Is puppy yoga safe? An honest answer.

By Pawty Yoga Β· Updated May 2026 Β· 6 min read

Yes β€” when it's run properly. Three things make a puppy yoga class safe: how the puppies are screened, how the room is managed, and what the studio does between sessions. National chains have stumbled on all three. Here's how Pawty Yoga handles each β€” and what to look for in any class you book.

"Is puppy yoga safe?" is the most common question we get from people considering their first booking β€” and from parents whose kids want to come along. It's a fair question. Putting humans, puppies, and yoga mats in the same room is unusual. There's also been enough negative press about poorly run puppy yoga events nationally that some skepticism is warranted. So this post is the long, honest answer.

Safe for the puppies

The most important question β€” and the one too few guests think to ask β€” is whether the experience is safe for the puppies themselves. Here's what we do:

A red flag in any puppy yoga class: groups of 30+ guests, sessions longer than 90 minutes, or "rotating" puppies between back-to-back classes. That's exhausting for the dogs and a sign the operator is optimizing for revenue over animal welfare.

Safe for the guests

For humans, the risks are real but small and manageable:

Safe for kids

This question comes up constantly because Pawty Yoga is one of the most kid-friendly events in Houston. Our position:

We've had kid attendees from age 3 to age 12 across our test sessions. Zero incidents. The only consistent complaint from parents: "He didn't want to leave."

What separates a safe class from a corner-cutting one

Some of the negative coverage of puppy yoga in other cities involved real problems β€” under-vaccinated puppies, overcrowded rooms, dogs sourced from sketchy puppy mills, sessions held in spaces that weren't cleaned between classes. None of that is intrinsic to the format. It's a sign of a poorly run operator.

Things you can ask any puppy yoga class before booking:

  1. Where do the puppies come from? The answer should be specific and named. If they can't name the breeder, that's a red flag. We use vetted ethical breeder partners we've personally evaluated, and we'll tell you which one.
  2. Are the puppies vaccinated? The answer should be unambiguous yes. If they hedge, leave.
  3. How big is the group? Anything above 25 humans starts to compromise the puppy experience. Anything above 30 is a problem.
  4. How is the studio cleaned between sessions? "Quickly, yes" isn't an answer. A real answer references specific products, mat replacement, and floor cleaning.
  5. What happens if a puppy gets stressed? The right answer is "we have a quiet zone they can retreat to." The wrong answer is silence.
Pawty Yoga's commitments, on record: 8–16 week-old puppies from vetted ethical breeder partners only, max 20 guests per session, full studio cleaning between sessions, handlers present the entire 75 minutes, phones and cameras welcome throughout.

What we won't do

To be specific about what corners we don't cut:

Insurance and liability

Pawty Yoga carries a commercial general liability policy and event-specific coverage. Every guest signs a brief release form before class β€” standard for any yoga studio. For corporate clients and HR teams, we can share our certificate of insurance and a sample release form ahead of booking.

Got more questions before booking?

Email [email protected] β€” we'd rather answer your concern than have you skip a class you'd love.

🎟️ Or book a session

The bottom line

Puppy yoga, run well, is one of the safer experiential events in town β€” gentler than goat yoga, calmer than most group fitness, and kinder to the animals than most "with-animals" tourism. Run badly, it can be unpleasant for the puppies and uncomfortable for the guests. The difference is entirely in the operator.

Ask the questions above of any class you book. If the answers are clear and specific, you're in good hands. If they're vague, walk away.