Pilates Studios in Park Slope
Park Slope has 8 Pilates studios, with 75% contemporary, 13% classical, and 13% mixed. Pricing skews affordable. Most studios offer private sessions, but reformer classes and mat classes are also available. The most common specialties are post-rehab, beginner-friendly programs, and postnatal. Use the filters or explore the listings below for more detail. Learn more about Pilates in Park Slope ↓
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About Pilates in Park Slope
Park Slope has 9 Pilates studios — the third-densest single-neighborhood count in Brooklyn after Williamsburg (25) and Greenpoint (11). Method mix in Park Slope reads 22% classical, 56% contemporary, and 22% mixed. Contemporary is the dominant tradition, in line with Brooklyn overall (53% contemporary borough-wide); classical and mixed studios each carry a roughly one-in-five share. Drop-in prices across Brooklyn typically run $35 to $44 for a group class, and Park Slope sits inside that band. What a drop-in buys varies by studio — some focus on reformer classes, some on mat work, some on full apparatus and small-group format. Park Slope sits within the Brooklyn sub-region; the next-densest Brooklyn neighborhoods after Park Slope are Boerum Hill and Bedford-Stuyvesant (7 studios each), then Brooklyn Heights, Carroll Gardens, Prospect Heights, and Crown Heights at 6 each.
Data snapshot: May 5, 2026
How does Park Slope rank among Brooklyn neighborhoods for studio density?
Park Slope's 9 studios place it third-densest in Brooklyn behind Williamsburg (25) and Greenpoint (11). After Park Slope the count drops to 7 in Boerum Hill and Bedford-Stuyvesant, then 6 each in Brooklyn Heights, Carroll Gardens, Prospect Heights, and Crown Heights, then 5 in Fort Greene. The full Brooklyn sub-region page on this site lists every studio across the borough's neighborhoods together; each neighborhood with at least 3 studios also has its own page.
What does the method mix look like in Park Slope?
Park Slope's 9 studios split 22% classical, 56% contemporary, and 22% mixed — close to an even split between classical and mixed at the edges, with contemporary as the majority. The 56% contemporary share is right in line with Brooklyn's borough-wide 53%. Both classical-lineage and mixed-method options are available in roughly equal numbers. The classical vs. contemporary guide on this site covers what each tradition emphasizes and how to read a studio's positioning before visiting.