What Do You Wear During a Massage?
One of the most-asked questions from first-time clients. Here's the straightforward answer.
The Honest Answer
It depends entirely on you. There is no "right" amount of clothing. Whatever level you're comfortable with is the right level.
Most Common Choice: Fully Undressed
Most clients undress fully and rely on the sheet. The sheet always covers areas not being worked on — only the immediate area being massaged is exposed at any given time. This is the easiest setup for the therapist (full access to oil glide on legs, back, arms) and is what most regular clients choose.
Underwear Optional
Many clients keep underwear on. It's perfectly fine. The therapist works around it. The immediate adjustment: lower back work on the gluteal-hip border may be slightly less direct, but is still effective.
Light Clothing for Shiatsu
Shiatsu and acupressure sessions can be performed with light comfortable clothing on. The therapist works through the cloth using thumb and palm pressure rather than oil. Many clients find this more comfortable for Eastern bodywork sessions.
What the Therapist Sees
Almost nothing. Sheet draping is professional standard — only the immediate area being worked on is exposed. Your back is exposed when working on your back; your leg when working on your leg. Otherwise everything is covered. Therapists are trained for this and are matter-of-fact about it.
You will not be made uncomfortable. If at any point you feel exposed, ask for more sheet covering — your therapist will adjust immediately.
What Helps the Session Work Better
- No watch, jewelry, or earrings (they get in the way)
- Hair tied back if long (so it doesn't tangle in oil)
- If you wear makeup, you may want to remove it before face/scalp work
- Phone on silent and tucked away
Special Cases
Pregnancy: Side-lying position is standard. Bring a sports bra or comfortable clothing — the side-lying position works well with light clothing.
Medical conditions: If you have a skin condition, scar, or area you'd prefer not to expose, just tell the therapist. They'll work around it.
First-timers nervous: Keep underwear on. Use the sheet generously. Tell the therapist you're new to this. Everyone starts somewhere.
How This Applies to Your Visit at Redwood Health Center
Everything described above informs how we approach every session at our Main Street location in Redwood City. With eight licensed therapists and 100+ years of combined experience, we have the depth to match each client's specific needs to the right person on our team.
If you're booking a session and want to apply what you've read here, the easiest approach is to call us at 650-868-5088 and describe what you're working with. We'll match you to the therapist whose specialty fits, suggest the duration that makes sense, and get you scheduled.
Common Questions Our Clients Ask
How quickly can I get an appointment? Same-day or next-day for most weekday slots. Weekends and evenings (after 6pm) often book out 2-3 days ahead. Same-day availability isn't always available with our most-requested therapists; book ahead when you can.
Do I need to mention specific issues when I book? Yes, please. Telling us up front whether you're dealing with chronic pain, looking for relaxation, or recovering from training lets us match you to the right therapist and prepare the room appropriately. Surprises don't help us help you.
What if I'm not sure which service to book? Just call us. Tell us what's bothering you or what you're hoping to get from the session. We'll suggest the right service. There's no penalty for "I don't know" — most of our first-time clients start that way.
What's your cancellation policy? 4 hours' notice for cancellation or rescheduling. We're flexible for genuine emergencies. Same-day cancellations and no-shows may incur a charge.
Can I book online? Currently we book by phone (650-868-5088) and through our chat (bottom right of any page). The reason: matching the right therapist to your needs is something we'd rather do through brief conversation than through a form.
Our Approach in One Paragraph
We're a small, focused therapeutic massage spa in downtown Redwood City — 260 Main St, Suite F. Open every day from 9am to 10pm. Eight licensed therapists with 8 to 30+ years of practice. Pricing is intentionally accessible: 60-min sessions $59, 30-min $39, Featured Combo $89. FREE 15-minute hot stone treatment with any service. We don't sell packages with expiration dates and we don't push upgrades. The goal is simple: that you leave feeling better than when you came in.
Practical Logistics for Booking Your Session
For clients ready to act on what's described above, the practical mechanics of working with us:
Phone booking: 650-868-5088. Available all open hours (9am to 10pm, every day). The receptionist will take you through service selection, therapist matching, and scheduling. Most calls take 3-5 minutes.
Chat booking: Bottom right of any page on our website. Available 24/7. Useful when you have specific questions or want to describe a complex issue before committing to a session. Response time during open hours is usually under 5 minutes.
Same-day appointment: Sometimes possible. Our therapists are typically booked, but if there's an opening we can fit you in. Call ahead to check.
Same-day vs advance booking: Same-day works for most weekday slots. Friday evenings and weekend slots fill 2-3 days ahead. The most-requested therapists (Edman, Jack) often book a week ahead during busy periods.
What to bring: Nothing required. Comfortable clothes for arrival and departure. We provide everything else — sheets, oils, robes, water.
Your First 60 Seconds With the Therapist
The brief consultation at the start of every session is more important than most clients realize. The therapist is making rapid assessments based on what you tell them and what they observe. The clearer you are in those first 60 seconds, the more targeted the work will be.
The questions worth answering specifically:
- Where exactly is the issue? "My neck" is vague. "The right side of my upper trapezius, just above the shoulder blade" is specific.
- How long has it been there? "A week" requires a different approach than "three years."
- What aggravates it? Specific positions, specific activities, specific times of day.
- What relieves it (even temporarily)? This tells the therapist what kinds of input the body responds to.
- Anything to avoid? Recent injuries, areas of skin sensitivity, areas you don't want worked on for any reason.
- What's the goal? Pain relief? Relaxation? Recovery? The session shape changes based on which.
What Tells You the Session Worked
The honest indicators that a session was effective:
In the first hour after: A quiet, slightly slow feeling. Reluctance to immediately return to busy activity. Mild thirst.
That night: Better sleep. Falling asleep faster. Waking less. Sleeping through usual disruptions.
The next morning: Better range of motion than yesterday. The chronic pain or tension you came in with is at minimum reduced — often noticeably less.
Day 2: Possibly mild soreness if you had deep work, similar to the day after a workout. Drink water; it resolves quickly.
Day 3-5: The cumulative benefit. Many clients report feeling better than they did before the session — calmer, more flexible, sleeping better.
If you notice none of these in the days after a session, the work didn't fully connect with what your body needed. That's useful feedback. Tell us at your next appointment so we can adjust technique, therapist match, or both.
Why Consistency Matters More Than Intensity
If we could give one piece of advice to every client about therapeutic massage, it would be this: consistency dramatically outperforms intensity. Two 60-minute sessions per month for a year does more for chronic conditions than a single dramatic 120-minute session per quarter.
The body learns from repeated input. A consistent rhythm of moderate sessions teaches the nervous system and the tissue that release is the new normal. A rare, dramatic session creates a temporary peak that fades back to baseline.
This is why we don't sell prepaid packages with expiration dates — we want clients booking when their bodies need it, not booking 10 sessions in 30 days because the package is expiring. The right rhythm is whatever you can sustain over time.
For most clients, that turns out to be every 2-3 weeks. For some, weekly. For others, monthly. The right answer is whatever you'll actually keep doing.
Ready to Book?
Visit our Complete Guide to Massage in Redwood City for deeper articles on choosing the right session.
Call: 650-868-5088