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Massage Therapy in Boston

Compare local massage therapy (lmt) pros in Boston and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.

Typical price: $40–$320

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Massage Therapy prices in Boston

Researched estimates for Boston (USD), adjusted for city size from national ranges. Updated 2026.
Job size Low Typical High
30-minute targeted session One problem area, e.g. neck/shoulders $40 $60 $90
60-minute full session Full body or focused deep work $60 $100 $160
90-minute extended session Full body plus focused work $90 $150 $220
Couples massage (60 min) Two therapists simultaneously $130 $200 $320

How to hire a massage therapy pro in United States

  1. Verify the therapist's state license (LMT) — most states require 500-1,000 training hours and list licensees in a public lookup
  2. Match the modality to your goal: relaxation, deep tissue, sports, or prenatal (prenatal needs specific training)
  3. Confirm the full price: session length, any first-visit intake time, and whether gratuity is expected (15-20% is customary)
  4. For mobile massage, confirm the travel fee and the space needed for the table
  5. Disclose health conditions on the intake form — clot risk, blood pressure, pregnancy, recent surgery
  6. Check reviews that mention pressure, professionalism and draping, not just ambience
  7. If claiming through an HSA/FSA, ask whether the provider can document medical necessity (usually needs a doctor's note)

Massage therapy is state-licensed in the large majority of US states, typically requiring 500-1,000 hours of accredited training plus an exam (usually the MBLEx). Practicing without a license is illegal where licensure exists; every licensing state offers an online license lookup.

Budgeting first?

See the full breakdown of what drives massage therapy prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.

Massage Therapy cost guide for United States

Frequently asked questions

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 much does a massage cost in the US?

A 60-minute session runs $60-$150 at independents and clinics, with mobile massage at $100-$200 including travel. Add the customary 15-20% tip. Membership chains offer intro rates around $50-$80 that rise to standard rates after the first visit.

How do I verify a massage therapist's license in the US?

Search your state's massage therapy board or professional licensing website for the therapist's name — licensure states maintain public lookups showing status and discipline history. If your state licenses massage and the provider has no license number anywhere, don't book.

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