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Article: I Started Reformer Pilates in My 50s. Here's What I'd Tell Anyone Who Thinks It's Too Late.

Woman seated on a FitBoutique timber reformer in a bright airy studio
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I Started Reformer Pilates in My 50s. Here's What I'd Tell Anyone Who Thinks It's Too Late.

I started reformer Pilates in my fifties, and the loudest voice in my head beforehand was "isn't this a young person's thing?" Every video I'd seen featured someone in their twenties folding into shapes I'd not attempted since childhood. I almost let that talk me out of it. I'm so glad it didn't, because starting later turned out to be one of the better decisions I've made for my body. If you're wondering whether you've missed the boat, you haven't.

Is reformer Pilates good for over 50s?

It might be the ideal age to start. Reformer Pilates is low-impact, fully adjustable, and focused on exactly the things that matter more with each decade: core strength, balance, mobility and joint-friendly movement. The springs scale the resistance to your level, so you're never forced past what your body wants to do today. Far from being a young person's pursuit, it's one of the most age-friendly ways to train I've found, which is why so many studios are full of people in their fifties, sixties and beyond.

Lunge stretch on a FitBoutique timber reformer in a bright studio

The "I've left it too late" lie

This is the belief I most want to dismantle. The idea that there's some cut-off after which you shouldn't start is simply wrong, and it keeps far too many people on the sofa. Your body responds to training at every age. Strength, balance and mobility are all improvable in your fifties, sixties and well beyond, that's not wishful thinking, it's how bodies work. The only genuinely too-late is never starting. Beginning today, at whatever age today is, beats waiting for a younger version of you that isn't coming back.

Why low-impact matters more now

In my twenties I could pound the pavement and bounce back. These days my joints have opinions. This is exactly why the reformer suits me now better than running ever did, there's no jarring, no impact slamming through knees and hips, just smooth, supported, controlled movement. The springs share the load so I build strength without the wear and tear. For anyone whose joints have started filing complaints, low-impact isn't a compromise. It's the smart choice that lets you keep training for years.

Strength, balance and the things we don't talk about

Here's the unglamorous truth that motivated me: the things that quietly matter more as we age are strength, balance and staying mobile and independent. Reformer Pilates works on all of them, the core and stabilising muscles, the controlled balance challenges, the full range of movement. I started for how it made me look and feel, but I've kept going because I genuinely believe it's an investment in moving well for decades. That's a different, and frankly better, reason to train than the one I had at twenty-five.

Woman seated on a FitBoutique reformer in a brick loft living space

Starting at home, on your terms

One quiet advantage of starting later: I cared a lot less about doing it in a busy class and a lot more about doing it comfortably, in my own space, at my own pace. A home reformer was perfect for that. Every FitBoutique reformer arrives fully assembled with a jumpboard, box and yoga starter kit included, and a foldable model tucks neatly away. Paired with beginner-friendly guided classes, our Fit by FitBoutique on-demand app is launching very soon, you can ease in gently with no audience and no pressure. If you'd like a hand choosing, our reformer buying guide walks through the range.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is reformer Pilates good for over 50s?

Yes, arguably it's ideal. It's low-impact and fully adjustable, and it targets core strength, balance and mobility, the things that matter more with age. The springs scale resistance to your level, so you train safely without being pushed past your comfort.

Is it too late to start in my 50s or 60s?

No. Bodies respond to training at every age, and strength, balance and mobility all improve well into later decades. The only too-late is never starting. Beginning now beats waiting.

Will it be too hard on my joints?

The opposite, it's low-impact by design. There's no jarring or pounding, and the springs share the load so you build strength gently. That joint-friendliness is exactly why it suits us as we get older.

Can I start at home rather than in a class?

Yes, and many people prefer it. A home reformer lets you ease in privately at your own pace. Foldable models pack away, machines arrive fully assembled, and beginner guided classes mean you're never guessing what to do.

It's Not Too Late to Start

A low-impact, fully adjustable reformer for every age, with free Australia-wide delivery and a 5-year warranty.

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KEY SUMMARY
Think you've left it too late to start reformer Pilates? Starting in your 50s (or 60s, or beyond) might be the best timing there is. Here's why.

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