You moved to Madrid for a reason. Maybe it was the career opportunity, the weather, the culture, or the simple desire to live somewhere that does not require a heavy coat eight months out of the year. Whatever brought you here, you are now navigating a city that runs on its own clock, eats dinner at 10 PM, and treats a two-hour lunch like a constitutional right.
Staying fit in this context requires a different approach than what worked back home. The 6 AM boot camp grind, the crowded chain gym with rows of treadmills, the rigid weekly schedule that leaves no room for spontaneity. None of that translates well to Madrid life. What does translate well is reformer pilates. And once you understand why, you will wonder how you ever trained any other way.
Madrid Runs on a Different Schedule. Your Workout Should Too.
The Spanish timetable throws most newcomers off balance. Work hours split around a long midday break. Social plans start late. Weekends revolve around brunch, long walks, and outdoor terraces. Trying to force a rigid gym schedule into this rhythm creates friction instead of consistency.
Reformer pilates fits naturally into the gaps of a Madrid day. A 50-minute class is short enough to slot into a lunch break, early enough to finish before your morning meetings, and energizing enough to carry you through an evening that does not end until midnight. At Pinar Pilates, classes run Monday through Friday from 7:00 to 10:00, 13:00 to 15:00, and 17:00 to 21:00, with weekend sessions from 8:30 to 13:00. That is over 50 classes per week spread across every time window that actually works in Madrid.
Compare that to most gyms in the city. Open hours are generous, sure, but a reformer studio with this many weekly sessions and flexible booking gives you something a gym floor never can: a structured, instructor-led workout that adapts to your week, not the other way around.
Why Reformer Pilates and Not Something Else
Madrid has no shortage of fitness options. Running along the Retiro, padel courts in every neighborhood, CrossFit boxes, yoga studios, and boutique cycling. So why reformer pilates?
It Fixes What Sitting Breaks
If you work in an office, cowork from a laptop in a cafe on Calle Serrano, or spend your days at a desk in any form, your body is paying a tax. Rounded shoulders, compressed lower back, tight hip flexors, weak glutes. Reformer pilates systematically addresses every one of these imbalances. The machine provides resistance and guidance simultaneously, which means you build strength in the exact ranges of motion where most desk workers are weakest.
It Scales With You
A reformer class at a good studio accommodates complete beginners and experienced athletes in the same session. The spring resistance system allows each person to work at their own level. You are not stuck in a «beginner» track for months, and you are never thrown into something your body is not ready for.
It Protects Your Joints
Madrid’s sidewalks are unforgiving, and running on concrete five days a week catches up with you. Reformer pilates is low-impact by design. The carriage glides on rails, the springs absorb force, and every movement is controlled. You build functional strength and flexibility without the cumulative joint stress that comes with high-impact training.
It Finishes in Under an Hour
A 50-minute reformer class delivers a full-body workout with no wasted time. No wandering between machines, no waiting for equipment, no filler sets. You walk in, you work, and you walk out. In a city where your time is constantly pulled toward social plans, errands in Spanish you only half-understand, and the general beautiful chaos of expat life, efficiency matters.
The Salamanca Factor
Not all neighborhoods in Madrid offer the same lifestyle equation for fitness. Barrio de Salamanca stands apart for several practical reasons.
Walkability
Salamanca is one of the most walkable districts in the city. Flat, wide sidewalks. Clean streets. A grid layout that makes navigation intuitive, even if you arrived last month. Pinar Pilates sits on Calle del Pinar 8, a five-minute walk from Colon metro (Line 4) and seven minutes from Alonso Martinez (Lines 4, 5, 10). You can walk to class, walk home, and fold the commute into your daily step count.
Post-Class Culture
This is where Salamanca really shines for the fitness-minded expat. After your morning class, you are surrounded by options. A fresh zumo at the juice bar around the corner. Breakfast at one of the dozens of cafes within a three-block radius. A stroll through the Mercado de la Paz for groceries. The neighborhood supports a lifestyle where your workout is not an isolated event but part of a larger, enjoyable routine.
Safety and Comfort
For those new to Madrid, Salamanca offers one of the safest, most comfortable environments in the city. Well-lit streets, a strong community presence, and a general atmosphere that makes early morning and evening walks to the studio feel completely natural.
The Tapas Question: Exercise and Spanish Food Culture
Every expat in Madrid faces the same happy dilemma. The food here is extraordinary, and the social culture revolves around eating together. Croquetas, tortilla, jamon, patatas bravas, natural wine at every corner. You did not move to Madrid to count macros and skip the vermut.
Reformer pilates does not ask you to choose between fitness and food. It gives you functional strength, improved posture, and a well-conditioned body that can handle the occasional three-course weekday lunch without guilt spiraling. Two to three sessions per week creates a baseline of physical discipline that coexists with, rather than fights against, the way people actually live here.
Think of it this way. Your body is a vehicle. Reformer pilates keeps the engine tuned. What fuel you put in it during a Saturday afternoon in La Latina is your business.
