
Yoga Mandir
San Pedro, San José
21 studios offering massage found near Costa Rica
FindYoga lists 21 massage studios and class providers in Costa Rica. Browse timetables, compare styles and find the right massage session for your level — whether you're stepping on the mat for the first time or deepening an established practice.

San Pedro, San José


Escazu, San José Province


San Rafael, San José


San Rafael, San José

Manuel Antonio, Provincia de Puntarenas


Santa Bárbara de Heredia, Heredia Province


Quepos, Provincia de Puntarenas


Alajuela, Provincia de Alajuela
Casual mountainside spa hotel offering dining, a wine bar & a wellness center with yoga classes.

Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste


Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste
Tranquil resort with free breakfast & daily yoga, plus an outdoor pool & an Ayurvedic spa.


Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste


Nosara, Guanacaste Province


Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste


San Juanillo, Provincia de Guanacaste


Tulum, Quintana Roo


Tulum, Quintana Roo


La Veleta, Quintana Roo


La Veleta, Quintana Roo

La Veleta, Quintana Roo


La Veleta, Quintana Roo

La Veleta, Quintana Roo
Massage is one of humanity's oldest and most instinctive forms of healing — the simple, profound act of using skilled touch to restore balance, ease tension, and invite the body back into a state of deep rest. Within the yoga world, massage is embraced as a natural companion to movement practice, addressing the physical body with the same intentionality that yoga brings to breath and mind. Whether experienced as a gentle Swedish session, a targeted deep tissue treatment, or the rhythmic compressions of traditional Thai massage, this modality has earned its place in wellness culture because it works — and because it feels extraordinary. People return to massage again and again not only for relief, but for the rare gift of being fully present in their own bodies without effort or agenda.
The roots of therapeutic massage stretch back thousands of years across multiple civilizations. Ancient Chinese texts from around 2700 BCE reference massage as medical treatment, while Ayurvedic traditions in India formalized it as abhyanga — the practice of warm oil massage to balance the doshas and nourish the tissues. In the West, the Swedish massage system developed in the 19th century by Per Henrik Ling laid the groundwork for modern clinical and spa massage by codifying techniques such as effleurage, petrissage, and tapotement. Thai massage, deeply influenced by Ayurvedic and Buddhist traditions, is often attributed to Jivaka Kumar Bhaccha, a physician said to have been a contemporary of the Buddha and personal doctor to Buddhist monks. Each tradition carries its own philosophy, yet all share a common intention: to support the body's innate intelligence and capacity for healing.
A typical massage session lasts anywhere from 60 to 90 minutes and is tailored to the individual's needs on that particular day. A skilled therapist will assess areas of holding, tightness, or imbalance and work systematically through muscle groups, fascia, and energy lines to encourage circulation, reduce inflammation, and release chronic tension patterns. The mental benefits are equally significant — massage activates the parasympathetic nervous system, lowering cortisol, quieting anxious thoughts, and producing a meditative state of calm alertness that mirrors the most peaceful moments in yoga practice. It is well suited to athletes recovering from exertion, office workers carrying postural strain, those navigating stress or grief, and anyone simply seeking a deeper connection to their own body. For anyone ready to slow down, soften, and truly arrive — massage is an invitation worth accepting.