Understanding “Stand With Your Feet Hip Distance Apart” in Yoga

Understanding, “Stand With Your Feet Hip Distance Apart” in Yoga

Yoga teachers often say, “Stand with your feet hip distance apart.” But what does that actually mean when you’re standing in Mountain Pose or in a forward fold?

Many people assume it means the outer width of the hips; including the skin and soft tissue. In yoga alignment, however, here at Body Soul Yoga, we are referring to something different.

What “Hip Distance Apart” Really Means

Hip distance is the width between your hip joints, the bony points at the front of your pelvis, (often called the front hip bones).

For most people, this works out to roughly:

  • The feet being 2 fist widths apart

  • the feet around 4–6 inches (10–15 cm) apart

  • The outer edges of your feet being parallel to the edges of your yoga mat.

A Quick Self-Check

Try this simple alignment check:

  1. Stand tall.

  2. Place your hands on the front of your hip bones.

  3. Look down and line your second toes up directly underneath those points.

That is your true hip-distance stance

Why This Alignment Matters

Standing with true hip-distance alignment can make a surprising difference in your yoga practice.

It can help to:

  • Improve balance and stability

  • Reduce strain on the knees

  • Support a neutral pelvis

  • Encourage the inner thighs to engage effectively

Even a simple standing pose can become much more stable when the foundation is set correctly.

The Power of Mountain Pose

Tadasana (Mountain Pose) may look simple, but when aligned well it becomes a powerful foundation for your entire practice; building strength, balance, and body awareness from the ground up.

A Slight Tweak

If you feel tightness or compression in the sacrum or lower back, try experimenting with your foot position:

  • Keep the feet parallel to the edges of the mat.

  • Or even turn the toes slightly inwards to create more space in the back of the pelvis and sacrum.

  • When you achieve more balance you can move the feet together, with the big toes touching, with a little space between the heels, to make space for the ankles.

Try it the next time you are on your yoga mat!

Love the Body Soul Yoga Team x

Posted 7 March 2026