Yoga Mat Coupon Codes — Verified Discounts June 2026
Working yoga mat coupon codes and promo codes for June 2026. Verified discounts for Manduka, Liforme, Jade Yoga, Gaiam, and more.
Jordan Reeves has tested over 30 yoga mats and tracks deals across all major retailers. He shares verified discounts and money-saving strategies for yoga practitioners.
Let me be upfront about something: yoga mat coupon codes are inconsistent. Some brands flood your inbox with “20% OFF TODAY ONLY” subject lines basically every Tuesday. Other brands guard their discount codes like nuclear launch codes. And then there’s the internet’s endless supply of “promo code” websites that list codes that haven’t worked since 2019.
I test every code on this page myself before I publish it. If it’s here, it worked when I tried it. That said, codes expire, and brands disable them without warning. If you try one and it’s dead, let me know and I’ll take it down. I update this page at least twice a month.
Verified Yoga Mat Coupon Codes — June 2026
Manduka
Manduka is the trickiest brand to find codes for, but also the one where a working code makes the biggest difference because their mats are expensive and their own site rarely discounts.
Current working codes:
| Code | Discount | Details | Verified Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| WELCOME15 | 15% off first order | Email signup welcome code. Works on most items, sometimes excludes PRO series mats — test it. | June 18, 2026 |
| STUDENT15 | 15% off | Student discount via Student Beans verification. Requires .edu email or student ID upload. | Ongoing |
Manduka runs site-wide sales a few times per year — usually 15-20% off — but they rarely distribute public coupon codes outside of those events. Their email list is the most reliable way to get notified when a code drops. I covered their broader discount patterns in my yoga mat sale deals guide.
What doesn’t work with Manduka: Most third-party coupon sites list codes like MANDUKA20 or PRO25. These are fake, recycled from old promotions, or outright fabricated. I test every one that surfaces and I’ve never seen one work. Stick to the verified codes above. Read my Manduka yoga mat review for the full picture on whether their mats are worth it even at full price.
Liforme
Here’s the honest truth about Liforme coupon codes: they almost never exist. Liforme runs exactly two sales per year — Black Friday and a spring event (sometimes tied to Earth Day). During those sales, they distribute codes to their email subscribers. Outside of those two windows, there are no working Liforme discount codes. I test every code that surfaces online, and I’ve never found a working Liforme code outside of their biannual sales.
If you’re set on a Liforme, here is your strategy: sign up for their newsletter, wait for the next sale event, and buy within the first 24 hours before your preferred color sells out. The Black Friday discount typically hits 25-26% off, which on a $160 mat means $119. For more detail, read my Liforme yoga mat review.
Jade Yoga
Jade Yoga operates similarly to Liforme — they’re not a code-heavy brand. Their discounting philosophy is more about site-wide sales than individual coupon codes.
Current working codes:
| Code | Discount | Details | Verified Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| None currently active | — | Jade’s next expected sale window is their summer promotion, typically late June or early July. | June 18, 2026 |
Jade runs site-wide sales roughly quarterly, and they announce them through their email list. The typical discount is 10-20% off. They also offer a teacher discount program — if you’re a certified yoga instructor, you can apply for their professional discount directly through their website’s wholesale portal. That discount is typically 20-25% and is the best ongoing deal for Jade mats.
One thing Jade does that most brands don’t: they offer a “Buy More, Save More” structure on some accessories, which sometimes extends to mats when you purchase multiple items. If you’re outfitting a small studio or buying for a group, contact their wholesale department directly — the per-unit pricing you can negotiate is better than any public code.
For a detailed look at the mats themselves, head to my Jade yoga mat review. And if you’re wondering whether these premium brands are worth the premium price, my cheap vs. expensive yoga mat breakdown walks through the math.
Gaiam
Gaiam is the polar opposite of Liforme and Jade. Codes are everywhere, they work consistently, and the discounts are deep. Gaiam runs a perpetual sale cycle where something is always 20-30% off. Their site usually has a banner code right on the homepage.
Current working codes:
| Code | Discount | Details | Verified Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| SAVE20 | 20% off sitewide | Rotating homepage code. Works on most items including mats. | June 18, 2026 |
| WELCOME15 | 15% off first order | Email signup incentive. Stacks with sale prices on some items. | June 18, 2026 |
Gaiam also frequently runs category-specific promotions — “30% off all mats” is something I see from them roughly every 6-8 weeks. These promotions usually run for 3-5 days. If you’re not in a rush, wait for the 30% off mats promo. At a $30 list price, 30% off takes it to $21. Combine that with free shipping on orders over $50, and you can get a mat plus accessories for less than the cost of one budget mat from most other brands.
