Pilates Studios in Brooklyn Heights
Brooklyn Heights has 3 Pilates studios, with 67% contemporary and 33% mixed. Pricing skews premium. Most studios offer private sessions and small group classes, but duet sessions and mat classes are also available. The most common specialties are postnatal, post-rehab, and beginner-friendly programs. Use the filters or explore the listings below for more detail. Learn more about Pilates in Brooklyn Heights ↓
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About Pilates in Brooklyn Heights
Brooklyn Heights has 6 Pilates studios. Method mix reads 0% classical, 50% contemporary, and 50% mixed — three contemporary studios and three mixed-method studios. There are no classical-lineage studios listed in Brooklyn Heights, which makes it unusual within Brooklyn: the borough overall reads 18% classical, 53% contemporary, and 29% mixed. The 50% mixed-method share is also well above the 29% borough average. Drop-in prices across Brooklyn typically run $35 to $44 for a group class, and Brooklyn Heights sits inside that band. Format varies by studio — some focus on reformer classes, some on mat work, some on full apparatus and small-group format. Brooklyn Heights sits within the Brooklyn sub-region; it shares the 6-studio tier with Carroll Gardens, Prospect Heights, and Crown Heights.
Data snapshot: May 5, 2026
Are there any classical-lineage studios in Brooklyn Heights?
Not in the directory at this point. All 6 Brooklyn Heights studios identify as either contemporary (3) or mixed-method (3). For classical-lineage options, the closest concentrations in Brooklyn are Williamsburg (3 classical studios within its 25-studio total), Greenpoint (3 within 11), and Carroll Gardens or Prospect Heights (3 within 6 each). Neighboring sub-regions also matter — Manhattan reads 33% classical across 215 studios. The classical vs. contemporary guide on this site covers what to look for.
What does a 50% mixed-method share mean in practice?
Half of Brooklyn Heights' 6 studios identify as mixed-method, meaning they draw on both classical and contemporary traditions in their teaching rather than positioning within one lineage. The 50% mixed share is well above Brooklyn's 29% borough average. In practice mixed-method studios vary in what they emphasize — some lean classical with contemporary modifications, others the reverse. Each studio's listing and its own website are the right place to read positioning. The classical vs. contemporary guide explains what mixed studios commonly draw from.