East Palo Alto sits 7 miles south of Redwood City — about a 13-minute drive via US-101. The city's diverse demographics and proximity to both Silicon Valley employment centers and Stanford make for an unusually varied client population.
East Palo Alto clients reflect the city's diversity: tech workers commuting to Palo Alto and Mountain View, healthcare workers from the Stanford and Sequoia hospital systems, hospitality and service workers, and active families.
The East Palo Alto pattern often involves physically demanding work: standing-all-day patterns from healthcare and hospitality workers, manual labor recovery for construction and trades, and the universal commuter pattern of long drives compressing the lower back and hips.
From East Palo Alto, US-101 north exit Whipple is the most direct route — 12-13 minutes. Bay Road or University Avenue connect to 101.
| Gardens | 12 minutes via US-101 North |
| Woodland Park | 13 minutes via US-101 |
| University Village | 14 minutes via US-101 |
| Ravenswood | 11 minutes via Bay Road + 101 |
We see clients from across East Palo Alto — including Gardens, Woodland Park, University Village, Ravenswood. Tell us where you're coming from and we'll suggest the smoothest route.
For physically demanding work recovery: Jack, Anna, and Peter. For general maintenance: Leo (every-day availability) and CiCi.
Not sure who to book? Tell us what's bothering you and we'll match you. Find your match by condition →
| Distance from East Palo Alto | 7 miles |
| Drive Time | 13 minutes via US-101 |
| Address | 260 Main St, Ste F, Redwood City, CA 94063 |
| Phone | 650-868-5088 |
| Hours | Open Daily · 9am – 10pm |
| Parking | Free on-site lot · ADA accessible |
7 miles via US-101 — about a 13 minutes drive.
The honest answer: most East Palo Alto clients who choose us are looking for therapeutic depth that closer options don't provide. Our team has 100+ years of combined experience, including therapists with formal Eastern bodywork training (Edman from Shanghai University of TCM, Jack with Chinese tuina background).
Yes. Same honest pricing: 60-min sessions from $59, 30-min from $39. Featured Combo Package $89. FREE 15-min hot stone with any service. No out-of-area surcharges.
Free on-site parking in our lot. ADA accessible. No metered street parking required.
7 miles drive · 13 minutes · Eight licensed therapists · Sessions from $59 · Open daily 9am–10pm
Call: 650-868-5088 Or chat with us on the bottom right →East Palo Alto presents a distinctive client profile shaped by the city's complex history and current diversity. The population is approximately 30,000, ethnically diverse, with significant Latino, African American, Pacific Islander, and AAPI communities. Income ranges widely. Employment ranges from tech professionals commuting to nearby Silicon Valley to healthcare workers, hospitality staff, construction trades, and small business owners.
This variety creates a varied client base for us. We don't see one dominant pattern from East Palo Alto — we see many.
The proximity to Stanford Hospital, Sequoia Hospital, and the broader Palo Alto medical complex means many healthcare workers live in East Palo Alto. The body patterns from healthcare work:
Standing-all-day fatigue. Nurses, technicians, and aides spend 8-12 hour shifts on their feet. Lower leg fatigue, calf tightness, and lower back compression are universal.
Lifting injuries. Repositioning patients, transferring patients between bed and chair, and the general physical demands of patient care create shoulder and lower back patterns specific to this work.
Hand and wrist tension. Charting, IV starts, instrument handling — repetitive small motions that accumulate over years.
Stress-related tension. Healthcare work involves chronic emotional demands. The body holds this in the upper trapezius, jaw, and lower back.
For healthcare workers, we typically recommend Deep Tissue with focus on the lower legs and lower back, plus targeted neck-and-shoulder work. Sessions on day-off mornings are most common.
East Palo Alto has a significant construction and skilled trades workforce. The body patterns from physical labor are different from desk-work patterns — typically involving asymmetric loading from carrying materials, repetitive motions specific to particular trades (carpentry, masonry, electrical, plumbing), and accumulated joint stress.
For trades workers, Jack's tuina background is particularly relevant — the techniques developed historically for laborer recovery in China translate directly. Strong pressure work, joint mobilization, and focused release of the most-loaded muscle groups.
Hospitality, restaurant, and retail workers from East Palo Alto often book sessions on their off days — typically Tuesday or Wednesday for restaurant workers, Sunday or Monday for retail workers. We hold flexibility for these clients since their schedules don't always align with the standard professional booking patterns.
East Palo Alto has a significant small business owner population — restaurant owners, salon owners, mechanics, contractors. The body pattern of small business ownership: chronic stress, irregular eating, irregular sleep, and the universal pattern of being on your feet or at a desk for extended hours without breaks. Sessions tend to be booked irregularly — when the work allows — but consistent business owners often settle into monthly rhythms once they realize the impact on stress management.
The honest answer from our East Palo Alto regulars: pricing accessibility combined with depth of work. Many local options are either expensive boutique spas or cheap chain massage. We're neither — $59 for 60 minutes from licensed therapists with 8-30+ years of practice. The math works.