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Pilates Studios in Long Island City

Long Island City has 7 Pilates studios, with 57% contemporary and 43% classical. Pricing skews affordable. Most studios offer private sessions and duet sessions, but mat classes is also available. The most common specialties are beginner-friendly programs, prenatal, and post-rehab. Use the filters or explore the listings below for more detail. Learn more about Pilates in Long Island City ↓

Club Pilates

Long Island City · 4.1 (31 Google reviews)
Contemporary Barrel Cadillac Reformer Tower Wunda Chair Post-Rehab Beginner Friendly $$

Halletts Point Pilates

Long Island City · 5.0 (107 Google reviews)
Contemporary Reformer Beginner Friendly $

Lady Life Pilates [LIC] x Merrithew® Host Training Center

Long Island City · 4.9 (297 Google reviews)
Contemporary Barrel Cadillac Reformer Tower Post-Rehab Prenatal $$

Ning Pilates

Long Island City · 4.7 (58 Google reviews)
Classical Reformer Tower Wunda Chair Athletes Dancers Post-Rehab Postnatal Prenatal Beginner Friendly

PilatesWorks

Long Island City · 4.9 (64 Google reviews)
Contemporary Reformer Back Pain Prenatal Beginner Friendly $

Wellness Genesis Pilates

Long Island City · 5.0 (73 Google reviews)
Classical Duet Back Pain Post-Rehab Postnatal Prenatal Seniors Weight Loss Beginner Friendly $$$$

Westside Pilates LIC

Long Island City · 5.0 (27 Google reviews)
Classical Reformer Tower Wunda Chair Back Pain Post-Rehab Prenatal $$$$
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About Pilates in Long Island City

Long Island City has 9 Pilates studios. Method mix reads 33% classical, 44% contemporary, and 22% mixed. The 33% classical share is the highest in Queens — well above the borough's 21% classical average — and contemporary remains the dominant tradition without running away with it. Queens borough-wide reads 21% classical, 58% contemporary, 19% mixed, and 2% unspecified, so LIC's contemporary share runs about 14 points below the borough average. Drop-in prices across Queens are the most affordable in NYC, with a typical group-class band of $25 to $40. Format varies by studio — some focus on reformer classes, some on mat work, some on full apparatus and small-group format. Long Island City sits within the Queens sub-region alongside Flushing, Astoria, Forest Hills, Jackson Heights, Bayside, and Rego Park.

Data snapshot: May 5, 2026

Where does Long Island City sit among Queens neighborhoods for studio density?

LIC's 9 studios put it among the densest Queens neighborhoods. Flushing leads at 10. After those two, the count drops across the rest of the borough's seven covered neighborhoods. Queens has 48 studios in total — about 22% of New York City's pilates supply, with Manhattan's 215 and Brooklyn's 153 making up the bulk. The Queens sub-region page on this site lists every studio across all the borough's neighborhoods together; each neighborhood with at least 3 studios also has its own page.

What does the highest classical share in Queens mean for LIC?

Three of Long Island City's 9 studios identify within classical-lineage training. That 33% classical share is higher than the 21% Queens average, and matches roughly the share found in Manhattan as a whole (33% classical across 215 studios). For someone wanting classical-lineage training in Queens, LIC offers more options than other neighborhoods in the borough; the data shows the pattern without explaining it. The classical vs. contemporary guide on this site covers what each tradition emphasizes and how to read a studio's positioning.