Skip to content
Home Cities Journal Match Compare About Add Practitioner For studios
Vol. I · Updated April 2026 · 🇺🇸 United States The Boston Edit

Best Lymphatic Drainage in Boston 2026.

15 practitioners in Boston — ranked by Google rating. Typical price: $80 – $150 per session · varies by therapist.

Also known as: lymphatic drainage · manual lymphatic drainage (MLD) · lymphatic massage · post-surgery drainage · Vodder method · Leduc method · pressotherapy · endermologie · lymphedema treatment · body contouring massage · post-op massage · decongestive therapy · lymph drainage therapy

15 practitioners 4.8★ avg rating $80 – $150 typical
Editor’s PickOur top practitioner in Boston
Viyada Thai Spa Editor’s Pick

This month in Boston

Viyada Thai Spa
Boston

"A dedicated space. Certified, quietly excellent."

4.9★
1136 reviews
Source
Source
#1
in Boston
Discover the practitioner
The Boston listOrdered by rating, featured first

Lymphatic Drainage studios in Boston

Sort
Min rating

Boston counts 15 lymphatic drainage practitioners listed on LymphaticDrainageFinder, with an average Google rating of 4.8★ across 4,596 public reviews. 100% of these practitioners hold a 4.5★ rating or above — above the global market average of 35%. This is the editorial guide we wish we had when we started looking for lymphatic drainage in Boston.

Boston at a glanceThe scene in numbers

15 lymphatic drainage practitioners documented — 6 of them hold a Featured listing (Editor’s Pick program).

4.8★ average rating across 4,596 reviews. Median review count per practitioner is 241 — a useful signal for how established these practitioners are.

Rating distribution: 15 rated 4.5★ or above, 0 between 4.0 and 4.4★, and 0 below 4.0★. Always check recency of reviews before booking.

Top practitioners in BostonRanked by rating and review volume
Featured

3. Le Visage Spa in Boston at Sola Salons

Rating4.9★ · 319 reviews
See full listing →
Featured

5. Healing Hands Bodywork & Massage Relaxation Therapy

Rating5.0★ · 57 reviews
See full listing →

9. Wings Wellness Custom Massage & Manual Lymphatic Drainage

Rating4.9★ · 94 reviews
See full listing →

Ranking combines public Google rating and review volume. See the full 15-practitioner list above.

Your guide to lymphatic drainage in BostonData-driven overview

Boston sits in the world's largest market for lymphatic drainage by volume, driven by massive demand from cosmetic surgery recovery (BBL, liposuction, tummy tuck) and celebrity-endorsed wellness culture. With 15 practitioners documented in our directory, Boston represents a mid-sized scene — enough range to find the right therapist whether you need medical-grade MLD for lymphedema, post-surgical recovery massage, or wellness-focused drainage for general wellbeing.

Quality signals are strong: 15 of 15 practitioners hold a 4.5★ rating or above. The average rating across all Boston practitioners is 4.8★, based on 4,596 public Google reviews. The median review count per practitioner is 241 — a useful proxy for how established each therapist is in the local market.

Review counts range from 34 to 1136, with the middle 50% between 59 and 388 reviews. Practitioners with fewer than 15 reviews may be newer to the area or operate primarily through referrals rather than walk-in traffic. For post-surgical lymphatic drainage, prioritize therapists with specific post-op training (CLT, Vodder, or Leduc certification) over review volume alone.

Lymphatic drainage prices in BostonWhat to expect to pay

Based on publicly available price lists from Boston practitioners and United States-wide market data, here are typical 2026 pricing ranges:

Session type Price range
Single session (60 min)$75–150
Extended session (90 min)$100–250
5-session package$325–650
Post-surgical specialist session$100–200

Prices vary by practitioner credentials, session focus (medical vs aesthetic), and clinic type. CLT-certified or Vodder-trained therapists and hospital-affiliated practitioners typically charge at the upper end. Post-surgical sessions often cost more due to specialised training requirements. Always confirm current pricing directly — these ranges are market-level estimates.

Costs to ask about: whether your health insurance or extended benefits cover MLD (common for diagnosed lymphedema), package expiry windows, mobile/home-visit surcharges, and whether the initial consultation is included in the first session price.

