at a mirror. At some point I genuinely believed Hot 26 could: -fix the Arab world -end wars -bring Jesus back AGAIN -and make Him say “okay but why is it THIS hot” By the end of class, everyone looks like they survived the same disaster. No words. Just eye contact. Trauma bonded forever. Come early. Bring water. Do NOT come cocky. Fahrenheit Yoga isn’t a studio it’s a sauna powered personality eraser.
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