Fusion Fitness & Yoga is a small studio in midtown Oklahoma City offering heated vinyasa, power yoga, and gentle classes on a drop-in or membership basis, positioned between boutique hot yoga studios and full-service gyms with yoga add-ons.
A 3,500-square-foot standalone studio with heated rooms (maintained at 85–95 degrees depending on class type), Fusion operates independently rather than as part of a larger fitness chain. The space includes two heated studios, a small reception area, and locker rooms with showers. Classes cap at 12–16 students per session, keeping the room intimate and allowing instructors to offer form corrections. The studio positions itself explicitly for people who want heated yoga without committing to a large gym membership.
Fusion offers vinyasa flow (heated to 90 degrees), power yoga (heated to 92 degrees), gentle or restorative sessions (85 degrees), and occasional yin or meditation classes. Drop-in classes cost $18 per session. A 10-class punch card is $160 (saving $20 off drop-in rates). Monthly unlimited memberships run $89 for unlimited classes and $69 for 8 classes per month. A founding member rate of $59 unlimited exists but enrollment was closed in 2023. New students typically attend an orientation session (included) before their first heated class to learn studio breathing and safety practices.
Yoga studios in Oklahoma City fall into three tiers: boutique heated studios (Fusion and similar independents), YMCAs and community centers offering unheated yoga at lower cost ($10–15 per drop-in), and large gyms like Planet Fitness or LA Fitness bundling yoga classes as a membership add-on (no separate yoga pricing). Fusion's $18 drop-in and $89 monthly unlimited sit at the middle-market price point. The YMCA of Greater Oklahoma City on NW 23rd Street offers unheated vinyasa and gentle yoga for $12 drop-in or included free with YMCA membership (roughly $40–80 monthly depending on membership tier), making it cheaper for budget-conscious students but without heat. Yoga Studio OKC, another independent hot yoga studio, charges $20 drop-in or $99 monthly unlimited, placing it 11% more expensive than Fusion at the monthly tier. Choose Fusion if you want consistent heat and small class size at a moderate price; choose the YMCA if you prefer unheated yoga or already hold a community membership; choose a big-box gym if yoga is a secondary interest and you want strength equipment alongside classes.
Fusion works best for practitioners who have completed at least a few yoga classes (the heated environment and vinyasa pace assume foundational knowledge of poses and breathing). It suits people who prefer smaller groups, want a heated practice, and can work around a fixed class schedule. It does not suit absolute beginners (unless they pay for private instruction, which Fusion does not prominently advertise), people seeking a full gym experience with weights and cardio equipment, or students needing highly specialized instruction like prenatal or therapeutic yoga for injury recovery. The small-cap format also means popular time slots (early morning and evening classes) fill and require advance booking.
New students should arrive 10–15 minutes early to check in, complete a waiver, and participate in a brief orientation. The instructor will explain proper breathing (ujjayi breathing, a gentle throat constriction creating warmth), hydration protocols (bring a large water bottle), and which props (blocks, straps, blankets) are available. Wear minimal cotton or synthetic athletic clothing; heat causes standard cotton to cling. Bring a small towel for your mat and a large towel for sweat. Most studios provide mats and props; confirm this at check-in to avoid carrying extra equipment. Classes run 60 minutes, with the first 10–15 spent on breath work and warm-up, 30–40 on standing and flowing sequences, and the remainder on cool-down and savasana (resting pose).
Fusion holds classes six days per week. Morning sessions typically run 6:30–7:30 a.m., midday classes 12:00–1:00 p.m., and evening classes 5:30–6:30 p.m. and 7:00–8:00 p.m. Exact schedules shift seasonally; confirm current hours on the studio website or by phone before your first visit. The studio sits in a small plaza on NW 23rd Street near the midtown corridor, with parking in a shared lot (free, rarely full outside peak hours). A women's-only evening class and a Saturday morning all-levels session provide entry points for beginners.
Fusion fills a practical gap in Oklahoma City: affordable, consistent heated yoga without a big-box gym membership or premium boutique pricing. For practitioners wanting accountability and community within a controlled environment, the membership structure and small classes justify the cost.
