The liver processes every nutrient absorbed from the digestive tract, detoxifies every substance the body produces or ingests, and synthesises the proteins required for systemic health. When it is overloaded — by high-calorie diet, insulin resistance, chronic cortisol and a sedentary lifestyle — it accumulates fat, reduces its functional efficiency and progressively develops the inflammation that advances to fibrosis without intervention.
NAFLD now affects an estimated 28–38% of Indian adults. The primary drivers — insulin resistance, cortisol-driven abdominal fat, and physical inactivity — are exactly what daily yoga addresses. Over 3.5 million Habuild members practise daily, and members managing fatty liver and metabolic liver conditions consistently describe yoga as the intervention that moved their liver enzyme levels when dietary changes alone had not.
The Habuild members who normalised their liver enzymes changed their hepatic environment through daily, consistent practice.
Yes — particularly for NAFLD, the most prevalent liver condition in India, and the one most directly driven by the metabolic and lifestyle factors that yoga addresses.
A 2017 study published in the Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology found that a yoga-based lifestyle intervention produced significant reductions in liver enzymes (ALT, AST), hepatic steatosis grade and insulin resistance in NAFLD patients over 12 weeks — with effects comparable to conventional pharmacological treatment at 6 months.
The mechanism is threefold: – Improved insulin sensitivity through GLUT-4 activation in working muscles – Visceral fat reduction through daily caloric expenditure and metabolic rate improvement – Anti-inflammatory effects produced by consistent, daily practice
If you are new to the practice, our yoga for beginners guide is the right starting point — Habuild’s sessions are fully accessible regardless of prior experience.
1. Improved Hepatic Blood Flow Through Twisting Poses
The liver receives 25% of cardiac output — its function depends on consistent blood flow for oxygen delivery and nutrient processing. Yoga’s twisting poses (Ardha Matsyendrasana, Jathara Parivartanasana) produce a mechanical compression-and-release of the hepatic parenchyma that improves hepatic blood flow and lymphatic drainage. This “wringing” of the liver is the most direct mechanical stimulation of hepatic circulation available through exercise.
2. Reduced NAFLD Through Insulin Sensitivity Improvement
NAFLD is primarily a consequence of insulin resistance — when peripheral tissues cannot use glucose efficiently, the liver absorbs the excess and converts it to stored hepatic fat (steatosis). Yoga’s GLUT-4 activation in working muscles directly improves insulin sensitivity, reducing the glucose load directed to hepatic fat synthesis. Combined with cortisol reduction, yoga addresses NAFLD at its metabolic roots.
3. Cortisol Reduction That Protects the Liver
Chronic cortisol promotes hepatic lipogenesis (liver fat synthesis), increases visceral adipose tissue and elevates the triglycerides that drive NAFLD progression. Yoga’s progressive cortisol normalisation removes these metabolic stressors from the liver. Members with elevated liver enzymes consistently describe enzyme normalisation that correlates directly with the cortisol reduction their practice produces.
4. Support for Liver Detoxification Pathways
The liver’s detoxification pathways require optimal blood flow, adequate oxygen delivery and an absence of chronic inflammatory overload to function efficiently. Yoga’s hepatic blood flow improvement, anti-inflammatory effects and general metabolic health improvements all support the liver’s natural detoxification function — not through any mystical “cleanse,” but by restoring the physiological conditions in which its already-sophisticated detoxification machinery works most effectively. For a broader view of how yoga supports digestive organ health, see our guide to yoga for gut health.
5. Weight Management That Reduces Hepatic Fat Load
Even modest weight loss — 5–10% of body weight — produces significant improvement in hepatic steatosis and liver enzyme levels in NAFLD. Yoga’s daily caloric expenditure and metabolic rate improvements from lean muscle development contribute meaningfully to the weight management that reduces hepatic fat load, making daily yoga the most comprehensive single lifestyle intervention for NAFLD available.
1. Seated Spinal Twist (Ardha Matsyendrasana)
The primary yoga asana for liver — the right-sided twist compresses the liver specifically, producing the mechanical blood flow stimulation and lymphatic drainage that optimises hepatic circulation. The left-sided twist stimulates the spleen and left liver lobe.
· How to practise: Hold 60 seconds on each side, right side first
· Why it works: Direct mechanical compression of hepatic parenchyma improves bile flow and venous drainage
· Difficulty: Beginner–Intermediate
2. Supine Twist (Jathara Parivartanasana)
The accessible supine liver-stimulating twist — knees rolled to each side, compressing the hepatic and splenic regions alternately. Provides the same liver compression mechanism as Ardha Matsyendrasana in a supine position appropriate for practitioners who find seated twists difficult.
· How to practise: Hold 2 minutes on each side
· Why it works: Alternating hepatic compression and release improves lymphatic and venous drainage
· Difficulty: Beginner
3. Boat Pose (Navasana)
Sustained abdominal organ compression stimulates the liver and surrounding digestive organs, improves mesenteric blood flow and builds the core strength that abdominal organ positioning requires. Also activates the hip flexors and abdominals in the sustained metabolic demand that supports GLUT-4 activation and insulin sensitivity. Because insulin resistance sits at the root of both NAFLD and type 2 diabetes, this pose is equally valuable for those managing both conditions — see our yoga for diabetes guide.
