Massage Therapy · North Carolina

Massage Therapy colleges in North Carolina

Massage Therapy program coverage in North Carolina is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Massage Therapy trains you in hands-on techniques to manipulate muscles and soft tissue, for people who want a practical, touch-based path in wellness and clinical care.

We're still verifying Massage Therapy programs in North Carolina. Try a broader search at /results?q=Massage Therapy or browse all colleges in North Carolina.

What you'll study in a Massage Therapy program

  • Anatomy, physiology, and kinesiology of muscles and connective tissue
  • Swedish massage strokes and body mechanics
  • Deep-tissue, sports, and clinical massage techniques
  • Myofascial release and trigger-point therapy
  • Reflexology and other manual soft-tissue approaches
  • Client intake, assessment, positioning, and draping
  • Contraindications, massage safety, and emergency response
  • Supervised clinical and student-clinic practice hours
  • Professional ethics, boundaries, and practice management

Where a Massage Therapy degree can lead

  • Massage Therapist
  • Sports Massage Therapist
  • Clinical Massage Therapist
  • Spa Therapist
  • Medical Massage Therapist
  • Bodywork Practitioner

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 massage therapists median $57,950).

Massage Therapy teaches you to ease pain, tension, and stress and to support a client's well-being by working directly on skin, muscles, and connective tissue with your hands. You study how the body moves and where soft tissue sits, then learn a range of manual approaches: classic Swedish strokes, deep-tissue work, sports massage, trigger-point and myofascial techniques, and reflexology. Alongside the hands-on craft, you practice reading each client's needs through intake and assessment, positioning and draping for comfort and safety, recognizing when massage is not appropriate, and responding calmly if a session goes wrong. Coursework also covers professional ethics, boundaries, and the business side of running a practice or working within a clinic or spa.

This is most often a certificate or diploma program built around supervised hands-on hours rather than a longer degree, though some schools fold it into an associate program. Training is intensely practical: you log practice and clinical sessions in a teaching clinic or student spa, building stamina, body mechanics, and a working set of techniques before you treat the public on your own. Programmatic accreditation and a state credential may apply, so verify the rules where you intend to practice; in many states a massage therapist must pass a licensing or certification exam and meet a set amount of training before working. Unlike physical therapy, which requires a clinical doctorate and a state license to diagnose and direct rehabilitation, massage therapy centers on manual soft-tissue work for relief and relaxation. Graduates work in spas and wellness centers, chiropractic and physical-therapy offices, fitness and athletic settings, hotels and resorts, and independent or mobile practices.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of massage therapists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $57,950 and projects employment to grow about 15.4% from 2024 to 2034; a postsecondary nondegree award is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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