The catch with Gaiam is that the mats themselves are budget-tier quality. You’re getting a $20 mat for $14 with a code, not a $80 mat for $56. The value is real — Gaiam mats are perfectly fine for beginners and casual practitioners — but don’t expect the code to turn a Gaiam into a Liforme. My Gaiam yoga mat review goes into the quality-versus-value tradeoff in detail.
Lululemon
Lululemon doesn’t really do coupon codes in the traditional sense. Their discount mechanism is their “We Made Too Much” sale section (formerly known as “What the Heck” — they should’ve kept that name). Items get marked down, not reduced by code.
Current discounts:
Lululemon’s “We Made Too Much” section is refreshed every Thursday morning. The Mat 5mm shows up there in seasonal and less popular colors, typically at $69-$78 (down from $88). Color availability changes weekly, and popular colors (black, navy, dark olive) almost never hit the sale section.
Lululemon offers a military and first responder discount of 15% in-store, which can be applied to full-price mats. They also have a Sweat Collective program for fitness professionals, which offers 25% off — but this requires verification of employment at a qualifying fitness facility and is harder to qualify for than a standard student discount.
If you’re interested in Lululemon’s mats, my Lululemon yoga mat review covers performance and value. And their broader pricing trends are covered in my yoga mat sale deals page.
Discount Strategies That Work (Codes or No Codes)
Codes are the straightforward path to savings, but they’re not the only path. Here are discount strategies I’ve used successfully that don’t require finding a working coupon code:
Student Discounts
Manduka offers 15% off for students through Student Beans. You’ll need a valid .edu email address or a student ID for verification. This is a consistent 15% discount on a brand that rarely offers public codes, so if you’re a student, use it. $140 Manduka PRO less 15% = $119, which is very close to the typical Amazon sale price but with the advantage of buying direct from Manduka.
Jade Yoga offers a professional discount for yoga teachers and studio owners (20-25%), but not a general student discount. Lululemon doesn’t offer a student discount. Gaiam’s student discount varies — check their site promotions.
Military and First Responder Discounts
Lululemon: 15% off in-store (U.S. and Canada). Must present valid military ID or first responder credentials. Applies to full-price items only, which means it works on The Mat when it’s at its standard $88 price (bringing it to $75).
Manduka: Occasionally runs military appreciation promotions but doesn’t have a standing military discount. They announce these through their email list.
Abandoned Cart Offers
Here’s a trick I’ve tested across all the major yoga mat brands: add a mat to your cart on the brand’s website, proceed to checkout, enter your email address, and then close the tab. Wait 24-48 hours. Many brands have abandoned cart email sequences that include a discount code to nudge you back.
My testing results:
- Manduka: No abandoned cart discount in my testing. They sent a reminder email, but no code.
- Gaiam: Frequently sends a 10% off code within 24 hours of cart abandonment.
- Liforme: No abandoned cart discount.
- Jade Yoga: Inconsistent. I’ve received a code once in four attempts.
It costs nothing to try, and the worst outcome is an email you can delete.
Email Signup Welcome Offers
This is the most reliable no-brainer code strategy. Nearly every brand offers a first-purchase discount when you sign up for their marketing emails:
- Manduka: WELCOME15 (15% off)
- Gaiam: WELCOME15 (15% off)
- Jade Yoga: No standard welcome code
- Liforme: No standard welcome code — they email you about new product launches and sales instead
One tip: use a secondary email address if you don’t want your primary inbox flooded. Create a free Gmail account specifically for brand newsletters. You’ll still get the welcome code, and you can check that inbox once a week instead of getting daily promotional emails mixed in with your work mail.
Price Match Policies
Some retailers will match a competitor’s price on the same product. REI has a fairly generous price match policy for identical items sold by Amazon (shipped and sold by Amazon.com, not third-party sellers). If you find a Manduka PRO on Amazon for $108 and REI has it listed at $140, REI will match the $108 if you call or use their online chat.
Dick’s Sporting Goods also price-matches Amazon on identical items. I’ve successfully price-matched a Manduka eKO at Dick’s when the Amazon price was lower.
The key limitation: most price match policies require the lower price to come from an authorized retailer, and Amazon is sometimes excluded if the specific listing is from a third-party seller. Always confirm the Amazon listing says “Ships from and sold by Amazon.com” before attempting a price match.
Where Most “Coupon Code” Websites Get It Wrong
I want to address this because I know many readers arrive here after trying codes from coupon aggregator sites and getting frustrated. Most coupon code websites operate on an advertising model: they list hundreds of codes, most of which are dead, because having more codes on the page leads to more affiliate click-throughs. They make money whether the code works or not.
