Being | Wellness Centre | Float Sauna Massage

Deep tissue vs Swedish vs sports massage: which one do you actually need?

A massage therapist works on a woman's neck and shoulder area in a calm, well-lit spa setting, demonstrating professional technique

The massage choice nobody helps you make

Most people booking their first massage tick a box on a form they don’t really understand. Swedish? Deep tissue? Sports? They pick whatever name sounds about right, or whatever’s available at 2pm on a Saturday.

The choice matters more than the studio, more than the therapist’s CV, and often more than the price. Pick the wrong one and you’ll either leave wondering what the fuss is about, or limp out wishing you hadn’t bothered.

Here’s the practical guide nobody gave you.

Why the type of massage matters

Massage is a category, not a single thing. The label covers everything from feather-light lymphatic work used after surgery to forearm-deep pressure that leaves you tender for three days. Different techniques work different tissue depths, do different jobs, and produce different results.

Book Swedish when you needed deep tissue and you’ll feel pleasant for an hour, but the chronic tightness in your shoulders will be back by Monday. Book deep tissue as your first-ever massage and you might decide you hate massage. Both happen all the time.

Match the technique to what’s actually going on in your body. Done.

Swedish massage

The classic. If someone says they’ve “had a massage” with no further detail, this is what they mean.

Swedish uses long, flowing strokes, kneading and rhythmic tapping with light to medium pressure. It’s oil-based, usually full body, and designed to calm the nervous system rather than work into specific tissue problems.

Who Swedish is right for

  • General stress and tension with no specific pain complaint
  • First-time massage clients
  • Anyone wanting to wind down rather than fix something
  • Improving circulation and lymph movement
  • Better sleep that night

Who Swedish is wrong for

If you’ve got chronic shoulder pain that’s been there for two years, a knot in your back you can locate within a centimetre, or sciatic-type pain down one leg, Swedish will feel nice for an hour and do nothing for the actual problem. You’ll spend money to feel briefly relaxed, then go home to the same pain.

Swedish is also the right call for anyone nervous about massage. Nothing should hurt. If it does, the therapist is reading the brief wrong.

Deep tissue massage

The most misunderstood option on the menu. Most people who book deep tissue actually wanted a firm Swedish. Most people who needed deep tissue booked Swedish.

Deep tissue uses slower, more deliberate pressure that works through the superficial muscle layers into the deeper tissue and fascia underneath. Less oil. More forearm and elbow. Therapists often hold pressure on a single point for 30 seconds or more, waiting for the tissue to release before moving on.

Who deep tissue is right for

  • Chronic muscle tension that won’t shift on its own
  • Postural issues — rounded shoulders, hunched neck, tight hip flexors
  • Specific knots that have set in and won’t release
  • Recovery from old injuries where scar tissue has built up
  • Anyone who’s had Swedish massage and felt it didn’t go deep enough

Who deep tissue is wrong for

First-timers. People who want pure relaxation. Anyone who bruises easily or has a low pain tolerance. People on blood thinners. Anyone with an inflammatory condition currently flared up.

Good pain vs bad pain

This is the bit that confuses people. Deep tissue should produce a sensation often described as “hurts so good”: intense, but where you can breathe through it and feel the muscle releasing on the other side. That’s good pain. The therapist is working with your tissue.

Bad pain is sharp, makes you flinch, makes you hold your breath, or radiates somewhere it shouldn’t. That’s a sign the pressure is too much, or the technique is wrong for that spot. Speak up. A good therapist wants to know.

Leaving a deep tissue session feeling tender is normal. Leaving feeling like you’ve been beaten up means the pressure was too much.

Sports massage

Often confused with deep tissue. It isn’t the same.

Sports massage focuses on the muscle groups being hammered by whatever sport you’re doing. Techniques borrow from deep tissue, but also include stretching, range-of-motion work, and active-release moves where you contract and relax muscles while the therapist works on them.

Who sports massage is right for

  • Runners with tight hamstrings, calves and IT bands
  • Cyclists with locked-up glutes and quads
  • Climbers with forearm and shoulder issues
  • Anyone training for a specific event who needs maintenance work
  • Pre-event priming (lighter, mobility-focused) or post-event recovery (deeper, draining work)

Who sports massage is wrong for

Someone who wants to lie face down in a quiet room and not think for an hour. Sports massage is more of a working session than a passive experience. The therapist may ask you to move, push against their hand, or hold a stretch.

If you don’t have a sport, you probably don’t need sports massage. Desk-worker neck pain is a deep tissue problem.

Lymphatic drainage massage

The opposite of deep tissue. Almost embarrassingly gentle.

It uses very light, rhythmic strokes following the lymphatic pathways under the skin. The pressure is so light it sometimes feels like nothing’s happening. Trust it — lymph responds to feather-light input, not pressure.

Who lymphatic drainage is right for

  • Post-surgery recovery, particularly after cosmetic procedures
  • Fluid retention and swelling
  • Immune system support during illness recovery
  • Anyone with chronic puffiness or sluggish lymph flow

Don’t book it expecting tension release. It works a different system entirely.

Trigger point therapy

Surgical, not whole-body.

Trigger point therapy uses sustained pressure (usually 30 to 90 seconds) on specific knots that produce referred pain — pressing one spot makes you feel pain somewhere else.

Who trigger point therapy is right for

  • Tension headaches that start at the base of the skull
  • Shoulder pain that radiates down the arm
  • Lower back pain referring into the glutes
  • Specific, locatable knots with a clear referral pattern

Often built into a broader deep tissue session rather than booked on its own.

