Solar vs Lunar Acroyoga: What's the Difference?
If you've started exploring acroyoga events across Europe, you've probably noticed that not all conventions are teaching the same thing. Solar and lunar are different enough in intention that it's worth knowing which one you're signing up for before you book.
What is solar acroyoga?
Solar acroyoga is the dynamic, athletic side of the practice — continuous flows, whips, Icarians, and transitions that build energy rather than release it. The base lies on their back with feet in the air (the L-Base position), which forms the foundation for almost all of it. But L-Base is just the platform: solar is the intention — playful, powerful, and always moving forward.
This is what most people picture when they imagine acroyoga. It's also the harder one to explain to someone who hasn't tried it.
What is lunar acroyoga?
Lunar acroyoga — sometimes called the therapeutic practice — is a different intention entirely. Where solar is dynamic and outward, lunar is slow, receptive, and deeply restorative. Partners take turns giving and receiving: deep stretches, supported positions that decompress the spine, massage, and thai-inspired bodywork. The goal isn't a trick or a flow — it's restoration.
It also uses L-Base positioning. The distinction isn't about where the base lies — it's about what happens next. Think of it as partner yoga meets massage, with trust at the centre.
So what's the relationship between them?
They share the same community, the same values — consent, communication, trust — and the same fundamental belief that movement is better with another person. Beyond that, they're genuinely distinct practices with different skill sets, different physical demands, and different reasons people are drawn to them.
There's no snobbery between the two camps. The acroyoga world is unusually supportive across styles, and most practitioners have at least some experience with both.
Why MAC focuses on L-Base and Flow
MAC excludes standing acro for a practical reason: the venue ceiling height makes it difficult. L-Base and Flow are also where Maria's passion sits, which matters — a convention built around a style its organiser loves produces a different quality of event than one trying to cover everything.
What does “Flow” mean at MAC specifically?
Flow is about continuous, unforced movement between two people — trusting the body's momentum rather than stopping at each pose. In practice it means transitions become as important as the positions themselves. The goal is something smooth and readable, where the connection between partners does the work rather than individual strength or technique alone.
There's a concept in partner dance called the third entity — the idea that when two people move together with genuine intention, something emerges that neither person created alone. It shows up in acroyoga too, particularly in flow work. When it clicks, the movement feels guided rather than executed.
That's what MAC's teachers are working toward across the five days.

The moves that are unique to L-Base
Whips, flows, and most Icarian variations are native to L-Base. Interestingly, Icarians — where the flyer is thrown and caught — have roots in circus and standing acrobatics, and the L-Base versions are likely descendants of those earlier forms. It's one of the places where the lineage of acroyoga and traditional acrobatics visibly overlaps.
Where MAC sits on the spectrum
Athletic, artistic, and spiritual — genuinely all three, depending on what you bring to it. The teacher lineup covers elite technical training for people who want to level up seriously. The flow and performance elements satisfy people drawn to acroyoga as an art form. And the evening events — ceremonies, jams, the closing circle — create space for something that goes beyond the physical.
MAC doesn't force any of those dimensions. It just builds the conditions for all of them.
Which style should a beginner start with?
If you find a local acroyoga class, go. All branches share the same core: connection, communication, and trust. The style matters less than the experience of trying it. Once you've been in a few classes you'll naturally gravitate toward what calls to you.
If you're drawn to dynamic movement, flow, and the kind of practice that looks like it defies gravity — L-Base is your world. MAC is a good place to go deep into it.
MAC 2026 — Malta, October 7–11
L-Base and Flow focused, all levels welcome. Five days of immersive training with some of Europe's best teachers.