No wellness studio listed in Voe yet.
Nobody’s claimed the spot yet - we’ll let you know when one joins.
Need a wellness studio?
Nobody in Voe yet.
Drop us your email and we’ll be in touch the moment one’s listed.
For Wellness Studios
Wide open.
- Only one Wellness Studio spot in Voe
- Your business, top of the pile - no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month - cancel anytime
About Wellness Studios
A wellness studio runs classes and group sessions in yoga, pilates, barre, breathwork and similar disciplines - with regular timetables and small-group instruction in a dedicated space.
Studios often run drop-in passes alongside class blocks and memberships; look for instructors with recognised qualifications (Yoga Alliance UK, REPs, Body Control Pilates) for any practice you'll do regularly.
If you're managing an injury, mention it before booking - good studios will adapt the class or point you to a specialist physio or sports therapist where the studio isn't the right fit.
- yoga studio
- pilates studio
- wellness centre
- fitness studio
- barre class
About Voe
Voe is a small village at the head of Olna Firth in central-north Mainland Shetland, at the junction of roads leading north to Brae, east to Vidlin and west to Aith.
The village was once a major centre for the haaf fishing industry - deep-sea fishing from open boats - and the old fishing booths along the waterfront reflect that heritage.
Voe has a community hall, the Sail Loft heritage centre and is a stopping point on journeys through the north of Mainland, with a character shaped by its setting at the meeting of land and sea.
The Voe Show, one of Shetland’s annual agricultural shows, draws crofters and families from across the north of the islands.
About Shetland
Shetland is an archipelago of around 100 islands - 16 of them inhabited - lying roughly 110 miles north of the Scottish mainland and 210 miles west of Norway, making it the most northerly part of the United Kingdom.
Lerwick is the capital and only town of any size, a compact and characterful harbour settlement that serves as the administrative, commercial and cultural centre of the islands. Around 7,000 of Shetland’s 23,000 residents live in and around the town.
Shetland’s economy has been shaped by the sea for centuries: fishing remains a major industry and the arrival of North Sea oil at the Sullom Voe terminal in the 1970s brought prosperity that was carefully managed through a charitable trust that continues to fund services and infrastructure across the islands.
The landscape is treeless, wind-scoured and dramatic - sea cliffs, voes (narrow inlets), tombolo beaches and open moorland define the character of the islands and nowhere in Shetland is more than three miles from the sea.
Shetland has a distinct cultural identity that draws on both Scottish and Norse heritage - the annual Up Helly Aa fire festival, the Shetland dialect and the fiddle music tradition are central to island life and the sense of community across the islands is strong and self-reliant.
See what claiming looks like
Lothian Flooring Company claimed their flooring specialist spot in Musselburgh.