# Day Spas in Chiang Mai: Where to Get a Great Massage at Any Budget

> From 250-baht neighbourhood shops to riverside luxury spas: how to choose where to get a massage in Chiang Mai, plus what to pay, wear and tip.

Chiang Mai might be the easiest place on earth to fold a great massage into an ordinary day. There is a shop on practically every soi, prices that would make a London spa blush, and a depth of skill that comes from generations of practice. The only real challenge is choosing, because the city offers everything from a plastic-stool foot rub on a market lane to a half-day journey through a teak-pavilion destination spa. This is the where-to-go companion to our deeper look at [the practice of Thai massage itself](/blog/thai-massage-chiang-mai) — here we are simply helping you pick the right room for your mood and your wallet.

## Know your three tiers

Think of Chiang Mai's massage scene as three loose tiers, and you can navigate almost any situation. At the bottom, and we mean that only on price, are the **neighbourhood massage shops**: open-fronted rooms with reclining chairs and curtained mats, often staffed by genuinely excellent therapists. **Lila Thai Massage** is the standard-bearer here, a social enterprise founded by a former director of the Chiang Mai Women's Prison to employ trained ex-inmates; it has several branches around the [Old City and Tha Phae area](/blog/old-city-temples-chiang-mai) and is a reliable, feel-good first stop. The middle tier is the proper **day spa** — private rooms, a shower, herbal tea, a garden — with **Fah Lanna Spa** (Old Town and Nimman) the much-loved benchmark. At the top sit **luxury and resort spas** such as **Oasis Spa**, with its several mansion-and-garden locations, where a treatment becomes a two- or three-hour ritual.

![A Lanna-style illustration of a serene Chiang Mai spa with herbal compress balls, oils and a massage mat](/blog/day-spas-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

| Tier | What you get | Rough price (1 hr) |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Neighbourhood shop | Reclining chairs, skilled therapists, walk-in | 200–350฿ |
| Day spa | Private room, shower, herbal tea, garden | 600–900฿ |
| Luxury / resort spa | Multi-hour ritual, hotel pick-up | 1,500฿+ |

## The treatments worth knowing

A menu can be bewildering, so here is the shortlist. **Traditional Thai massage** is the deep, fully-clothed, no-oil stretching-and-pressing work the region is famous for. **Oil or aromatherapy massage** is gentler and more familiar to Western spa-goers, worked on bare skin with scented oils. The **herbal compress**, or *luk pra kob*, uses a steamed muslin ball packed with lemongrass, turmeric and kaffir lime pressed warm against tired muscles — a Lanna speciality with roots in [northern traditional medicine](/blog/traditional-medicine-chiang-mai). A simple **foot massage** is the perfect 30 to 60 minutes after a day on your feet, and **body scrubs** and herbal steam rooms round out the longer spa packages. If you have just survived a [Muay Thai class](/blog/muay-thai-chiang-mai) or a long trek, a Thai massage with compress is the classic recovery.

## What it costs

This is the happy part. At a neighbourhood shop, expect roughly **200 to 350 baht for a one-hour Thai or foot massage** — a little more right around Tha Phae Gate, a little less as you walk away from the tourist core. A mid-range day spa typically runs **600 to 900 baht an hour**, and a luxury spa package will start higher again, often well past **1,500 baht** once you factor in the longer rituals, the garden, and the hotel pick-up. Even at the very top it remains a fraction of what you would pay back home, so do treat yourself at least once. For a sense of how this fits a wider budget, see our [cost-of-living rundown](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai).

## How to spot a good place

A few honest signals. A busy shop with locals in the chairs is almost always a good sign. Look for clean linens and a fresh set of clothes offered for Thai massage, a price list posted plainly, and therapists who ask about injuries or pressure preference before they start. Be a little wary of any "massage" shop with neon lights and women calling from the doorway late at night — that is a different trade, and the [common-scams guide](/blog/common-scams-chiang-mai) is worth a glance. Otherwise, trust your eyes: calm, tidy and unhurried beats glossy every time.

![A Lanna-style illustration of a Chiang Mai massage and spa scene](/blog/day-spas-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## What to wear and how to behave

Wear something loose and comfortable; for Thai and herbal-compress work you will usually be given soft pyjama-style clothes to change into, while oil treatments are done on bare skin under a towel or sarong, with disposable underwear provided. Shoes come off at the door, always. Speak softly, switch your phone to silent, and arrive ten to fifteen minutes early for spa appointments so there is time to consult. A quick read of our [etiquette notes for visitors](/blog/thai-etiquette-for-visitors) never hurts. And do say if the pressure is too strong — *bao bao* means "gently".

## Booking, tipping and a couple of last tips

Walk-ins are completely normal at neighbourhood shops, but for a popular day spa on a weekend, or a couples' room, book a day ahead. Tipping is appreciated rather than obligatory; **20 to 100 baht** for a good neighbourhood massage, or a little more at a spa, is the local norm — our [tipping and bargaining guide](/blog/tipping-bargaining-thailand) has the full picture. Finally, if you have caught the wellness bug, Chiang Mai pairs massage beautifully with its [yoga and meditation retreats](/blog/yoga-retreats-chiang-mai). Our standing advice to guests: book one good massage for your first evening to shake off the flight, and let the city's gentle hands do the rest.