I’ve tested codes from the top dozen yoga mat coupon pages, and the success rate is abysmal. Of roughly 50 codes I tested across Manduka, Liforme, Jade, and Gaiam in a single session, exactly two worked — both of which were the well-known welcome codes I already list on this page. The rest were expired, fake, or for completely different products.
My commitment with this page: if a code is listed here, I tested it personally within the last two weeks. If you find a code elsewhere that claims to work, test it yourself — you’ll know within 30 seconds at checkout — but don’t be surprised when it doesn’t.
How to Stack Savings
The real art of buying a yoga mat below market price is stacking multiple savings mechanisms. Here are two real examples from my own purchases:
Example 1 — Manduka PRO for $93.50 from Manduka.com:
- Manduka ran a “Summer Sale — 20% off sitewide” promotion
- The PRO listed at $140, so 20% off = $112
- I used the WELCOME15 code (it stacked during that specific promotion)
- That took another 15% off the already-discounted price = $95.20
- Free shipping on orders over $75
Result: $95.20 for a mat with a $140 MSRP. Not the $82 I’ve seen on Black Friday, but pretty close for a June purchase.
Example 2 — Gaiam full starter kit for $36:
- Gaiam ran a “30% off mats” promotion
- Premium 6mm mat at $30 → $21 with promo
- I added two cork blocks ($14 each) and a strap ($8)
- Gaiam’s site automatically applied a free shipping threshold at $50
- I used WELCOME15 for an additional 15% off the already-discounted total
- Subtotal before promo: $66. After stacked discounts: $36
At $36 for a mat, two blocks, and a strap, that’s less than the price of a single budget mat from most brands. Is the Gaiam setup as good as a Manduka PRO with Manduka cork blocks? Of course not. But for someone just starting out — and I was that someone once — it’s a completely functional kit at a price that’s hard to argue with. My best budget yoga mat under $50 guide covers more scenarios like this.
When Not to Wait for a Code
Codes are great, but there are situations where waiting for one costs you more than it saves. Here’s when to just buy the mat:
You have a new class starting next week. The value of having your own mat — not a studio loaner that’s been sweated on by 50 strangers — for the first day of a new class is real. A $15 code isn’t worth a week of using a questionable studio mat.
The mat is already on a significant Amazon sale. If the Manduka PRO is $108 on Amazon (23% off MSRP), a 15% code on Manduka’s site at full price ($140 less 15% = $119) actually costs you $11 more. I explain this dynamic in detail in my yoga mat sale deals page.
You’re buying a budget mat ($30 or less). The absolute savings from a 15% off code on a $25 Gaiam mat is $3.75. The time you spend hunting for that code is worth more than $3.75. Just buy the mat.
You found a clearance deal. Clearance prices are typically final, and clearance inventory moves fast. If you find a Manduka PRO for $85 in a clearance section, buy it. A 10% code that might drop next week is irrelevant — that mat won’t be there next week. My yoga mat clearance guide covers how to find these opportunities.
My Process for Keeping This Page Updated
I want to be transparent about how I maintain this page, so you know what you’re getting. Here’s my testing schedule:
Twice a month: I test every code listed on this page against each brand’s website. I note which codes still work and remove any dead ones. I also check each brand’s homepage for new banner codes.
Before major sales events: A week before Prime Day, Black Friday, and Earth Day, I do a full sweep. Brands often release early-access codes to email subscribers during this window, and I test them immediately.
When readers report dead codes: If you email me about a dead code, I test it within 24 hours and update the page. I test codes even faster when readers send me tips about new working codes.
Continuous monitoring: I’m subscribed to every brand’s email list, and I use a dedicated inbox filter that flags subject lines containing “code,” “coupon,” “discount,” or “sale.” If a brand sends a new code, I usually know about it within a few hours.
The Bottom Line
Yoga mat coupon codes exist, but they’re not the primary way to save money on a quality mat. The biggest savings come from timing your purchase around seasonal sales events and buying from the right channel — Amazon for Manduka during Prime Day and Black Friday, brand sites for Liforme during their biannual sales, and clearance sections for opportunistic finds.
This page gives you the verified working codes as of today, but the broader strategy is what actually saves you money over time. If you’re still figuring out which mat to buy, start with my yoga mat buying guide. Once you’ve narrowed it down, use this page plus my yoga mat sale deals page to time your purchase for the best possible price.
Every mat we recommend has been personally tested by our team. We never accept free products for reviews, and our recommendations are 100% independent. This article contains affiliate links — if you purchase through our links, we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you. Learn more.