Getting started with Ashtanga Yoga can be quite an undertaking. The sequence is long. The pace is fast. The discipline is stringent. However, Ashtanga is simple when practiced step by step.
You do not need to have everything down perfectly. What matters is finding a workable daily practice.

Start small, not perfect
The most common mistake beginners make is attempting to learn the entire series in the first session.
This method is simply not effective.
Instead:
- Start with a 20-30 minute yoga session
- Focus on consistency rather than intensity
- Make your practice easily repeatable
Short daily yoga practices will build more strength than an occasional long session.
Familiarize Yourself with the Ashtanga Structure
Ashtanga Yoga follows a fixed sequence, ensuring a strong foundation. A beginner-friendly structure includes:
- Opening (centering + breath)
- Surya Namaskar (A & B)
- Standing postures
- (Short seated sequence)
- Closing + rest
You do not need to dive straight into the Primary Series. Instead, gradually build toward it.
Your beginner daily routine (simple version)
This is a practical routine you can follow:
1. Centering (2-3 minutes)
Sit quietly. Close your eyes. Focus on your breath.
This step is not as easy as it seems. It sets the tone. Please do not rush it!
2. Surya Namaskar A (5 rounds)
The key here is to move SLOWLY.
Match your breath to your movements. Then, steady breath and smooth transitions.
Focus your yogi mind on the movement rather than the time.
3. Surya Namaskar B (3 rounds)
This will generate strength and heat for the next postures. It is important to keep your breath controlled and your form intact.
4. Standing Postures (10–15 minutes)
Start off with the basics:
- McKenzie forward fold variations
- McKenzie lunges
- Some balancing poses
You don’t need all the standing poses to begin with. Choose standing postures to do for a practice for a week and do that pose.
At a minimum do four to six standing poses and the practicing to do them daily.
5. Seated Postures (Early Stages Optional)
Having completed the standing postures, you can also begin to add the seated postures. Gradually add:
- Paschimottanasana (seated forward fold)
- Simple hip openers
Keep it light. No forcing.
6. Closing (5–7 minutes)
Finish off with:
- A gentle backbend
- A forward fold
- Resting in Savasana
Never skip resting. It integrates your practice.
Start building consistency first
Having a routine matters more than having variety.
Practice daily. Even if it’s just 20 minutes.
Set a fixed time:
- Early morning works best
- Same time each and every day builds discipline
If you miss a day, no guilt: just begin again.
Your breath will be the anchor
In Ashtanga, the breath leads the practice.
Breath can be lost in the practice and this can be seen in many ways.
Remember:
- Everything our breath, inha le to expand
- Exale to ground.
Do not rush to keep up with the movement.
Avoid the common beginner mistakes
Practice shall fail, and many beginners struggle not because of the difficulty, but because of the approach.
Look out for:
- Full sequences too early
- Ignoring breath
- Comparing yourself to others
- Not resting
- Practicing infrequently
Progress shall come with patience, not forcing.
When to progress
You’ll know you are ready to add more when you have more control of your breath, movement and more. When your body also recovers well, you can add the standing and seated postures.
There’s no rush. Ashtanga is a long-term practice.
Create the right environment
The space you create for your practice, more than you think, really matters.
You can train anywhere if it is:
- Quiet
- Clean
- Free from distractions
Discipline over motivation
Motivtion changes day by day. Discipline does not.
Some days will feel heavy. Practice anyway.
Some days will feel great. Stay steady.
It is not about feeling perfect.
It is about showing up.
A simple weekly structure
If daily practice feels difficult, start here:
- 3–4 days per week → short routine
Aim to gradually move to 5–6 days
Even experienced practitioners take one rest day per week.
Final reflection
Ashtanga Yoga is not about doing more. It’s about doing the same things with deeper awareness.
A beginner routine should feel:
- Sustainable
- Grounded
- Repeatable
The sequence will open up if you keep showing up.
Not because you forced it.
But because you stayed with it.
