Peloton Sculpt 30 class on the schedule

Hannah Corbin Debuts Peloton Sculpt 30 on July 27

Peloton’s New Sculpt 30 Joins a Growing Class Name Trend

A 30-minute low-impact strength class blending Pilates, barre, and bodyweight moves lands on the schedule for July 27

Peloton Sculpt 30 Class thumbnail

Peloton Sculpt 30 is showing up on the schedule for July 27, and it comes with a notable name in this space. The format, led by Hannah Corbin, is described as a low-impact, high-energy class blending Pilates, barre, and bodyweight strength moves with added equipment, all in 30 minutes. It is the kind of class that tests both strength and cardiovascular endurance, according to Peloton’s own description. Sounds spicy, no?

Hannah Corbin on a mat demonstrating a Peloton Sculpt 30 class blending Pilates and barre movements

The encore version is currently listed for 9:30 AM ET debut in the schedule on Monday, July 27, with the original live class having been recorded on Thursday, July 16, at 6:30 PM ET.

How Peloton Sculpt 30 Fits a Growing Pattern

What makes Peloton Sculpt 30 interesting beyond the class itself is its name. Peloton has been steadily building a catalog of classes that lead with a signature descriptor followed by a number indicating the duration. Thunder 45, Adrian Williams’s advanced Tread Bootcamp, runs 45 minutes. Power 60, Logan Aldridge’s strength format, clocks in at 60. Sims 60, Jess Sims’s killer bootcamp format (formerly known as Saturday 60), follows the same logic.

Peloton Sculpt 30 Class comparison - TS 60

Andy Speer’s Total Strength 60 is an interesting comparison, and one we have written about in detail. Speer’s weekly class is known colloquially as TS60 and lives inside a collection called Total Strength 60, but the individual class listings still carry the name “Total Strength” followed by the duration, rather than leading with “TS60” or even “Total Strength 60” as the official class title. It is a case where the community shorthand and the collection branding have outpaced the on-platform naming. Sculpt 30 takes a cleaner approach from the start: the name is the format, the number is the time, and there is no ambiguity.

What Peloton Sculpt 30 Actually Covers

Peloton’s Sculpt Flow, which launched in December 2025 with instructor Greta Dopp, blends yoga conditioning, Pilates, and barre movements into a music-driven format that lives in the Yoga category.  The Clip Out covered its debut, and the format has grown steadily, with Dopp expanding into ankle weights this June.

Peloton Sculpt 30 filter comparison to Yoga Sculpt Flow

Peloton Sculpt 30 shares some surface-level vocabulary with Sculpt Flow, but these are not the same format. Sculpt Flow is a yoga-adjacent class that lives under the Yoga tab. Is it relaxing? Not really. Is it a great workout in its own right? Absolutely! It was borne out of the Yoga Conditioning classes on Peloton, and, IYKYK.

Sculpt 30 is a strength class taught (at least to start) by a barre/Pilates expert, and it sits in the Strength category. The “Sculpt” in both names points to a shared emphasis on toning, low-impact resistance work, and full-body conditioning. Beyond that, they are distinct offerings for different parts of the library.

Hannah Corbin has built her Peloton presence primarily through barre and stretching (when not on the Bike!), and she recently returned to the Pilates format on Peloton, making her a logical instructor for a class like this. So, it this going to be sort of a “Pilates Plus?” We shall see!

Where the Naming Convention Might Go

If Peloton continues the format-plus-number naming pattern, Sculpt 30 could eventually anchor a broader category alongside other duration-based class names. A Sculpt 45 or a version taught by additional instructors would follow naturally if the format earns the kind of engagement that Thunder 45 and Sims 60 have. The pattern already suggests Peloton sees value in giving signature formats their own identity within the library, separate from the broader class type labels like Strength or Bootcamp.

For members who like barre or Pilates but want something with more resistance and cardiovascular demand, Peloton Sculpt 30 looks like a logical next step. Will you be trying this class when it comes out?


 

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About the Author: Elizabeth Schlosberg

Elizabeth (#MinuteToSpinIt) has been a Peloton member since 2019 and focuses on Power Zone Rides along with Yoga and Strength. When she's not finding a way to work Peloton into any conversation, she works as a freelance Communications Specialist helping nonprofits and small businesses tell their stories, connect with their audiences, and reach their goals. Just like here at The Clip Out, as a writer since 2024!

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