Foot massage and reflexology, end-of-day style
New here? Read our foot massage field guide →
Foot massage is the small, fast, accessible treatment that keeps Bangkok walking. Sessions are 30, 45 or 60 minutes, performed in a reclining armchair (not on a table or futon), and include the feet, calves, sometimes the knees, and almost always a short shoulder and neck rub at the end. You stay fully clothed apart from removing your shoes and rolling up trouser legs. It is the easiest modality to drop into without a booking and the most common reason locals visit a massage shop on a weeknight.
Most venues label the service as either "foot massage" (broader work using oil or balm, gentler on the soles) or "reflexology" (precise thumb pressure on specific reflex points mapped to internal organs). The line between them is blurry in practice - a good therapist does both. Expect a foot wash in a wooden bowl with herbs and lemon at the start, a wooden stick for the deeper reflex points, and a strong calf and Achilles squeeze that catches first-timers off guard but loosens tight legs more than any stretch.
A 60-minute foot session is the right call after a temple-and-market day, especially in the rainy season when long walks in wet shoes wreck your calves. Many travellers book it back-to-back with a 30-minute neck-and-shoulder massage in the same chair for a one-hour combo at very low cost.
180-700 THB per hour
30, 45 or 60 minutes
- • Sore feet from walking or running
- • Quick lunch-break treatments
- • Travellers who do not want to undress
- • A first taste of Thai massage culture without committing to 90 minutes on the floor
What to expect during a foot massage session
- 1.Foot wash with warm water, salts and lemon or lemongrass.
- 2.Recline in a wide armchair under a blanket - dim lights, sometimes shared room.
- 3.Cream or balm worked into feet and calves with thumbs and a small wooden stick.
- 4.Optional 10-15 minutes of neck and shoulder work at the end included in many shop menus.
Foot massage FAQ
›Does foot reflexology actually do anything?
The clinical evidence for reflex-point-to-organ mapping is weak. The mechanical evidence for foot and calf massage reducing soreness, improving local circulation and helping sleep is solid. Either way, after a 20,000-step day in Bangkok it feels excellent.
›Can I get a foot massage if my feet are ticklish?
Yes - tell the therapist at the start. They will use firmer, slower pressure rather than light strokes, which removes the tickle reflex almost completely.
›What is the wooden stick for?
It is a smooth tapered tool used to apply firm point pressure to reflex zones on the soles. It hurts in a satisfying way for about three seconds per point. Tell the therapist if it is too sharp and they will switch to thumbs.
›Should I shower before a foot massage?
No - the foot wash at the start handles it. Just wear shoes you can slip off easily and trousers that roll up to the knee.
