The 7 Priorities
of Alignment
A guide for moving with strength, safety, and awareness — learning to support your body from the inside out.
Not about looking perfect.
About feeling supported.
Yoga alignment is not about making every pose look a certain way. It is about learning how to support your body from the inside out — so you can move with more confidence, reduce unnecessary strain, and build a practice that feels strong, steady, and sustainable.
The more you practice these priorities, the more natural they become. Over time, alignment stops feeling like a checklist and starts becoming a conversation with your body.
Your foundation is whatever part of your body is touching the floor. In standing poses, it is your feet. In Downward Facing Dog or Plank, it is your hands and feet. In seated poses, it may be your hips and legs. Before moving deeper into a pose, take a moment to feel what is connected to the ground. Press evenly through the base. If you are standing, feel all four corners of your feet. If you are on your hands, spread your fingers and press through the whole hand, not just the wrist. A strong foundation helps the rest of the body feel more supported.
The knees are designed to bend and straighten, but they do not love twisting or collapsing inward. In most standing poses, we want the knee to point in the same direction as the toes. When the knee is bent, look down and check that it is tracking over the ankle and toward the middle toes. If the knee falls inward, it can place strain on the joint. Also, avoid locking the knees. A soft micro-bend keeps the muscles active and protects the joint from hyperextension.
Your spine is your center line. In yoga, we move the spine in many ways — we lengthen it, fold it, twist it, round it, and gently extend it. The key is to move with awareness instead of forcing. Before twisting, folding, or backbending, first create length. Imagine the crown of your head reaching away from your tailbone. This gives the spine more space and helps the movement feel cleaner. Your head should follow the spine — keep the neck as a natural extension rather than jutting the chin or dropping the head too heavily.
Your core is more than your abs. It includes the muscles around your belly, waist, back, and pelvis — working together to support your spine and keep you steady. Core engagement does not mean gripping, sucking in, or holding your breath. It is a gentle drawing in and up, like giving your spine support from the inside. When the core is active, poses feel more controlled, transitions become smoother, and the low back feels far less strained.
Many of us carry tension in the neck, shoulders, and upper back. In yoga, we want to create space across the chest without forcing the shoulders into a stiff position. Shoulders naturally draw back and down, but they should not be squeezed aggressively. Think of softening the shoulders away from the ears while keeping the chest open and the neck long. This helps reduce tension and allows the breath to move more freely through the body.
When we fold forward, the safest and strongest movement usually begins at the hips, not the low back. The hips are built for this kind of movement. The low back is not meant to do all the work. A hip hinge means the pelvis tips forward as the spine stays long. Keeping a soft bend in the knees makes this easier and protects the hamstrings and low back. The goal is not to touch the floor. The goal is to fold in a way that keeps the body supported and the spine intact.
A lever is anything that makes a pose feel heavier or harder. In yoga, the arms and legs can create long levers — the farther they move away from the body, the more strength and control the pose requires. Shortening the lever means bringing the limbs closer to the body to reduce strain. This is not “less advanced.” It is smart alignment. It allows you to build strength safely and stay genuinely connected to the pose rather than forcing through it with poor form.
One priority
at a time.
You do not have to remember every priority in every pose. Start with one. Let it become natural. Then add another. The sequence below is a useful order — each one builds on what came before.
“Alignment stops feeling like a list of rules and starts becoming a conversation with your body.”
