Massage Therapy in Burlington
Compare local massage therapy (rmt) pros in Burlington and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: CA$50–CA$320
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Massage Therapy prices in Burlington
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30-minute targeted session One problem area | CA$50 | CA$70 | CA$90 |
| 60-minute full session Full body or deep tissue | CA$85 | CA$120 | CA$150 |
| 90-minute extended session Full body plus focused work | CA$120 | CA$160 | CA$210 |
| Couples massage (60 min) Two therapists simultaneously | CA$170 | CA$230 | CA$320 |
How to hire a massage therapy pro in Canada
- In regulated provinces (Ontario, BC, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, PEI), verify the therapist is a Registered Massage Therapist (RMT) via the provincial college's public register
- If you want to claim on extended health benefits, an RMT receipt is usually required — confirm before booking
- Confirm the full price and whether tax applies (RMT services are taxable in most provinces)
- Disclose health conditions on the intake form — RMTs take a full health history
- For mobile massage, confirm travel fee and table space
- Tipping norms: customary at spas (15-20%), not expected for clinical RMT treatments
- Check the cancellation window — 24 hours is standard, and no-shows are billed
Massage therapy is a regulated health profession in Ontario, BC, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, and PEI, where only registrants of the provincial college may use the RMT title. Most extended health plans reimburse only RMT-issued receipts, which anchors both quality and pricing.
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See the full breakdown of what drives massage therapy prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a 90-minute massage cost compared to 60 minutes?
Usually about 1.4-1.5x the 60-minute price, not 1.5x exactly — the marginal half hour is cheaper because setup and consultation are already done. If you have multiple problem areas or want full-body plus focused work, 90 minutes is better value than two short sessions.
When should I NOT get a massage?
Skip or postpone with fever, contagious illness, acute injury (first 48-72 hours), deep vein thrombosis or clot risk, uncontrolled high blood pressure, and some cancer treatments — ask your doctor. Pregnancy massage is fine after the first trimester with a therapist trained in prenatal work. Always disclose conditions on the intake form.
What should I expect at a first massage appointment?
A short health intake (medications, injuries, surgeries, pregnancy), a discussion of your goal areas and pressure preference, then the treatment. You undress to your comfort level — you're always draped except the area being worked. Speak up during the session if pressure is too much; a good therapist adjusts without fuss.
Should I tip a massage therapist?
It depends on the country. In the US and Canada, 15-20% is customary. In the UK, Australia, New Zealand and most of Europe, tipping is appreciated but not expected, especially for clinical or remedial work. In Asia, practice varies — check the local page. Never feel obligated at a medical or physio-adjacent clinic.
How often should I get a massage?
For general stress management, every 3-4 weeks maintains benefit. For a specific issue like a stiff neck or training recovery, weekly or fortnightly for 3-4 sessions, then reassess. A one-off massage feels good for a few days; cumulative benefit comes from consistency, not from one long session.
How do I find a legitimate, qualified massage therapist?
Check the credential your country uses — a state licence, professional-body registration, or a recognised diploma. Legit therapists list their qualification and training hours openly, take health intake forms seriously, and work from a clinic, registered business, or established platform. Vague listings with stock photos and no surname are the ones to skip.
How much does a massage cost in Canada?
RMT treatments run CAD $90-$160 per hour depending on province and city, with Toronto and Vancouver at the top. Non-RMT relaxation massage at spas runs $70-$130. Mobile RMT visits add $20-$50 travel. Extended health plans typically reimburse $500-$1,000 of RMT massage per year.
Will my benefits plan cover massage in Canada?
Most employer extended-health plans cover massage by a Registered Massage Therapist up to an annual maximum, sometimes requiring a doctor's referral. The receipt must come from a registered RMT — verify registration on your provincial college's website, because non-RMT receipts get rejected.
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