Puppy yoga vs goat yoga vs cat yoga — what's the difference?
All three are wellness experiences with animals. They're surprisingly different. The choice depends on whether you want energy or calm, indoor or outdoor, and whether you'd actually consider taking the animal home. Here's the side-by-side, written by people who've genuinely thought about all three.
"Animal yoga" started as a curiosity around 2016, when goat yoga went viral via a single farmer in Oregon. Cat yoga and puppy yoga followed. By 2026, all three are real, bookable experiences in most U.S. cities — and they're frequently confused with each other. Here's the honest, opinionated breakdown.
The five-second summary
- Goat yoga: outdoor, rural, the animals are big enough to stand on you. High novelty. Best as a one-time experience.
- Cat yoga: indoor, low-energy, the animals barely engage with you. Best for cat people who want a quiet hour.
- Puppy yoga: indoor, social, the animals actively engage with you. The most photogenic and the most repeatable.
If you only read this section, you have enough information to choose. If you want the why, keep reading.
Setting and vibe
Goat yoga
Goat yoga is a barn experience. Most operators host it on actual farms, sometimes in covered pavilions, sometimes in fenced fields. The setup is rural by necessity — goats need outdoor space, hooves don't work well on hardwood floors, and the smell, frankly, is real. You'll get to a farm, you'll do yoga in the dirt or on a tarp, you'll have a 60-pound mini goat stand on your back during cobra pose. The whole thing has a "weekend escape" feel and is often the highlight of someone's birthday weekend.
The vibe is rustic-festive. The photos are wild. It's not subtle. You will not "find your zen" — you'll laugh a lot and your shoes will be muddy.
Cat yoga
Cat yoga is the opposite end of the spectrum. It's indoor, in a normal yoga studio or sometimes a cat café, and the cats are mostly indifferent to you. Some sleep on the windowsill. A few might walk across your mat. One might sit on you for half a pose. But cats are cats — they don't perform.
The vibe is calm, almost contemplative. It's a normal yoga class with cats wandering in and out. If you've been to a regular yoga class and want a slightly more interesting version, cat yoga is closest. If you wanted dynamic energy, you'll be disappointed.
Puppy yoga
Puppy yoga sits in the middle. Indoor like cat yoga (clean studio, sprung floor, climate-controlled) but socially energetic like goat yoga (the animals actively engage with you, climb on you, lick your face). It's the most consistently photogenic of the three because puppies are puppies — they can't help being adorable.
The vibe is warm, social, and energetic in bursts. There are calm moments and chaotic moments. Most guests describe it as "the most relaxed I've felt in months" without it being meditative — the relaxation comes from being interrupted by something delightful every 30 seconds.
Intensity of the yoga
None of the three are athletic yoga sessions. The animals make sustained difficult poses impractical. But there's a gradient:
- Cat yoga can come closest to a "real" yoga class because the cats stay out of your way. Intermediate flows work fine here.
- Goat yoga is closer to "stretching while a goat stands on you." It's gentle by necessity. The novelty drives the experience, not the workout.
- Puppy yoga is intentionally beginner-level. Holding a difficult balance pose isn't realistic when a puppy is licking your ankle. Most poses are floor-based or low-intensity.
If you want a real yoga workout, none of these are it. If you want a gentle flow with an animal-driven focal point, all three work.
The animal welfare question
This is where the three diverge most. Animal welfare in goat yoga is variable — some farms are excellent, some are clearly stressing the goats. Cat yoga is generally fine because the cats can leave whenever they want and most operators host in cat-cafe spaces where the cats already live.
Puppy yoga is the one where the operator's ethics matter most. Puppies are in a sensitive socialization window. Done well, puppy yoga is genuinely good for them — exposure to humans in a calm setting is part of healthy development. Done badly (overcrowding, back-to-back sessions, sketchy sourcing), it can be exhausting or stressful.
At Pawty Yoga we're explicit about how we handle this. Our puppies come from vetted ethical breeder partners only, every puppy is 8–16 weeks old with full vaccination records, sessions are 75 minutes max, group size is capped at 20, and we don't run back-to-back classes with the same puppies. We covered the safety side in detail in our safety post.
Photo-worthiness
If we're being honest, this is what most guests are picking based on:
- Goat yoga photos are funny — a goat balanced on someone's back, a goat eating someone's ponytail. They're "look at this wild thing I did." Once.
- Cat yoga photos are quiet. A cat curled in someone's lap during savasana. Cute, but not viral.
- Puppy yoga photos are the ones that get reposted. A laughing person on the floor with a fluffy puppy on their chest. Universally appealing. Works for Instagram, gift cards, holiday photos, all of it.
This is also why puppy yoga has become the dominant choice for bridal showers, kids' birthdays, and corporate team events — the photo dividend is genuinely the best of the three.
Adoption potential
Goats are not pets. (Mostly.) Cats are pets but the ones at cat yoga are usually already adopted (resident cafe cats). Puppies are the only category where the animals you meet during class are actively adoptable.
At Pawty Yoga, every puppy is from a vetted ethical breeder partner — 8–16 weeks old, just before joining their permanent families. Several guests over our history have asked about connecting with our breeder partner after meeting a puppy in class, and the breeder runs all placements directly through their normal screening process.
Best for which person
- Pick goat yoga if you want a one-time wild experience for a bachelorette weekend or a 30th birthday. You'll love it once.
- Pick cat yoga if you're a cat person who wants a quiet, low-energy version of a yoga class. You'll find it pleasant but probably not transformative.
- Pick puppy yoga if you want the most universally enjoyable version, you have a group with mixed energy levels (kids, adults, grandparents), or you're considering eventually adopting a dog and want low-stakes exposure to puppies.
Cost
- Goat yoga: usually $40–$60 per session. Travel time to the farm is the bigger investment.
- Cat yoga: $20–$35 per session. Cheapest of the three because the animals require less management.
- Puppy yoga: $50–$70 per session. Pawty Yoga is $60 in Houston, which is at the lower end of the national range.
Picked puppy yoga?
Pawty Yoga is Houston's first dedicated puppy yoga experience. Aug 8 & 9, 2026 in the Memorial Area.
🎟️ Book your spotThe honest answer
Of the three, puppy yoga is the one most people enjoy enough to do twice. Goat yoga is a once-in-a-lifetime story. Cat yoga is a side dish to your normal yoga practice. Puppy yoga becomes a regular thing — birthday tradition, monthly group hang, recurring corporate event.
That's why we built Pawty Yoga. Houston had no dedicated puppy yoga studio, only national chains running pop-up dates. We wanted to be the one Houstonians come back to month after month — and we built it for that.