How Boston compares across United StatesCross-city comparison
City Practitioners Avg rating Total reviews 4.5★+
Boston (this page)154.8★4,59615
Atlanta145.0★4,97714
Austin174.9★3,57117
Chicago204.9★4,56320
Dallas124.8★5,22412

Boston accounts for 6% of the 260 lymphatic drainage practitioners we track across United States. Austin, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, San Francisco, Washington DC have a larger directory. Atlanta, Dallas, Nashville, Scottsdale, Seattle have fewer listed practitioners. Practitioner count alone does not determine quality — for lymphatic drainage, credentials (CLT, Vodder, Leduc), post-op specialisation, and recent review quality matter more than directory size.

Lymphatic drainage in Boston — your questions answeredCity-specific FAQ
How much does lymphatic drainage cost in Boston?

A standard 60-minute lymphatic drainage session in Boston typically costs $75–150. Extended 90-minute sessions run $100–250. A 5-session package — common for post-surgical recovery protocols — costs $325–650. Specialist post-operative sessions (after liposuction, BBL, or tummy tuck) cost $100–200 due to the additional training required. Prices reflect the United States market as of 2026. For diagnosed lymphedema, check whether your insurance covers MLD — it is reimbursed in many healthcare systems.

How many lymphatic drainage sessions do I need after surgery in Boston?

Most plastic surgeons recommend 2–3 lymphatic drainage sessions per week for the first 2–4 weeks after procedures like liposuction, BBL, tummy tuck, or breast augmentation. A typical post-op protocol involves 6–12 sessions total, depending on the procedure and individual recovery. Published research (PMC4075221, PMC10045879) supports that manual lymphatic drainage is more effective than mechanical drainage for post-abdominoplasty recovery, reducing swelling, tissue fibrosis, and localised pain. In Boston, 15 practitioners are listed — look specifically for those advertising post-surgical experience or CLT credentials. Always obtain your surgeon's clearance before starting MLD, typically 48–72 hours post-procedure.

What is the difference between lymphatic drainage and deep tissue massage?

Lymphatic drainage (MLD) uses very light pressure — roughly 30–40 mmHg, the weight of a nickel on skin — in slow, rhythmic strokes that follow the lymphatic pathways toward lymph nodes. Deep tissue massage uses firm pressure to reach muscle fascia and break up adhesions. They serve different purposes: MLD reduces oedema, supports immune function, and aids post-surgical recovery; deep tissue addresses chronic muscle tension, knots, and pain. MLD should never hurt — if it does, the pressure is too high. If you need both, book them as separate sessions, not combined. Among the 15 practitioners in Boston, some offer both modalities — verify the therapist holds specific MLD training (Vodder, Leduc, or CLT certification), not just general massage qualifications.

How often should you get lymphatic drainage in Boston?

Frequency depends on your goal. For general wellness and fluid balance: once every 1–2 weeks is typical. For post-surgical recovery: 2–3 times per week for the first 2–4 weeks, then tapering. For diagnosed lymphedema: your CLT or physiotherapist will set an intensive schedule (often daily during initial decongestive therapy) before transitioning to maintenance. For facial lymphatic drainage (aesthetic): weekly sessions are common. Published evidence (PMC3819918) shows that even single MLD sessions can significantly reduce leg oedema in pregnancy. For chronic conditions, consistency matters more than intensity. The 15 practitioners in Boston can advise on a schedule tailored to your needs.

What are the side effects of lymphatic drainage massage?

MLD is one of the gentlest manual therapies available. Common short-term effects include: increased urination (the body processing mobilised fluid), mild fatigue, light-headedness, and occasionally a temporary headache — all normal and typically resolve within 24 hours. Serious side effects are rare when performed by a qualified therapist. However, MLD has absolute contraindications: active infection or fever, deep vein thrombosis (DVT), congestive heart failure, acute cellulitis, and kidney failure. Cancer patients should obtain oncologist clearance — published evidence (PMC4354455) shows no increased recurrence risk, but standard practice requires medical approval. Drink extra water after your session and avoid intense exercise for a few hours.

How does Boston compare to Los Angeles for lymphatic drainage?

Boston has 15 lymphatic drainage practitioners with an average rating of 4.8★ and 4,596 total reviews. Los Angeles has 23 practitioners with an average rating of 4.9★. With more practitioners, Los Angeles offers more choice — but therapist credentials and post-op specialisation matter more than directory size for lymphatic drainage. Browse both city directories to compare ratings, specialisations, and recent reviews.

