Surya Namaskar (Sun Salutation) Defined: The Complete Guide | Yoga Near Me

Surya Namaskar Defined

Pronunciation: SOOR-yah nah-mah-SKAR · Sanskrit: सूर्य नमस्कार

Surya Namaskar—the Sun Salutation—is a flowing sequence of poses synchronized with breath. It warms the body, honors the sun as the source of life, and forms the rhythmic backbone of most vinyasa practice.

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What Is Surya Namaskar?

Surya Namaskar translates as "Salutation to the Sun" (surya = sun, namaskar = salutation or greeting). It's a sequence of yoga poses performed in a continuous flow, with each movement synchronized to either an inhale or exhale. One complete round takes you through forward folds, lunges, plank, and downward-facing dog, then returns you to standing.

Traditionally practiced at sunrise facing east, Surya Namaskar is both a physical warm-up and a moving meditation—an embodied acknowledgment of the sun as the source of light, warmth, and life on Earth. The sequence has been practiced for generations as a complete practice in itself or as preparation for deeper work.

In modern yoga classes, you'll encounter Sun Salutations in almost every vinyasa or power yoga class, often practiced in the opening minutes to build heat and establish the breath-movement connection that carries through the rest of practice.

Why the sun? In yoga philosophy, the sun represents prana—life force energy. Surya Namaskar isn't sun worship in a religious sense; it's recognition that without solar energy, there would be no life. The sequence honors that fundamental relationship between humans and the source of all earthly energy.

Sun Salutation A (Surya Namaskar A)

This is the foundational sequence you'll encounter most often. It consists of 9-12 positions (depending on how you count) and takes about one minute to complete. Here's the classical form:

Surya Namaskar A 9 Positions
1

Tadasana (Mountain Pose)

Stand at the front of your mat, hands at heart

Start
2

Urdhva Hastasana (Upward Salute)

Arms sweep overhead, slight backbend

Inhale
3

Uttanasana (Standing Forward Fold)

Fold forward from the hips

Exhale
4

Ardha Uttanasana (Half Lift)

Lengthen spine, fingertips to shins or floor

Inhale
5

Chaturanga Dandasana (Four-Limbed Staff)

Step or jump back, lower halfway down

Exhale
6

Urdhva Mukha Svanasana (Upward Dog)

Press through hands, open chest, tops of feet down

Inhale
7

Adho Mukha Svanasana (Downward Dog)

Lift hips, press back—hold for 5 breaths

Exhale
8

Ardha Uttanasana (Half Lift)

Step or jump forward, lengthen spine

Inhale
9

Uttanasana (Standing Forward Fold)

Fold forward from the hips

Exhale
10

Urdhva Hastasana (Upward Salute)

Arms sweep overhead, slight backbend

Exhale
11

Tadasana (Mountain Pose)

Rise to standing, hands to heart

Exhale

Sun Salutation B (Surya Namaskar B)

Sun Salutation B adds Warrior I (Virabhadrasana I) and Chair Pose (Utkatasana) to the sequence, making it longer, more challenging, and more heat-building. It's typically practiced after several rounds of Sun A have warmed the body.

Ashtanga vs. Vinyasa: The sequences above follow the Ashtanga tradition. Other lineages have their own versions—Sivananda's 12-step sequence includes lunges instead of stepping/jumping back. Iyengar yoga uses Sun Salutations less frequently, favoring longer holds. Your teacher's version may differ slightly, and that's fine. The essence remains: breath-synchronized movement honoring the sun.

Benefits of Sun Salutations

Practiced regularly, Surya Namaskar offers a remarkable range of benefits:

Warms the Body

Raises internal temperature, preparing muscles and joints for deeper practice

Builds Strength

Engages arms, core, legs, and back—a complete strengthening sequence

Increases Flexibility

Forward folds, backbends, and hip openers address the whole body

Links Breath & Movement

Trains the coordination that defines vinyasa practice

Energizes

The combination of movement and breath boosts circulation and alertness

Focuses the Mind

The repetitive, flowing nature creates a meditative state

How Many to Practice?

Traditionally, practitioners might do 108 Sun Salutations—a sacred number in yoga—on special occasions like the solstices or equinoxes. But for daily practice:

  • 3-5 rounds — A quick warm-up or standalone morning practice
  • 5-10 rounds — Thorough preparation for a longer asana practice
  • 12+ rounds — A complete cardiovascular and strength practice on its own

Quality matters more than quantity. Three mindful Sun Salutations with proper breath and alignment will serve you better than rushing through ten.

Modifications are valid: Can't do Chaturanga? Lower all the way down or skip to Cobra instead of Upward Dog. Knees not happy with lunges? Step instead of jumping. Wrists complaining? Practice on fists or use wedges. The sequence adapts to your body—not the other way around.

When to Practice

Traditionally, Surya Namaskar is practiced at sunrise, facing east. This aligns with the sequence's purpose: greeting the sun as it rises. The early morning hours (Brahma muhurta, roughly 4-6 AM) are considered ideal in yoga tradition.

That said, Sun Salutations work any time you need to warm the body, generate energy, or transition from stillness to movement. Many practitioners use them:

  • First thing in the morning to wake up the body
  • At the beginning of any yoga practice as a warm-up
  • As a standalone practice when time is limited
  • In the afternoon as an energy boost

Avoid vigorous Sun Salutations immediately after eating or just before bed (the energizing effect may interfere with sleep).

A Practice Within the Practice

Sun Salutations are sometimes dismissed as "just the warm-up"—something to get through before the "real" practice begins. But there's profound depth available in this simple sequence. When you synchronize breath with movement, maintain steady attention, and honor the tradition's origins, Surya Namaskar becomes a complete practice: physical, energetic, and contemplative.

Many advanced practitioners return to Sun Salutations as their primary practice, finding new subtlety in poses they've done thousands of times. The sequence is simple enough to memorize immediately, deep enough to explore for a lifetime.

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