Love Pilates but hate the studio commute? We break down how to choose high-quality home equipment that fits your living space, budget, and personal fitness goals.
Header Image Source: Ahmet Kurt @ Unsplash
So you’ve been doing Pilates long enough to feel the difference. Your posture is better, your back doesn’t complain the way it used to, and you move like someone who actually knows where their core is.
But life gets busy. The commute to the studio starts feeling more tedious than the workout itself. So naturally, you start thinking about bringing Pilates home. And thankfully, most of what makes Pilates effective has nothing to do with the building where you do it.
Then you start searching for home Pilates equipment, and the overwhelm hits immediately. Pricey reformers. Mats in every thickness imaginable. Resistance bands, magic circles, foam rollers, Pilates arcs. Do you really need all of it? None of it? Some vague middle ground?
The industry is very good at making more gear feel like better practice. That’s not quite how it works. A solid home Pilates setup comes down to a few well-chosen pieces that match your floor space and fitness goals. Here’s a quick breakdown to help you build exactly that.
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Most people looking into Pilates equipment for home do the same thing. They start with the biggest, most impressive option they can find, which is usually a reformer. It feels like the “real” version of Pilates, so it must be the starting point.
But that’s not necessarily true. Mat work is the foundation of Pilates. When you’re on the mat, nothing is supporting you except your own control. And that’s the point. You learn how to move without momentum and notice when something is off before it becomes a habit.
The mat repertoire is also extensive, with 34 exercises pioneered by Joseph Pilates himself. And according to the Pilates Method Alliance, mat-based practice remains the most common entry point because it builds essential movement control before adding load or resistance complexity.
For the best results, you’ll want a mat that’s around 10mm thick. This is dense enough to cushion your spine through roll-ups and grippy enough that you don’t slide during planks or footwork. Expect to spend roughly $70-$85 for something that lasts.
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Before you spend thousands on a reformer, spend around a hundred on a few Pilates props first. These tools add resistance, tactile feedback, and variety to mat work without turning your living room into a mini storage unit.
You can build a surprisingly complete home Pilates setup with a handful of inexpensive props. A few of them include the following:
Source: Ahmet Kurt @ Unsplash
The reformer is arguably the most versatile piece of Pilates equipment ever created. It supports hundreds of exercises and allows movements that simply aren’t possible on a mat alone. It’s also a serious commitment of money, floor space, and follow-through.
These three factors need careful consideration before you buy.
That’s why experts recommend spending time with a reformer before buying one. You’ll want to attend between 20-30 supervised studio sessions before committing. Or rent a reformer if that’s an option. Here’s how a practitioner describes their experience with this process:
Source: Reddit
Put simply, it helps to find out how you feel about reformers when the novelty wears off. If you still find yourself looking forward to every session, you’ll have your answer.
One of the biggest challenges with home Pilates is knowing whether you’re moving well, not just moving often. That’s where smart reformers have started changing the conversation.
Unlike your average reformers, smart models use built-in sensors to track how you move throughout a session. They measure things like control, speed, consistency, and overall movement quality to give you feedback that would normally come from an instructor. The Flexia Smart Reformer is a good example.
Flexia’s built-in sensors track movement in real time and generate a Movement Quality Score after each workout. Plus, through the Flexia Online Studio, you can follow guided classes led by expert instructors while monitoring progress over time.
Flexia’s Smart Reformers also store upright, which solves one of the biggest objections to owning a reformer at home. For people committed to a long-term home practice, this combination of coaching, feedback, and space-conscious design makes the investment a no-brainer. Check out our collection.
Ultimately, your home Pilates practice won’t succeed because you bought the right equipment but because you kept showing up. A $75 mat used four times a week beats a $4,000 reformer used twice a month.
Start simple. Let your practice tell you what it needs next. One reason Pilates has remained popular for nearly a century is that it doesn’t need a room full of machines to get started.
Some people build a strong practice with little more than a mat. Others eventually invest in studio-grade reformers that expand what’s possible. Whichever camp you belong to, Flexia Pilates is designed to help support your fitness goals. Get started today.