Maui Goat Yoga - Maui’s Pioneering Goat Yoga Experience - #1 Rated, Award Winning!
936 Keanuhea St, Kula, HI 96790
1 location — baby goat yoga classes near Kula
Kula sits on the leeward slopes of Haleakalā, where Upcountry Maui's cooler temperatures and open pastureland create an ideal setting for outdoor animal-assisted yoga. The town sits around 1,500 to 3,000 feet above sea level, which means sessions here escape the coastal humidity that makes midday yoga in Lahaina or Kīhei feel oppressive. The trade-off: mornings can be brisk enough to want layers, especially during winter months when temperatures dip into the 50s before sunrise.
Kula has exactly one goat yoga venue, but it's the one that started the trend on Maui. The operation at 936 Keanuhea Street holds the distinction of being the island's first goat yoga experience, and they've built their reputation around that pioneering status. Sessions run on their property with views extending across the Maui isthmus to the West Maui Mountains — a panorama that does most of the heavy lifting for ambiance. The goats are raised on-site, which means the animals are acclimated to people and the routine of wandering through downward dogs and seated poses.
Kula's climate dictates when goat yoga happens here. The area sits in Maui's agricultural belt, where morning fog burns off by mid-morning and afternoon trade winds pick up reliably. Operators schedule around these patterns — early sessions capitalize on calm air and soft light, while late-afternoon slots catch the golden hour before sunset drops behind the volcanoes. Rain is less of a concern here than on the windward side of the island, but Upcountry showers arrive fast and dissipate quickly. Most sessions proceed in light drizzle, and the goats couldn't care less either way.
The goats are small — kids, not full-grown adults — which makes the physical interaction manageable even for someone who's never held a yoga pose. The practice itself trends toward gentle and restorative rather than rigorous vinyasa. You're here to have a goat stand on your back during child's pose, not to nail a perfect chaturanga. Wear clothes you don't mind getting dirty. The pasture setting means grass, dirt, and the occasional goat pellet underfoot. Bring sunscreen regardless of cloud cover; at this elevation, UV exposure intensifies quickly.
936 Keanuhea St, Kula, HI 96790