Pilates Studios in Dallas
Dallas has 102 Pilates studios, with 51% contemporary, 30% mixed, and 17% classical. Drop-in classes typically run $30-$45. Most studios offer large group classes, but private sessions and reformer classes are also available. The most common specialties are beginner-friendly programs, post-rehab, and athletes. Use the filters or explore the listings below for more detail. Learn more about Pilates in Dallas ↓
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About Pilates in Dallas
Dallas has 102 Pilates studios across the city itself and the inner-ring cities of addison, richardson, and carrollton. It is the largest sub-region in DFW by raw studio count, accounting for roughly 37% of the metro's 279 studios. Method mix in Dallas runs 53% contemporary, 30% mixed-method, and 17% classical — close to the metro-wide split, with a slightly higher classical share than the DFW average of 15%. Drop-in classes typically run in the metro's $30 to $40 band; format (mat, reformer, full equipment), group size, and studio positioning all move the price within that range. Most studios offer small group classes and private sessions; mat classes and duet sessions are also common. The neighborhood and city pages within Dallas narrow the listing further; the broader DFW metro page lists every studio across all eight sub-regions together.
Data snapshot: May 5, 2026
Where are Pilates studios concentrated in Dallas?
The Dallas sub-region covers four cities: dallas itself, addison, richardson, and carrollton. The bulk of the 102 studios sit inside the city of Dallas; addison, richardson, and carrollton together account for the remainder. Each city in the sub-region has its own listing page on this site where it carries enough studios to warrant one. The sub-region page lists every Dallas-area studio together; the DFW metro page covers all eight DFW sub-regions in a single view.
What method mix dominates in Dallas?
About 53% of Dallas studios identify as contemporary, 30% as mixed (drawing on both traditions), and 17% as classical. The classical share in Dallas runs slightly above the DFW metro average of 15%, with classical-lineage studios more visible here than in most of the metro's outer sub-regions. Contemporary studios broadly teach within named training programs that emerged after Joseph Pilates' original work; classical studios stay closer to the original syllabus; mixed studios draw on both. The classical vs. contemporary guide on this site covers what each tradition emphasizes.
How does Dallas compare to other sub-regions in DFW?
Dallas is the largest sub-region in DFW by raw studio count at 102 studios — more than twice the size of the next-largest sub-region, Fort Worth (45). Together, Dallas and Fort Worth carry about 53% of the metro's 279 studios; the remaining six sub-regions split the rest. Dallas's method mix sits close to the metro-wide split, distinguishing it from sub-regions like North Dallas Suburbs (heavily contemporary) or Northeast Suburbs (mixed-heavy, classical-light).