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Hot Yoga Teacher Training in Spokane

4 studios in Spokane, Washington show real evidence of running teacher training — 4 with a program page on the studio's own site — the 200-hour foundation and, at some, 300- and 500-hour paths beyond it. Training is a real commitment of time and money (a 200-hour program commonly runs around $3,000–5,000, and formats range from a few intensive weeks to weekends over several months), so the comparison is worth doing carefully: with 4 programs in town, you can weigh style, schedule, cost, and whether each is Yoga Alliance registered before you enroll. Studios are ranked below by local reputation (rating weighted by review count), and where students' reviews mention training or certification, the quote is shown.

1. Shala Living Yoga

4.9 ★★★★★ 126 reviews

412 W Boone Ave, Spokane, WA

Teacher training Infrared Beginner-friendly Free first class

Teacher training confirmed on their website.

2. BEYOUTIFUL HOT YOGA - South Hill Spokane

4.8 ★★★★★ 80 reviews

3017 S Grand Blvd c, Spokane, WA

Teacher training Beginner-friendly

“I love the style of teaching at BHY so much that I took the new BeYOUtiful Hot Yoga teacher training program this spring. I can't say enough good things about the owners, the…” — Elle

See their teacher training page →

3. Eclipse Power Yoga

4.9 ★★★★★ 78 reviews

3209 E 57th Ave e, Spokane, WA

Teacher training Infrared Beginner-friendly

“I am updating my review because I took teacher training at Eclipse and I have had nothing but good feedback (and occasional groans for difficulty 😂) from my students. Everything…” — Briana

Teacher training confirmed on their website.

4. BEYOUTIFUL HOT YOGA - North Spokane

5 ★★★★★ 58 reviews

410 E Holland Ave a, Spokane, WA

Teacher training Beginner-friendly

See their teacher training page →

Choosing a training in Spokane: what to weigh

  1. Confirm the hours and the credential. Is it 200-hour foundational, or a 300-hour advanced you'd take after a 200? And is the school Yoga Alliance registered (an RYS), so you can register as an RYT afterward? That's the credential most studios hiring teachers look for.
  2. Match the style to what you want to teach. A Bikram-lineage 26&2 training, a sculpt or power training, and a general vinyasa training all lead somewhere different. Train in the practice you actually love and want to lead.
  3. Get the real schedule. Intensive over a few weeks, or weekends spread across months? Pick the one you can realistically finish around work and life — the certificate is the same either way.
  4. Ask what's included, and the total cost. Manual, mat time, assessment, any post-training mentoring — and the all-in number with payment options. Treat the $3,000–5,000 range as a ballpark; get the studio's real figure.
  5. Ask what graduates do next. The best programs are proud of where their teachers end up — and many hire their own graduates for their first classes.

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