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Pilates Studios in West Village

West Village has 4 Pilates studios, with 75% contemporary and 25% mixed. Pricing skews premium. Studios offer private sessions and duet sessions. The most common specialties are beginner-friendly programs, athletes, and prenatal. Use the filters or explore the listings below for more detail. Learn more about Pilates in West Village ↓

BODYROK Meatpacking

West Village · 4.9 (224 Google reviews)
Contemporary Reformer Athletes Prenatal Weight Loss Beginner Friendly $$$

Club Pilates

West Village · 4.7 (108 Google reviews)
Contemporary Reformer Wunda Chair Athletes Beginner Friendly $$

EricoPilates

West Village · 5.0 (5 Google reviews)
Contemporary Cadillac Reformer Tower Athletes Back Pain Dancers Post-Rehab Prenatal Beginner Friendly $$$$

ZenGirl Fitness & Pilates

West Village · 5.0 (3 Google reviews)
Mixed Tower Post-Rehab Beginner Friendly $$$
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About Pilates in West Village

The West Village has 5 Pilates studios. Method mix in the West Village splits 60% contemporary and 40% classical, with no studios in the mixed-method position. The contemporary share runs 20 points above the Manhattan-wide 40%, and the classical share runs above the borough's 32% as well; the absence of mixed studios stands out against the borough's 26% mixed share. Drop-in prices in Manhattan typically fall in the $36 to $50 P25-P75 band, with the upper half of the borough's wider range concentrated among classical full-apparatus studios. The West Village sits within the Manhattan sub-region, which carries 238 studios across 17 neighborhoods. The West Village's count places it in the lowest density tier among neighborhoods with at least 3 studios; the next-largest neighborhoods up are Gramercy and the Lower East Side at 6 each.

Data snapshot: May 5, 2026

How does the West Village compare to other Manhattan neighborhoods for Pilates?

The West Village has 5 studios — among the lowest counts in Manhattan among neighborhoods with substantial Pilates presence. The four high-density neighborhoods — Midtown (42), Chelsea (33), the Upper East Side (29), and the Upper West Side (28) — carry more than half of Manhattan's 238 studios. Below them, counts step down through Soho and the Flatiron District (13 each), Tribeca (9), Greenwich Village and the Financial District (8 each), the East Village and Hells Kitchen (7 each), and Gramercy and the Lower East Side (6 each). The West Village has its own listing page on this site.

What method mix dominates the West Village?

The West Village splits 60% contemporary and 40% classical with no mixed-method studios in the count. The contemporary share runs 20 points above the Manhattan-wide 40%, and the classical share runs above the borough's 32%; the absence of mixed studios stands out against the borough's 26% mixed share. With 5 studios in total, the split translates into roughly three contemporary studios and two classical. The classical vs. contemporary guide on this site covers what each tradition emphasizes and what a clean two-way split (rather than a three-way split with mixed studios) typically looks like.