Pregnancy massage

A category of its own, with specialised training and equipment.

Pregnancy massage is adapted for the second and third trimester. Side-lying or semi-reclined positioning with bolsters. No deep work on the abdomen, lower legs, or pressure points associated with labour induction unless that’s specifically what you want and your midwife has cleared it.

Who pregnancy massage is right for

  • Pelvic and lower back pain in mid-to-late pregnancy
  • Sciatic-type referred pain
  • Sleep difficulties
  • Swelling in the legs and feet
  • The physical load of growing a person

First-trimester clients should generally wait until 13 weeks. Always check with your midwife if there are any complications.

How to choose the right massage for you

Skip the marketing names. Match the technique to what your body is doing.

  • Stressed, no specific physical complaint → Swedish
  • Chronic tight shoulders or neck from desk work → Deep tissue
  • Marathon training, cycling, climbing → Sports
  • One specific knot that refers pain elsewhere → Trigger point therapy (or deep tissue with a therapist who knows trigger points)
  • Pregnant, second or third trimester → Pregnancy massage
  • Post-surgery, fluid retention, immune recovery → Lymphatic drainage
  • First massage, ever → Swedish

If you’re between two options, tell the therapist what’s going on at the start. A good practitioner will adapt within the booking. The session you booked is a starting point, not a contract.

How long should a massage be?

The other question that catches people out.

  • 30 minutes: one focused area only. Neck and shoulders, or lower back. Not both. Try to fit a full back into 30 minutes and the therapist is rushing through tissue that needs time to respond.
  • 40 minutes: full back, or two related areas (neck/shoulders/upper back, or lower back/glutes/hamstrings).
  • 60 minutes: full body, or full attention to one or two areas with proper depth and resolution.

For deep tissue, 30 minutes is usually the minimum that produces meaningful change. Tissue takes time to soften.

Stacking massage with float and sauna

Massage works better when the muscle is already warm and the nervous system has settled.

A short float before a massage drops your nervous system into a calm state and softens the tissue before the therapist has started. This is particularly useful for clients who carry chronic stress and find it hard to settle on the table.

An infrared sauna session before a massage raises tissue temperature and softens fascia. The therapist can then work deeper with less discomfort, and you’ll feel more open afterwards. If you’re stacking all three, the order is float first, then sauna, then massage — each step makes the next one work better.

That’s one of the reasons being has float, sauna and massage under one roof. The stack matters.

Book the right massage

Most studios will let you change technique mid-session if you’ve booked the wrong one. Most therapists will steer you toward the right one if you describe what’s actually going on. The trick is describing it accurately. Not “I want a massage” but “I’ve had right shoulder pain for six months that gets worse after I’ve been at my laptop, and I think it’s referring up into my neck.”

That’s a deep tissue session, possibly with trigger point work, ideally 60 minutes, probably better if you stack a sauna session before it.

Book a massage at being. 30, 40 and 60-minute sessions, with experienced therapists who adapt to what your body actually needs.

FAQs

What’s the difference between deep tissue and sports massage?

Deep tissue works through muscle layers into the deeper fascia using sustained pressure — best for chronic tension and postural issues. Sports massage uses similar pressure but adds stretching and active-release techniques, focused on the specific muscle groups being trained for a particular sport. Deep tissue is the right answer for desk-worker tension; sports massage is the right answer for marathon training.

Is deep tissue massage supposed to hurt?

It should produce intensity rather than sharp pain. Think “hurts so good” — uncomfortable but releases tension when the therapist works through it. Sharp, flinch-inducing pain means the pressure is too much or the technique is wrong for that spot. Always tell your therapist when something doesn’t feel right.

How often should I get a massage?

Depends on the goal. General stress maintenance: once a month is the sensible baseline. Chronic pain: fortnightly while you’re working through it, then taper to monthly. Athletes in a training block: weekly or fortnightly. Acute injury or flare: two to three sessions close together to settle the muscle, then back to maintenance.

Will I be sore after a massage?

After deep tissue or sports massage, mild soreness for 24 to 48 hours is normal, like an unfamiliar workout. Drink water, walk gently, avoid heavy training the next day. Sharp pain, increasing soreness, or pain lasting more than three days is a sign the pressure was too much or there’s something else going on — let your therapist know.

Can I get a massage if I’m pregnant?

Yes, from 13 weeks onwards (the start of the second trimester), with a therapist trained specifically in prenatal massage. Pregnancy massage uses side-lying or semi-reclined positioning and avoids specific pressure points. Always check with your midwife if you have any pregnancy complications.

What’s the best massage for stress?

Swedish, almost always. It’s designed to calm the nervous system rather than work into tissue problems. Deep tissue can be too intense when you’re already wound up. A short float before the massage compounds the effect — the nervous system drops in the float, and the Swedish work then keeps it down.

What should I tell my massage therapist before the session?

Where the pain is (be specific), when it started, what makes it worse or better, what you’ve already tried, your pressure preference (firm, medium, light), and anything they need to avoid (injuries, surgeries, pregnancy, medical conditions). Five minutes of useful detail at the start makes the next 60 minutes far more effective.

Up
d

Welcome to Reina

Step into a true oasis of digital beauty we devised for your new beauty center, resort or spa website.

Monday 09:00 - 19:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 19:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 19:00
Thursday 09:00 - 21:00
Friday 09:00 - 19:00
Saturday 09:00 - 19:00
Sunday 10:00 - 16:00