how to Prepare for a Home Massage Session

Preparing for an in-home massage session takes less than five minutes. Knowing what to expect — and what to set up in advance — ensures your full booked time is spent on treatment, not logistics.

In-home massage

or mobile RMT service

Home · Hotel · Office

Any location you choose

Registered RMTs

Regulated, certified therapists

60+ Canadian cities

Same-day in most areas

Preparing for a Home Massage — What It Actually Means.

Preparation for an in-home massage session is minimal by design. Your therapist arrives fully equipped with everything required for a clinical-quality treatment — table, linens, oils, bolsters, and equipment. You are not responsible for sourcing, setting up, or providing any therapeutic materials.

"The less friction between your front door and the treatment table, the more you carry the benefit of the session — not the effort of getting there."

What preparation does involve is: identifying a suitable room or space, adjusting temperature if needed, and mentally transitioning from your daily context into a treatment mindset. The few minutes of physical preparation also serve as a useful psychological buffer — a transition that enhances the therapeutic benefit of the session itself.

Choose Your Space

Any room with enough floor space for the massage table works — bedroom, living room, study, or basement. Your therapist will orient the table for best access.

Set the Temperature

Massage therapy typically requires a warmer-than-usual room temperature, as undressed clients cool quickly. Set your thermostat to approximately 22–24°C before your therapist arrives.

Limit Distractions

Let household members know a session is in progress. Put pets in another room. Silence your phone. The more protected the session environment, the better the therapeutic result.

Hydrate Before Your Session

Well-hydrated tissue responds better to therapeutic massage. Drink water in the hour before your session and avoid heavy meals within 90 minutes of treatment.

What Happens During Your Session?

Once your therapist has set up and completed the health intake, your session proceeds exactly as it would in a clinical setting. Your therapist adapts technique, pressure, and focus areas based on your intake and in-session feedback. You are not expected to direct the session — your therapist leads the treatment and checks in as needed.

What Every In-Home Massage Session Includes.

Nothing is missing from an in-home session. Every booking includes full clinical setup and professional delivery from start to finish.
in-progress-icon

Certified, registered therapist

CMTBC or CMTO-registered RMT in regulated provinces. FQM or NHPC member in others. All verified before onboarding.
in-progress-icon

Therapeutic-grade oils & equipment

All oils, bolsters, specialty equipment (pregnancy pillows, stones, cups) appropriate to the booked service.
in-progress-icon

Official RMT insurance receipt

Emailed immediately after the session. Accepted by all Canadian extended health benefits plans.
in-progress-icon

Professional massage table & linens

Clinic-grade folding table with fresh, laundered linens per client. Never reused between sessions.
in-progress-icon

Health intake & assessment

Brief intake before every session. Full clinical assessment included in therapeutic massage bookings.

Preparing for Home Massage Vs Preparing for a Clinic — The Real Differences.

Most people assume preparing for a home massage is more complicated than going to a clinic. In practice, the opposite is consistently true.

"Preparing for a home massage session requires less effort than finding parking for a clinic appointment."

What is the same:The treatment itself. The professional standards. The intake process. The aftercare guidance. The insurance receipt. Everything clinical about the session is identical — your RMT brings their full professional toolkit, applies the same techniques, and documents the session to the same standard.

What is different:The logistical burden sits almost entirely with your therapist, not with you. They travel to you, set up the treatment space, manage the equipment, and dismantle and remove everything when they leave. You do not commute, park, check in, or wait. The 20–40 minutes most Canadians spend traveling to a clinic appointment are returned to you — available for rest before the session, or recovery immediately after it.

One limitation:

For clients whose first instinct is to clean their entire home before the therapist arrives — this is unnecessary and adds stress before what should be a restorative experience. A clear treatment space is all that is required. Your therapist is a healthcare professional visiting to deliver care, not a guest.

How it works, step by step

The process is simpler than most first-time clients expect. From booking to aftercare, here is the complete step-by-step experience.

number-one-icon

You book online — in about 2 minutes

Choose your service type, session duration, date, and location. Browse therapist profiles showing credentials, specialties, and client reviews. Confirm your booking.
number-two-icon

Your therapist arrives fully equipped

Your RMT arrives with a professional folding massage table, fresh linens, oils, and all required equipment. You need nothing — a clear 2m × 2m space is sufficient.
number-three-icon

A brief health intake confirms your goals

Your therapist conducts a short intake covering your health history, current complaint or goal, pressure preference, and any areas to focus on or avoid. This takes 3–5 minutes.

number-four-icon

Your full session — the entire booked time

The session runs for the full duration you booked. The therapist adapts technique, pressure, and focus in real time based on your feedback throughout.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Do I need to provide anything for the session?
No — your therapist brings everything. The only things we ask of you are a clear floor space approximately 6×8 feet (enough for the massage table), a comfortable room temperature, and a few minutes of available time before the session begins. No towels, oils, or equipment required from your side.
How much space do I need for an in-home massage?
A clear area of approximately 2m × 2m (roughly 6.5ft × 6.5ft) is sufficient. This fits in most living rooms, bedrooms, and even studio apartments. Pushing a coffee table aside or moving a desk chair is typically all that's required. Our therapists are practiced at efficient, professional setup in all kinds of urban living spaces — including very compact ones.
What should I do immediately after my session?
Rest is the highest-value post-massage activity —  particularly in your own home, which is the primary advantage of in-home treatment. Drink water, avoid heavy physical exertion for 2–3 hours, and if possible, allow 30–60 minutes of quiet rest before resuming normal activity. Your therapist will provide specific aftercare guidance relevant to your treatment.
What types of massage are available through a mobile service?
All major massage modalities are available through MassageHome — Swedish, deep tissue, therapeutic, sports, prenatal, relaxation, hot stone, shiatsu, Thai, lymphatic drainage, myofascial therapy, trigger point, cranio-sacral, osteopathy, aromatherapy, reflexology, and more. Specialty services like oncology massage, infant massage, and disability-adapted massage are also available with appropriately trained therapists.

Ready to experience it for yourself?

Certified RMTs delivering professional massage to your home, hotel, or office anywhere in Canada. Same-day slots. Insurance receipts. No commute required.

✓ Certified RMTs · regulated standards   ✓ Same-day in 60+ cities   ✓ Insurance receipts included   ✓ Discreet professional arrival