Yoga and pilates are two of Australia's fastest-growing wellbeing practices — but they're often associated with middle-class, commercial health studios rather than community grant-funded programs. Community yoga and pilates — accessible, low-cost programs in community centres, schools, aged care facilities, and health services — fills an important gap: making evidence-based mind-body practices available to people who cannot afford commercial classes. Grant funding supports community yoga programs, therapeutic yoga, yoga in schools, and the programs that bring these practices to underserved communities.
The landscape
The evidence base
Who benefits from accessible yoga
Limited direct government funding
Commercial yoga is rarely government-funded. But therapeutic applications access health funding.
Health departments
Therapeutic yoga through health promotion programs.
Aged care
Yoga and gentle exercise in aged care settings.
Health foundations
Therapeutic yoga through health foundations.
Community trusts
Local community yoga programs.
Mental health funders
Yoga as part of mental health programs.
Community yoga
Therapeutic yoga
Yoga in schools
Prenatal and postnatal yoga
Yoga for older adults
Pilates rehabilitation
Cultural yoga
Community and therapeutic yoga can access health funding beyond traditional arts and community development sources:
- Cancer Council programs
- Mental health service providers
- Aged care facilities
- Rehabilitation centres
- NDIS-funded programs for participants with appropriate support categories
Applications that position yoga as a therapeutic, health-promoting intervention — with evidence and referral pathways — can access these health funding streams.
Therapeutic framing
Generic yoga grants are less compelling than therapeutic applications. Applications that connect yoga to specific health outcomes — chronic pain reduction, mental health improvement, fall prevention — are more credible.
Equity and access
Commercial yoga is already accessible to those who can afford it. Applications specifically targeting low-income participants, people with health conditions, or underserved populations justify grant investment.
Evidence-based delivery
Applications with therapeutic yoga delivered by appropriately trained instructors (yoga therapy qualifications, allied health partnerships) are more credible than general wellness programs.
Integration with health services
Yoga programs integrated into health service delivery — GP referrals, mental health services, aged care — are more likely to reach people who need them most.
Tahua's grants management platform supports health and wellbeing funders and community yoga organisations — with participant tracking, health outcome measurement, program reach data, and the reporting tools that help funders demonstrate their investment in accessible mind-body wellbeing programs.