Yoga Factory in Baltimore: Heat-Focused Classes on a Pay-Per-Class Model
Yoga Factory is a heated yoga studio in Baltimore's Canton neighborhood that operates on single-class pricing rather than a membership model, making it accessible for drop-in visits and short-term practice.
What Yoga Factory actually is
Yoga Factory specializes in heated vinyasa and power yoga classes. The studio offers classes throughout the day, with a teaching model built around alignment-focused instruction in rooms heated to around 85–90 degrees. Unlike many Baltimore yoga studios that emphasize beginner-friendly or yin-based practices, Yoga Factory targets students looking for cardiovascular challenge and heat-induced intensity.
Classes and pricing
Classes cost $15 per session when paid at the studio. A 5-class pass costs $65, reducing the per-class rate to $13. A 10-class pass costs $120, or $12 per class. Monthly unlimited memberships are available for $99 per month, though the studio also allows true drop-in attendance without a membership commitment. Most classes run 60 minutes. The studio offers beginner, intermediate, and advanced-level classes at different times, so students new to heated yoga can find appropriate entry points without committing long-term.
How it compares to other Baltimore yoga options
Baltimore has several yoga studios with different models. Dharma Yoga, also in Canton, offers donation-based and pay-what-you-can classes, which lowers the barrier to entry but operates on inconsistent revenue. Yoga Sanctuary in Fells Point charges $18 per class or $88 monthly unlimited and focuses on classical Hatha and restorative styles rather than heat-based vinyasa. Yoga Factory's $15 single-class rate sits between donation-based entry and Yoga Sanctuary's pricing, and its heat-focused practice attracts students who find heated environments aid flexibility and detoxification, whereas Yoga Sanctuary appeals more to practitioners seeking slower-paced, alignment-first instruction. If you want cardiovascular challenge in heat without a membership obligation, Yoga Factory works. If you prefer affordability and flexibility on what you pay, Dharma Yoga. If you're drawn to traditional, unheated styles, Yoga Sanctuary is the clearer choice.
Who it suits and who it does not suit
Yoga Factory works well for students with vinyasa experience who enjoy heat, travelers passing through Baltimore, and people testing whether heated yoga fits their practice before committing to a monthly fee. The pay-per-class model suits people with inconsistent schedules. It is less suited to absolute beginners to yoga (though beginner classes exist, the heat can overwhelm newcomers), students who prefer cooler environments or yin-style restorative work, and practitioners looking for the lowest possible cost (at $15 per class, it exceeds donation-based models).
What the first visit involves
Arrive 10–15 minutes early to allow time for check-in and to acclimate to the heated room. Bring a mat (the studio may offer rentals; confirm in advance), a towel, and a water bottle. The instructor will typically offer modifications at the start of class. Most classes follow a standard vinyasa sequence with sun salutations, standing poses, and a cool-down; heat gradually builds throughout the hour rather than beginning at maximum temperature.
Hours, parking, and logistics
Yoga Factory is located in Canton. The studio's class schedule typically runs from early morning through early evening on weekdays and weekend mornings, though specific times should be confirmed directly, as class availability can shift seasonally. Street parking is available in the surrounding Canton neighborhood; the studio itself does not operate a dedicated lot. The neighborhood is walkable from the Canton Metro station if using public transit.
Yoga Factory fills a specific need in Baltimore's yoga landscape: accessible drop-in heated practice without membership pressure, making it practical for people who want heat-driven vinyasa on their own schedule.

