Ethics in yoga therapy are not simply a code of ethics—they’re a promise on sacred ground. A yoga therapist occupies a profound position of trust, dealing with the vulnerable element of a client’s body, mind, and feelings. Awareness of ethics protects this duty and honors it through compassion, professional conduct, and integrity.
Yoga therapy is a healing conversation, not acting. Ethical principles:
Conserve the well-being of the client
Maintain professional boundaries and conduct
Substantiate the inner integrity and spiritual development of the therapist
Protect the sacred heritage of yoga lineages
Dharma (right action) is the culmination of yogic service of authenticity.
Refrain from crossing physical, emotional, and energetic boundaries of the client
Avoid pushing, judging, or diagnosing
Provide gentle options when pain arises
Be clear on your scope of practice
Never guarantee cures or unachievable outcomes
Speak clearly and truthfully
Keep client information confidential
Get informed consent before sharing even a detail, even for case studies
Resist dual relationships (e.g., financial or personal entanglements)
Ensure a therapeutic space without ego, favoritism, or manipulation
Keep anatomy, yoga philosophy, and recent findings up-to-date
Refer clients to respective professionals when necessary
Touch can be healing—but it must be done with permission and attention.
Examples:
For grounding and reassurance (with permission):
Tadasana (Mountain Pose)
Therapist may lightly place hands on shoulders to help align
Modification: Use verbal cues if client is not at ease with touch
For physical support (if needed):
Trikonasana (Triangle Pose)
Support at the hip for balance if necessary
Modification: Use a wall or block instead of therapist’s hand
For emotional safety:
Savasana (Corpse Pose)
No touching except by prior arrangement; therapist is energetically present
Adjustment: Provide weighted eye pillow or blanket in place of touch
Never touch without asking. Silence is not agreement.
Yoga therapy may awaken intense feelings. Ethical therapist:
Listens without judgment
Does not offer psychological advice unless trained
Asks client to pursue further help if necessary
Respect the diversity of spiritual heritage without imposition of beliefs
Offer yogic tools as choices, not requirements
Don’t use Sanskrit terms dogmatically—translate it with context and humility
Ethical practice in yoga therapy is like the yamas and niyamas come to life. It’s a living practice of respect, presence, and humility. When therapists walk this path, they become not only healers—but examples of the very yoga they teach.
“Right action, done in silence, becomes the loudest teaching.”