Yoga for anxiety is an evidence-based mind‑body practice that reduces anxiety by calming the nervous system and lowering stress hormones. A 2026 meta‑analysis of 30 controlled trials (2,288 participants) found that yoga reliably improves anxiety (ES = −0.52), stress (ES = −0.54), and depression (ES = −0.50). A single 45‑minute Hatha yoga session (corpse pose, cat‑cow, balancing poses, breathing) significantly reduces anxiety in both healthy adults (70% of studies) and patients with mental illness (75% of studies).
Key Research Findings
- 8‑week study of medical students (n=120, daily practice): Yoga group (Surya Namaskara, Yoga Nidra, OM meditation) showed large improvements: state anxiety (d = −0.86), trait anxiety (d = −0.76), and perceived stress (rpb = −0.301, p = 0.004). Systolic blood pressure (rpb = −0.56) and pulse rate (rpb = −0.40) also improved (p < 0.001).
- Asthma patients (8‑week RCT, n=191): Adjunct yoga therapy (3x/week) reduced Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) scores and improved sleep quality (PSQI) vs. standard care (P < 0.05).
- Women with chronic pain (2‑week pilot, remote yoga): 60‑minute Hatha yoga reduced anxiety and improved pain, depression, and sleep, with good adherence and no serious adverse events.
How Yoga Reduces Anxiety
- Activates the parasympathetic nervous system, shifting from “fight‑or‑flight” to “rest‑and‑digest”
- Increases GABA (calming neurotransmitter) and reduces cortisol (stress hormone)
- Improves heart rate variability (HRV), which correlates with anxiety relief (r = −0.58, p < 0.001)
- Lowers inflammatory markers (interleukin‑6, periostin)
Practice Recommendations
- Immediate relief: A single 45‑minute Hatha session with corpse pose, cat‑cow, balancing poses, and breathing exercises
- Sustained benefits: 2–5 sessions weekly, including Surya Namaskara, pranayama (deep breathing), and Yoga Nidra
Yoga is safe, well‑tolerated, and effective even when delivered remotely. Always consult a healthcare provider before beginning any new exercise regimen.