Building Community as an Expat
One of the less obvious benefits of joining a small-group reformer studio is the social dimension. Moving to a new country can be isolating, especially once the initial excitement fades and the reality of building a new social circle sets in.
At a studio with a maximum of 8 people per class, you see the same faces when you book the same time slots. Conversations happen naturally before and after sessions. You bond over sore muscles, celebrate progress together, and eventually start getting coffee afterwards. This is not the anonymous experience of a 200-person gym. It is a genuine micro-community.
At Pinar Pilates, that community includes a significant international contingent. English and Spanish mix freely. Our instructors communicate in both languages, which means you never feel excluded from the group dynamic. Many of our current members started as solo expats who found their first Madrid friends through the studio.
For those looking to connect with other English-speaking fitness enthusiasts, our English-friendly classes are a natural starting point.
What a Typical Week Looks Like
Here is how reformer pilates might fit into a realistic Madrid expat schedule.
Monday, 7:30 AM. Start the week with an early class before work. The studio is quiet, the group is small, and you are done by 8:20. Shower at home, coffee at the office by 9:00.
Wednesday, 13:30. Use the lunch break for a midday session. The Spanish work schedule practically begs you to do something productive with those two hours. One class, a quick shower, and a light lunch still gets you back to your desk on time.
Saturday, 9:30. Weekend morning class. Finish by 10:20, then walk to brunch. The rest of your Saturday is completely open.
Three sessions per week. Roughly 2.5 hours of total training time. No commute to a distant gym. No equipment to maintain. No workout plan to design. Just show up, follow the instructor, and leave feeling better than when you arrived.
The Numbers
Pinar Pilates is rated 5 stars on Google with over más de 450 reviews. Classes cap at 8 participants. Over 50 sessions per week.
Pricing is straightforward:
- Unlimited monthly: 250 euros
- 12 classes/month: 200 euros
- 8 classes/month: 150 euros
- 4 classes/month: 100 euros
- Single class: 30 euros
For new clients, the first class is available at 50% off (15 euros). No hidden fees, no enrollment charges, no year-long contracts.
If you train three times per week, the 12-class monthly plan works out to roughly 16.50 euros per session for a small-group, instructor-led reformer class in one of Madrid’s best neighborhoods. That is less than most padel court rentals and a fraction of what personal training costs.
Language Should Not Be a Barrier
One of the most common hesitations expats have about joining a local studio is language. You are already navigating bureaucracy, banking, and daily life in Spanish. Adding fitness vocabulary on top of that can feel like one challenge too many.
At Pinar Pilates, every instructor speaks English. You do not need to book a special English session or request a translator. Simply show up, let your instructor know your language preference, and you will receive clear, precise cues in English throughout the class. The small group size of 8 people makes this level of individual communication possible.
Over time, you will likely pick up the Spanish terminology naturally. Reformer pilates uses a limited, repetitive vocabulary, and hearing the same cues week after week is one of the most effective low-pressure ways to build your Spanish. Several of our members credit their classes with jumpstarting their Spanish comprehension.
How to Get Started
Step 1. Book your first class at 50% off. New clients pay just 15 euros for their introductory session.
Step 2. Choose a time slot from the weekly schedule. With 50+ classes across mornings, lunchtimes, evenings, and weekends, you will find one that fits.
Step 3. Arrive 10 minutes early. Wear comfortable, form-fitting clothing. Bring grip socks if you have them; the studio also sells them.
Step 4. Tell your instructor you prefer English. That is the only setup required.
Step 5. Move, breathe, and discover why más de 450 people gave this studio a perfect rating.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need any reformer pilates experience?
No. Classes at Pinar Pilates range from basic to advanced levels. As a new client, you will be guided to the appropriate level, and your instructor will give you extra attention during your first few sessions to ensure your form is correct.
Is reformer pilates enough exercise on its own?
For most people, two to three reformer sessions per week combined with regular walking (which Madrid practically guarantees) is a complete fitness foundation. You build strength, flexibility, balance, and body awareness. Many members supplement with running or swimming, but it is not necessary.
Can I communicate entirely in English?
Yes. Every instructor at Pinar Pilates is bilingual. You will receive all cues, corrections, and explanations in English if that is your preference.
What if I need to cancel or change my schedule?
The online booking system allows you to manage your reservations easily. Cancellation policies are straightforward, and the large number of weekly classes means rescheduling is rarely a problem.
Is Salamanca easy to reach from other parts of Madrid?
Very. Colon metro station (Line 4) and Alonso Martinez (Lines 4, 5, 10) are both within walking distance of the studio. Bus lines along Calle Genova and Paseo de la Castellana also serve the area. If you live anywhere along Lines 4, 5, or 10, you can reach the studio in under 20 minutes.
You moved to Madrid to live well. Reformer pilates keeps your body strong while the city takes care of the rest. Book your first class at 50% off and find out what más de 450 five-star reviewers already know.
Calle del Pinar 8, Salamanca, Madrid. Contact us | +34 611 994 729. We speak English and Spanish.