· How to practise: 3 sets of 20–30 seconds
· Why it works: Core activation drives metabolic improvement while compressing digestive organs
· Difficulty: Beginner–Intermediate
4. Cobra Pose (Bhujangasana)
Prone anterior abdominal stretch that gently stretches the hepatic ligaments and surrounding fascia, improving the mobility of the liver within its anatomical position and stimulating blood flow through elongation of the hepatic vessels. Specifically beneficial for the hepatic congestion that chronic forward-rounding posture produces.
· How to practise: 3 sets of 20–30 seconds
· Why it works: Anterior stretch releases hepatic ligaments and improves hepatic vessel blood flow
· Difficulty: Beginner
5. Sun Salutation (Surya Namaskar)
15–20 continuous rounds — the most comprehensive single metabolic intervention in yoga. Surya Namaskar activates GLUT-4 in working muscles (improving insulin sensitivity), elevates heart rate for cardiovascular conditioning, produces daily caloric expenditure for weight management and generates the cortisol-lowering effects that protect liver health from the metabolic and hormonal drivers of NAFLD.
· How to practise: 15–20 rounds at a steady pace, 6 days per week
· Why it works: Full-body metabolic activation addresses every physiological driver of NAFLD simultaneously
· Difficulty: Beginner–Intermediate
6. Child’s Pose (Balasana)
Deep cortisol-reducing parasympathetic rest — directly reduces the cortisol that drives hepatic lipogenesis and visceral fat accumulation. For liver health specifically, Balasana is the most important resting pose: its cortisol reduction removes the primary hormonal driver of hepatic fat synthesis.
· How to practise: Hold 3–5 minutes between active sequences
· Why it works: Activates the parasympathetic nervous system, suppressing cortisol-driven hepatic fat synthesis
· Difficulty: Beginner
Every liver-stimulating twist and pranayama sequence above is guided live daily at Habuild.
1. Daily Practice Builds Lasting Hepatic Benefits
Liver health improvement through yoga — reduced liver enzyme levels, improved fatty acid metabolism, and enhanced detoxification capacity — requires sustained daily practice. The metabolic shifts that yoga produces develop over 8–12 weeks of consistent abdominal stimulation and stress reduction. Habuild’s daily live sessions build this consistency directly into your morning routine.
2. Live Guidance for Correct Form
The abdominal twists and compressions most beneficial for liver function — Ardha Matsyendrasana, Jathara Parivartanasana, Dhanurasana — require correct twist direction, depth, and breath coordination to produce hepatic stimulation. Habuild’s live instructors provide the real-time guidance that ensures every session correctly stimulates liver circulation and bile flow rather than simply going through the motions.
3. Community Accountability Keeps You Consistent
Liver health improvements are gradual and rarely visible in early weeks — which makes this one of the health goals where community accountability matters most. Practising alongside Habuild’s live community every morning creates the social commitment that keeps members consistent during the weeks before visible or measurable results arrive. The community’s shared liver health journeys provide the encouragement that sustains effort.
4. Sessions Designed for All Fitness Levels
Habuild’s sessions are designed to be safe and accessible for all fitness levels, including members with liver conditions who need gentle, progressive practice. Every session offers modifications for abdominal twists and compressions, and the pace is set to be sustainable for members managing fatigue or digestive sensitivity. You participate at whatever level is comfortable each day.
Your yoga for liver health journey is guided by one of India's most qualified instructors—Saurabh Bothra.
1. Complete Beginners
No prior yoga experience required. Habuild’s sessions begin with fully accessible modifications and the benefits for liver health are available from the very first session, regardless of fitness level.
2. Working Professionals with Busy Schedules
A 45-minute morning session delivers the complete daily therapeutic stimulus before the working day begins — the most efficient daily investment for sustained liver health improvement.
3. People Who Have Tried Other Methods Without Success
Yoga addresses the underlying physiological drivers — insulin resistance, cortisol elevation, inactivity — that symptomatic dietary treatment alone cannot fully reach. It delivers the root-cause intervention that produces durable improvement where other approaches produced only temporary relief.
4. Anyone Looking for a Sustainable, Long-Term Solution
Yoga is a practice that compounds over time. Practitioners who describe the most lasting liver health results are those who made it a permanent daily commitment rather than a temporary intervention.
1. Week 1–2: Improved Digestive Comfort and Energy
The hepatic blood flow improvement from daily twisting and the cortisol reduction of consistent practice produce improved digestive function and energy levels — the first subjective signs of improved liver metabolic efficiency.
2. Week 3–4: Weight and Metabolic Improvements Begin
Insulin sensitivity and cortisol normalisation begin to produce measurable metabolic improvements — waist circumference reducing, post-meal energy improving and the general metabolic clarity that improved liver function produces.
3. Month 2–3: Measurable Liver Enzyme Improvement
The 8–12 week window is when hepatic steatosis and inflammatory liver enzyme elevations (ALT, AST) begin to improve on blood testing. Insulin sensitivity and cortisol improvements have been sustained long enough to reduce hepatic fat accumulation measurably.
4. Month 4+: Structural Liver Health Restoration
Ultrasound findings in NAFLD patients typically show hepatic steatosis grade improvement at 4–6 months of consistent daily practice alongside appropriate dietary management. The metabolic conditions driving fatty liver have been structurally changed.