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A woman starts a daily flow practice expecting to drop 15 pounds in two months. Eight weeks later, she's stronger, sleeps better, and handles stress differently — but the scale hasn't moved. A man swaps his evening runs for hot yoga three times a week, then celebrates each session with a 500-calorie açaí bowl. He gains weight.
Neither outcome means yoga failed. It means expectations and execution were misaligned. Yoga can contribute meaningfully to body-composition change — but the mechanism isn't what most people assume, and the approach matters far more than the label on the class.
Can Yoga Actually Help You Lose Weight? (What the Research Says)
The honest answer: yes, but not primarily through caloric burn.
A 60-minute vinyasa session burns roughly 300–500 calories for a 155-lb person. Hatha lands closer to 180–250. Restorative: under 150. Compare that to running (500–700) or HIIT circuits (400–600) and the direct energy expenditure from yoga looks modest.
Where it earns its weight-loss value is indirect. A 2016 review in the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine found that regular practitioners showed lower BMI over time compared to non-practitioners — not because they burned more calories on the mat, but because their behavior off the mat shifted.
The mechanisms: reduced cortisol from consistent practice lowers stress-driven eating and visceral fat accumulation. Improved sleep quality (documented across multiple trials) stabilizes hunger hormones — ghrelin and lept...
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