A good yoga mat has one simple job: stay where it is while you try very hard to look serene. Complete Unity Yoga is a UK-facing yoga equipment brand built around eco-minded mats and accessories, with its CompleteGrip™ yoga mat sitting at the centre of the range.
This is not a hands-on test and we have not personally practised on the mat for this review. It is a practical desk-based shopper review, based on the brand’s own product information, shop pages and public claims. Piglington’s short version: Complete Unity Yoga looks like a strong shortlist option if you want a grippy, natural-materials yoga mat, but you should still check weight, smell, care and returns before buying.
What Complete Unity Yoga sells
Complete Unity Yoga focuses on yoga mats and supporting kit rather than general fitness retail. The range includes eco yoga mats, travel mats, yoga sets, mat bags, bolsters, cushions, blocks, straps, blankets, water bottles and relaxation accessories.
The headline product is the CompleteGrip™ eco yoga mat. The brand describes it as a 4mm mat made from natural tree rubber and natural jute fibres, with a surface designed to improve grip during different styles of yoga, pilates and fitness practice.
What looks good
The range has a clear purpose. This is not a everything-store with a yoga aisle bolted on. Complete Unity Yoga presents itself as a specialist yoga equipment brand, which is reassuring if you want kit designed around practice rather than generic home workout shopping.
The material story is central. The brand says the CompleteGrip™ mat uses natural rubber and jute, arrives in plastic-free FSC-certified recyclable paper packaging, and is made without materials such as PVC, TPE, PU, BPA or plastic. If avoiding standard plastic-heavy mats matters to you, that is the main reason to look here.
Grip is the big promise. Complete Unity Yoga puts its slip-free message front and centre, including a grip guarantee on the site. That matters because a pretty mat that behaves like a banana skin during downward dog is, scientifically speaking, a nuisance.
There is a proper brand story. The company says it was founded by yoga teachers Malene and Will after time teaching and studying yoga in India, and that the business has focused on sustainable, better-quality yoga equipment since 2016. You do not need to buy every founder-story flourish, but it gives the shop a clearer identity than an anonymous marketplace listing.
What to check before buying
Natural rubber is not for everyone. Rubber mats can have a smell, can be heavier than thin synthetic mats, and may not suit people with latex sensitivities. Complete Unity Yoga says its newer mat uses lavender-infused natural rubber, but shoppers who are sensitive to scent or rubber should read the product details carefully before ordering.
Thickness is a preference, not a universal win. The flagship mat is described as 4mm thick. That may be a nice middle ground for many people, but if you need extra knee cushioning for floor-based work, or an ultra-light mat for commuting, compare it with the travel mat and set options rather than assuming one mat fits every practice.
Eco claims still deserve normal shopper scrutiny. The brand makes several sustainability and production claims, including natural materials, zero-waste manufacturing and plastic-free packaging. Those are positives, but sensible buyers should still treat them as brand claims and check the detail that matters most to them.
Read the guarantee and returns wording before relying on it. A grip guarantee is useful only if you understand the conditions, timings and return process. Before buying, check the current returns, delivery and guarantee information on the live site.
Who Complete Unity Yoga may suit
Complete Unity Yoga looks best for shoppers who already know they want a more natural-materials yoga mat and are willing to pay for a specialist product rather than a cheap starter mat from a general sports shop.
It may also suit home yogis who want matching accessories: blocks, straps, bolsters, blankets and bags all in one place. That makes the brand handy for building a calm home practice setup or buying a more thoughtful yoga gift.
If you are mainly after low-cost all-round sports kit, our Decathlon UK review covers a broader value-led option. If cycling and outdoor fitness kit is more your lane, our Sigma Sports review may be more relevant.
Verdict: is Complete Unity Yoga worth a closer look?
Yes, if you want a specialist yoga brand with a clear eco-materials angle and a strong focus on grip. Complete Unity Yoga appears especially appealing for regular home practice, giftable yoga sets and shoppers who are trying to move away from plastic-heavy mats.
The watch-outs are practical rather than alarming: natural rubber feel and scent, mat weight, the 4mm cushioning level, and the exact guarantee or returns terms. Check those before you buy and Complete Unity Yoga looks well worth shortlisting for a more considered yoga setup.