Why lymphatic drainage in BostonEvidence-based benefits

Whether you are browsing Boston's 15 practitioners for post-surgical recovery, a diagnosed lymphatic condition, or general wellness, the published evidence supports several concrete benefits of professional MLD:

  • Post-surgical recovery: Manual lymphatic drainage proved more effective than mechanical lymphatic drainage post-abdominoplasty, reducing swelling, tissue fibrosis, and local pain (PMC4075221). Surgeons commonly recommend 2–3 sessions per week for the first 2–4 weeks following body contouring procedures.
  • Lymphedema management: A Cochrane review concluded that MLD is safe and may offer additional benefit to compression bandaging for swelling reduction in breast-cancer-related lymphedema. MLD is standard of care as part of Complete Decongestive Therapy (CDT) per NHS UK guidelines (PMC4966288).
  • Pregnancy oedema: A published study (PMC3819918) found that MLD significantly reduced leg swelling in pregnant women during the day. The treatment is generally safe when performed by a trained prenatal therapist, though first-trimester caution is advised.
  • Chronic venous insufficiency: An RCT demonstrated that a 4-week course of lower-leg MLD significantly improved symptoms including fatigue, heaviness, and pain.
  • Migraine reduction: A 2025 RCT found that MLD reduced migraine days, decreased analgesic use, and improved overall well-being in chronic migraine patients.

What MLD does NOT do: There is no evidence that lymphatic drainage causes fat loss (temporary fluid loss is not weight loss — UCLA Health, Cleveland Clinic). Claims about "detoxification" are not supported by clinical evidence — a healthy lymphatic system functions without external assistance.

These findings apply regardless of where you practice — but access to qualified, credentialed therapists matters. Boston's 15 practitioners rated 4.5★+ out of 15 total give you a reasonable starting pool.

Sources: PMC4075221, PMC10045879, PMC4966288, PMC3819918, PMC4354455. See our medical disclaimer.

Before your visitPractical logistics for Boston

The lymphatic drainage practitioners scene in Boston is a growing scene — 15 practitioners documented with consistently high quality signals. For reference, the top-reviewed practitioner has 1136 reviews. The logistics below apply across the lymphatic drainage practice worldwide, but local conventions in Boston may differ — always confirm specifics with the practitioner before booking.

What to wear

Bring loose, comfortable clothing for before and after. You will undress during the session — how much depends on the practitioner's style and the body areas being drained. Most therapists provide a gown or drape you with sheets.

Undressing and draping protocol

A trained lymphatic drainage therapist drapes you with a sheet so that only the specific area being worked is exposed. Full nudity is almost never required. If a practitioner doesn't offer draping, that is a red flag. You can always ask at intake what the undressing protocol is.

Arrival and intake

Arrive 10–15 minutes early for the first visit. The practitioner will take a brief health history (surgeries, medications, pregnancy, oncology history) — this is essential for your safety, not paperwork theatre.

During the session

Lymphatic drainage is light-pressure, not a deep-tissue massage. If the therapist presses hard, they are doing something else (possibly standard massage). The actual technique feels almost feather-light. Sessions run 45–90 minutes.

After the session

Drink water, rest if possible, use the bathroom (you will likely urinate more in the hours after). Avoid alcohol, heavy meals, and intense exercise for 24 hours. Mild fatigue is common and normal.

Payment and cancellation

Confirm rates and cancellation policy before booking. Most practitioners charge 50–100% for cancellations under 24 hours.

Questions nobody asksHonest answers for Boston
Is lymphatic drainage compatible with endometriosis?

Many people with endometriosis report reduced bloating and pelvic congestion after MLD sessions — a subjective benefit increasingly recognised by clinicians who treat the condition. Most protocols suggest avoiding sessions during acute flares with severe pain, and practitioners trained in pelvic floor or visceral work may offer more targeted approaches. Sharing your diagnosis with your therapist allows them to adapt pressure, positioning, and session timing relative to your cycle.

What is the Renata Franca method, and how does it differ from traditional MLD?

