Har Ghar Yoga event draws 930,000 viewers in single day
Habuild's Har Ghar Yoga ran six live sessions on Jan 17 and reported about 9.3 lakh participants, setting a new world record for single-day yoga viewership. It aimed to reboot daily wellness habits.

An India-based wellness platform, Habuild, ran a day-long online push called Har Ghar Yoga on January 17 and reported cumulative participation of roughly 9.3 lakh people across six live sessions, a figure validated with the World Records Union. Organisers framed the event as a gentle re-entry into daily practice, focusing on consistency and habit-building rather than intense, one-off goals.
The program scheduled six live sessions spread across the day to meet varied routines and time zones, widening access for morning risers, office-hour practitioners, and evening wind-downs. Habuild tied participation growth to a community service pledge: a brick donated for a school-building initiative for each new community member who joined the campaign. That mix of accessible programming and social impact helped drive both numbers and engagement.
Habuild cofounder Saurabh Bothra described the day as focused on welcoming people back to practice and building daily habit momentum rather than chasing perfection. That framing aligns with a broader shift in online yoga: short, approachable sessions that prioritize consistency and small wins over marathon workshops. For many who feel past the "Quitter's Day" slump in mid-January, Har Ghar Yoga offered a low-pressure restart and a built-in accountability loop.
For practitioners, the event highlights the continued reach of guided online yoga and confirms that virtual formats can scale while remaining community-oriented. Live streams that run in bite-sized blocks make it easier to slot practice into a busy day, and cumulative participation metrics show how collective momentum can motivate individual commitment. The charitable tie-in also demonstrates how community-led initiatives can pair personal practice with social impact, turning mat time into measurable benefit beyond the home.
If you want to use similar events to reboot your routine, prioritize short daily sessions over occasional long practices, schedule a consistent time, and treat community sign-ups as accountability. Look for programs that offer repeated, varied session times so you can keep momentum even when travel or work disrupts a usual slot. Track attendance and set small, achievable targets to turn ad-hoc practice into habit.
Har Ghar Yoga's headline numbers matter less than the model it reinforces: approachable, repeatable practice at scale, with community and charity woven in. Expect more mass online campaigns this year that emphasize habit formation and social return—so roll out your mat, start small, and let consistency do the heavy lifting.
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