Best Massage Therapy in Denver, Colorado — 2026 Top-Rated Pros
Browse 27 verified massage therapy providers in Denver. Reviews, hours, and direct contact — free to use.
In Denver, Colorado: Massage therapy is the most variable service in the wellness category — same massage style (let''s call it Swedish), three different therapists, three completely different experiences. The 62 U.S. cities currently listed in our directory cover both spa-employed therapists and independent licensed massage therapists running solo practices. Independent LMTs typically charge $80 to $150 for a 60-minute session, $120 to $200 for 90 minutes; spa pricing runs $20 to $40 higher per session for the same therapist quality because the spa keeps a share. Specialty work commands premium pricing: sports massage with recovery-focused techniques $100 to $180 per session, prenatal massage from certified therapists $100 to $175, lymphatic drainage (post-surgical) $120 to $220, medical massage tied to physical therapy referrals often covered by insurance. The categorical question is style: Swedish (relaxation, flowing strokes), deep tissue (targets adhesions, slower and firmer), sports (functional, pre- or post-event focus), trigger point (pressure on specific knots), Thai (clothed, stretches and pressure points), shiatsu (acupressure on meridian lines). Different therapists specialize differently, and the right match matters more than star rating average. State licensing requirements vary, but every U.S. state regulates massage therapy — verify license currency before booking, especially for first-time providers.
Top Massage Therapy in Denver (27)

Radiant Mountain Massage
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Cherry Creek Aesthetic-Massage
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Rooted Remedy
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Invigorate Massage and Wellness
Denver, CO
11 reviews

Denver Massage Studio
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Hand In Hand Therapeutic Touch
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Elixir Mind Body Massage
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Zen'd Out Massage Spa
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Balanced Living LLC
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Healing Hands
Denver, CO
11 reviews

Crifase Natural Health Centers, LLC
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Luna Massage & Wellness
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Moyer Total Wellness
Denver, CO
11 reviews

Denver Sports Recovery
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Revive Bodywork
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Symmetry 360 Massage
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Zen’d Out Massage Spa
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Individualized Massage Inc.
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Nuru Massage Therapy
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Saunders Massage Therapy
Denver, CO
11 reviews

Pura Vida Massage Studio
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Right Way Massage Therapy
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Alivio Massage Therapy Inc
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Frixtion Spa
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Integral Massage Therapy
Denver, CO
11 reviews

LoDo Massage Studio
Denver, CO
10 reviews

Heart of Healing Therapeutics
Greenwood Village, CO
1 review
What to Look For
Verify state LMT (Licensed Massage Therapist) license — every U.S. state regulates the profession. Read reviews specific to the therapist for the style you want; reviewers describing relaxation aren't evaluating the same therapist a deep-tissue client is. Communicate during the session — pressure preferences, areas to avoid, sensitivity to pressure all matter and good therapists prefer real-time feedback. For specialty work (prenatal, sports, medical), confirm specific training and certification beyond the base LMT license.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much should a massage cost?
60-minute massage: $80–$150 independent, $100–$175 at a spa. 90-minute massage: $120–$200 independent, $150–$235 at a spa. Specialty work (sports, prenatal, medical): premium $20–$50 per session above standard rates. House calls add $30–$75 for travel.
What''s the difference between Swedish and deep tissue?
Swedish: lighter pressure, longer flowing strokes, focus on relaxation and circulation. Deep tissue: firmer pressure, slower work, targets adhesions and chronic tension in specific muscle groups. Deep tissue should never be ''painful'' in a harmful sense — there''s a productive ache, but bruising and acute pain mean too much pressure. Communicate continuously.
Should I tip my massage therapist?
Depends on the setting. Spa: 18–22% if no service fee is auto-added. Independent therapist with their own studio: tipping is optional and many decline (they set their full rate). Medical massage tied to physical therapy: no tipping (it''s a medical service). When in doubt, 20% is the default U.S. norm for wellness massage.
How often should I get a massage?
Chronic-pain management: weekly to biweekly. General stress and tension: every 2–4 weeks. Maintenance after acute relief: every 4–6 weeks. Athletes during training: post-workout sessions weekly to biweekly. Beyond 8 weeks between sessions, the benefits reset and you''re starting over each time.
Does insurance cover massage therapy?
Sometimes — when prescribed by a physician for a documented condition (back pain, post-surgical recovery, work-related injury), and when the massage therapist is in-network with your plan. HSA and FSA accounts often cover massage with an LMD (Letter of Medical Necessity). Standalone wellness massage almost never qualifies for insurance reimbursement.
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