Siddhi Yoga Online Certifications: What Actually Works for Women Teachers
You're thinking about getting certified to teach yoga online. Or maybe you're already teaching but want credentials that actually mean something. Siddhi Yoga keeps showing up in your search results, and you're wondering if it's legit—and more importantly, if it's right for you.
Here's the thing: there's a lot of hype around online yoga certifications. Some programs are solid. Some are just selling you a certificate. We're going to walk through what Siddhi Yoga actually offers, break down their real costs, and help you figure out if their approach matches what you're looking for.
Who Siddhi Yoga Is (and Isn't) For
Siddhi Yoga is an India-based online platform offering yoga teacher training and certification courses. They've been around for a while and have built a decent reputation in the online yoga space. Their courses cover asanas, pranayama, meditation, yoga philosophy, and teaching methodology.
But let's be direct: Siddhi Yoga certifications aren't Yoga Alliance registered. That matters if you're serious about teaching professionally, especially in studios or fitness centers that require RYT (Registered Yoga Teacher) credentials. If you're building a private online practice or teaching friends and family, this is less of an issue. If you want to eventually get on studio rosters, you'll want to know this upfront.
Their Core Certification Programs
200-Hour Foundation Yoga Teacher Training
This is their flagship offering. It covers the basics: asanas, pranayama, meditation, yoga philosophy (Yoga Sutras, Bhagavad Gita), anatomy for yoga, and how to actually teach. You get video lessons, reading materials, and usually some level of student access or community forum.
The structure is self-paced, meaning you move through it on your own timeline. No fixed start dates. No Zoom classes at set times. That's great if you're juggling a job or family. It's harder if you need accountability or real-time feedback on your teaching.
300-Hour Advanced Training
If you've already got a 200-hour cert (from anywhere), you can stack another 300 hours with Siddhi Yoga. This goes deeper into yoga philosophy, advanced asana techniques, pranayama practices, and specialized teaching methods. It's designed for people who want to deepen their knowledge beyond the basics.
The 200 + 300 combination gets you to 500 hours, which looks better on a resume and shows genuine depth. But again—not Yoga Alliance registered, so the credential value depends on who you're trying to impress.
Specialty Certifications
Siddhi Yoga also offers shorter specialty courses in things like prenatal yoga, kids yoga, senior yoga, yoga therapy basics, and restorative yoga. These run 100-200 hours and are useful if you want to specialize rather than get a full teaching cert.
The specialty route appeals to women who already teach or practice yoga and want to add a focused skill. You don't need a 500-hour cert to teach prenatal yoga to your pregnancy group, for instance.
What's Actually Included (and What Isn't)
The Good Parts
Self-paced learning is the real draw. You're not locked into a schedule. If you need to slow down one month because life happens, you slow down. If you want to blast through a section because you're excited about it, you can.
The curriculum covers actual yoga—not just sequences. You get philosophy, which matters. You get anatomy basics so you understand why you're cuing things the way you are. Most courses include lifetime access to the materials, so you're not paying a monthly fee forever.
The Gaps
Self-paced also means self-disciplined. If you need structure, you need deadlines, you need someone checking your work—this format won't hold you accountable. There's no live teaching practice with real feedback from an experienced instructor. You might get video submission reviews, but it's not the same as in-person or live virtual interaction.
Community is minimal. You're not building a cohort of people to share your teaching journey with. That matters to some women. Some love it. Some miss the connection.
Real Pricing Breakdown
Siddhi Yoga's pricing varies depending on which program and whether they're running a promotion. Here's what to expect:
The 200-hour foundation cert typically runs $600-$1,200 depending on sales and payment plans. The 300-hour advanced program is usually $800-$1,500. Full 500-hour packages (200 + 300 bundled) might be $1,200-$2,000. Specialty certifications are usually $300-$800.
These prices are genuinely affordable compared to in-person teacher trainings, which often cost $2,500-$5,000+. That's the whole point of the online model—lower overhead, lower cost to you.
They regularly run sales and offer payment plans (often 3-4 monthly payments with no interest). Sign up for their email list and you'll catch discounts. That's not a hack—that's just how they run their business.
The Yoga Alliance Question
Let's address this clearly because it matters: Siddhi Yoga is not a Yoga Alliance registered provider. That means the hours you complete won't count toward RYT 200, RYT 500, or YACEP (Yoga Alliance Continuing Education Provider) status.
If you want to be an RYT, you need a Yoga Alliance registered 200-hour program. Period. Programs like YogaAlliance.org's registry show who's registered. Some programs you'll recognize (big names like Yoga International), some are smaller studios.
If your goal is to teach in studios, studios care about RYT status. If your goal is to build a private online business teaching people who found you organically, this matters way less. You can still be a fantastic teacher without Yoga Alliance credentials. But know what you're getting into.
What Women Teachers Actually Say
The honest reviews we see are mixed but lean positive for people with clear expectations. Women who wanted flexibility and affordability loved the self-paced format. They appreciated the philosophy content and the lifetime access to materials.
Women who felt disappointed typically expected more live interaction, more personalized feedback on their teaching, or didn't realize upfront that the cert wasn't Yoga Alliance registered. Some found the platform clunky or the video production quality outdated.
The support varies. Some people report responsive help from their team. Others found it slow. It's a smaller operation than big online education platforms, so be realistic about response times.
Is Siddhi Yoga Right for You?
Choose Siddhi Yoga if:
You want affordable, self-paced training without fixed class times. You're building a private online practice (not chasing studio gigs that require RYT status). You already have yoga experience and want to formalize it. You're interested in specialty training (prenatal, kids, therapy) without needing a full 500-hour cert. You value lifetime access to materials and want to learn at your own pace.
Look Elsewhere if:
You need Yoga Alliance registration for your career plan. You require live teaching feedback and real-time interaction with instructors. You work better with set start dates and cohorts. You want cutting-edge video production and modern platform design. You need strong community and peer support built into the program.
The Real Talk
Siddhi Yoga is a legitimate training platform. It's not a scam. It won't turn you into a great teacher all by itself—no program will. Teaching is a skill you build through practice, feedback, and showing up for your students.
What Siddhi Yoga gives you is comprehensive curriculum at an accessible price point, self-paced flexibility, and lifetime access to the materials. For some women, that's exactly what they need. For others, it's not the right fit.
Before you enroll, know what you're signing up for. Know it's not Yoga Alliance registered if that matters to your goals. Know you'll be responsible for keeping yourself accountable without a fixed class schedule. Know you won't have live instructors watching your practice.
If all of that works for you, and the pricing fits your budget, it's worth considering. Just go in with eyes open.
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