One of the questions we hear most often at Artemis Wellness Clinic is whether a patient should book physiotherapy or massage therapy. Both are regulated healthcare professions in British Columbia, both can help with pain and injury, and both are covered by most extended health benefit plans. But they approach treatment differently, and understanding those differences helps you make the best choice for your situation.
What Does a Physiotherapist Do?
Physiotherapy focuses on restoring movement, function, and strength after injury, surgery, or as part of managing chronic conditions. Your physiotherapist assesses how your body moves, identifies weaknesses, restrictions, and compensatory patterns, and then develops an active rehabilitation program.
A typical physiotherapy session may include manual therapy and joint mobilization, therapeutic exercises that you perform during the session and at home, movement retraining and gait analysis, modalities such as ultrasound, electrical stimulation, or taping, and education about your condition and how to prevent recurrence.
Physiotherapy is particularly effective for post-surgical rehabilitation, sports injuries requiring structured return-to-play programs, chronic conditions requiring ongoing exercise management, balance and mobility issues, and workplace injury recovery through WorkSafeBC.
What Does an RMT Do?
Registered Massage Therapy focuses on treating the soft tissues of the body — muscles, tendons, ligaments, and fascia. Your RMT uses hands-on techniques to reduce pain, release tension, improve circulation, and promote healing.
A typical RMT session may include deep tissue massage to release chronic muscle tension, myofascial release to address connective tissue restrictions, trigger point therapy for localized pain and referred pain patterns, joint mobilization within the scope of massage therapy, and relaxation massage for stress reduction and overall well-being.
RMT is particularly effective for chronic muscle tension and pain, stress-related conditions including headaches, acute muscle strains and sprains, repetitive strain injuries, and prenatal and postnatal discomfort.
Key Differences Between Physiotherapy and Massage Therapy
The fundamental difference is that physiotherapy is primarily active (you do exercises and movements) while massage therapy is primarily passive (the therapist works on your body). Physiotherapy aims to change how you move and strengthen weak areas, while massage therapy aims to release tension, reduce pain, and improve tissue health.
Another important difference is the assessment approach. Physiotherapists focus on functional movement assessment — how you walk, bend, reach, and perform daily activities. RMTs focus on tissue assessment — identifying where muscles are tight, where trigger points exist, and where fascial restrictions are limiting movement.
When to Choose Physiotherapy
Choose physiotherapy when you need rehabilitation after surgery or a significant injury, you need a structured exercise program to manage a chronic condition, your condition involves weakness, instability, or poor movement patterns, you need a return-to-work or return-to-sport program, or your doctor has recommended physiotherapy specifically.
When to Choose Massage Therapy
Choose massage therapy when your primary issue is muscle tension, tightness, or pain, you experience chronic headaches, neck pain, or back pain related to muscle tension, you need stress relief and relaxation, you have a soft tissue injury such as a muscle strain, or you want maintenance treatment to prevent injuries and manage ongoing tension.
When You Need Both
At Artemis Wellness Clinic, we frequently recommend combining physiotherapy and massage therapy for the best results. For example, a patient recovering from a car accident may benefit from physiotherapy exercises to restore strength and mobility while receiving RMT to manage pain and muscle guarding. A patient with chronic low back pain may need physiotherapy to address core weakness and movement dysfunction while RMT releases the tight muscles that are contributing to pain.
The advantage of a multidisciplinary clinic like Artemis is that your physiotherapist and RMT can coordinate your care, ensuring that treatments complement rather than duplicate each other.
Read our related comparison: RMT vs Physiotherapy in Richmond
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a doctor’s referral for physiotherapy or massage therapy?
In BC, you do not need a referral to see an RMT. Some extended health plans require a doctor’s referral for physiotherapy coverage — check your specific plan.
Which is better for back pain?
It depends on the cause. If your back pain is primarily muscular, RMT may be most effective. If it involves weakness, poor posture, or disc issues, physiotherapy may be more appropriate. For many patients, a combination of both produces the best results.
Can I claim both physiotherapy and massage therapy on my insurance?
Yes. Most extended health plans have separate coverage categories for physiotherapy and RMT, so using one does not reduce your coverage for the other.
How do I know which to try first?
If you are unsure, book an assessment with either practitioner. Both are trained to recognize when the other therapy would be beneficial and can recommend adding it to your treatment plan.
Book Your Assessment in Richmond
Whether you need physiotherapy, massage therapy, or both, our team at Artemis Wellness Clinic can help you determine the best approach. Call 604-242-2233 or book online.
