Types of Retreats: Which Should You Host?
Choosing what kind of retreat to host isn't a branding exercise — it determines your guests, your price, your schedule, and how hard the retreat is to fill. The right answer is usually the one closest to what you already teach and who already trusts you. Here's an honest look at the main types.
Yoga retreats
The most common and most competitive category. Guests expect daily practice, good food, and beautiful surroundings. Easy to fill if you already have students who love you; hard if you're starting from zero, because the market is crowded. Margins are healthy at all-inclusive venues. See how to host a yoga retreat.
Wellness and detox retreats
Broader than yoga — nutrition, breathwork, bodywork, rest. Attracts guests seeking a reset rather than a practice. Requires careful attention to food and to any health claims you make. See how to host a wellness / detox retreat.
Corporate offsites
A different business entirely: the company pays, not the individual, which means bigger budgets, less price sensitivity, and different requirements — meeting space, reliable Wi-Fi, and clear ROI. Sales cycles are longer but contracts are larger. See how to plan a corporate offsite.
Women's retreats
Built around community and safety as much as content. These fill on trust and word of mouth, and often produce the strongest repeat attendance of any category. See how to host a women's retreat.
Surf, adventure, and activity retreats
Pair a practice with a place — surfing, hiking, diving. The destination does heavy marketing work here, and logistics get more complex (equipment, guides, weather). See how to host a surf + yoga retreat.
Luxury retreats
Fewer guests, much higher price, far higher expectations. Every detail is scrutinized. Excellent margins if you can deliver and reach the audience. See how to host a luxury retreat.
Budget-friendly retreats
The opposite trade: more guests, lower price, thinner per-person margin, and volume-driven profit. Fills quickly with the right audience, but leaves little room for error in your costing. See budget-friendly retreats.
Writing and creative retreats
Structured around focused work time and gentle facilitation, with far less programming than a wellness retreat. Guests want quiet, space, and just enough structure. See how to host a writing / creative retreat.
How to actually choose
Ignore which type sounds most appealing and ask three questions:
- Who already trusts me? Your existing audience is who you'll actually sell to. Their needs define your retreat type. If you're building that audience, start with build an email list before you launch.
- What can I deliver excellently? Host the retreat only you can lead, not the one you saw on Instagram.
- Do the numbers work? A luxury retreat and a budget retreat require different group sizes to break even. Test both in the itinerary calculator and check the logic in how to price a retreat.
What every type shares
Whatever you choose, the fundamentals don't change: a venue that carries the logistics (how to choose a retreat venue), a schedule with room to breathe (how to design a retreat itinerary), and a plan for filling seats (how to sell out your retreat). The type shapes the experience; the fundamentals decide whether it works.
Your next step
ZÂRIA hosts every type on this list — yoga, wellness, corporate, women's, creative — with all-inclusive packages, practice spaces, and a team on the ground in the Dominican Republic. Build your itinerary and quote, then start planning your retreat with us →
Related: how to host a retreat: the complete guide · sample retreat schedules by type