The Renata Franca method is a Brazilian lymphatic drainage technique developed in the 2010s that has gained significant international attention in 2025-2026, with notable visibility from celebrity practitioners and clients (Maya Jama among them). The technique differs from the classical Vodder MLD (Denmark, 1932), which uses pressure under ~30 mmHg and gentle pumping: the Renata Franca approach combines firmer pressure with sweeping movements and visible lymphatic mapping. Many clients report immediate contouring effects after the first session. Clinical research on long-term outcomes is still developing — for aesthetic and event-prep use, client testimonials are abundant and consistent. For medical lymphedema, classical Vodder protocols remain the documented standard.

What are the typical post-BBL or post-liposuction MLD protocols?

Surgical recovery protocols commonly recommend starting MLD between day 3 and day 5 post-procedure, after surgical clearance. The first two weeks typically involve short (30–45 min), gentle sessions at high frequency (3–5 per week); sessions lengthen and space out from week 3 onwards. Many cosmetic surgery clinics in Bogota, Miami, and Istanbul integrate MLD directly into their recovery packages. Always follow the specific protocol given by your surgeon — they will indicate timing, technique restrictions around incisions, and total session count.

What does current evidence say about lymphatic facial and gua sha techniques?

Lymphatic facial work and gua sha (documented in Traditional Chinese Medicine for centuries) stimulate superficial lymph flow in the face and neck. Clinical and dermatology observations support short-term reduction of facial puffiness, improved circulation, and an immediate sense of de-puffing — particularly useful before events or photoshoots. Long-term anti-aging claims are less documented in peer-reviewed literature; most practitioners frame it as a complementary routine alongside skincare. Gentle pressure is recommended to avoid breaking facial capillaries.

How do at-home tools (gua sha, rollers, vibration plates) compare to professional sessions?

At-home tools are widely used as complement to professional sessions — supporting daily maintenance, mindfulness routines, and skin care rituals. Clinical research focuses on professional sessions where a trained practitioner maps lymphatic pathways and applies calibrated pressure for 60+ minutes. Vibration plates have emerging research on general circulation. The combination (professional sessions + daily at-home routine) is the approach most often recommended by wellness practitioners themselves.

What does lymphatic drainage do, and what does it not do, according to current research?

Manual lymphatic drainage works on the lymphatic system specifically — supporting circulation and fluid balance. Major medical organisations (Mayo Clinic, NHS, Cleveland Clinic) note that organ-level detoxification is handled by the liver and kidneys; MLD is not a substitute for those systems. What clinical research does document for MLD: post-surgical edema reduction (Cochrane Review 2015), lymphedema management as part of CDT (NHS), and short-term reduction of fluid retention. Many clients also describe a real sense of lightness and well-being after sessions — a valued subjective benefit. Practical takeaway: MLD is well-documented for post-surgical recovery, lymphedema, and fluid retention; broader 'cleansing' goals are best supported by combining MLD with hydration, movement, and rest.

Who should wait or get cleared firstContraindications

Absolute contraindications

Active infection or fever, untreated deep vein thrombosis, acute kidney or heart failure, unstable cardiovascular disease. Consult your physician before any lymphatic work if you have these conditions.

Requires medical clearance

Active cancer treatment (get oncologist clearance — lymphatic drainage is widely used for oncology patients but needs specialist training), recent surgery (under 2–4 weeks), pregnancy first trimester, uncontrolled hypertension. (Source: PubMed on MLD contraindications.)

Lymphedema and chronic conditions

Chronic lymphedema treatment is a specialized field (CDT — Complete Decongestive Therapy). Book with a certified lymphedema therapist, not a general spa. (Source: Lymphology Association of North America.)

Pregnancy-specific

Second and third trimesters: yes with a prenatal-trained therapist. Avoid deep abdominal work after 20 weeks. Always consult your obstetrician first.

Disclaimer

This list is informational and not exhaustive. Consult a licensed healthcare professional who knows your medical history. See our medical disclaimer.

Red flags before you bookQuality signals in Boston

No intake form or health history

Lymphatic drainage has real contraindications (DVT, active cancer, acute infection). A practitioner who doesn't ask about your health is skipping the basic safety check.

Deep pressure or pain

If the pressure is heavy or painful, it is not lymphatic drainage. It may be deep-tissue massage sold under a different name. Either is fine — but you should know what you are paying for.

No visible certification

Serious practitioners display their training (Dr. Vodder, Casley-Smith, Földi, Leduc, APTA Lymphology). No displayed credentials = ask directly. No answer = move on.

The Boston takeawayWhat the data tells us

The Boston lymphatic drainage landscape has 15 documented practitioners. The most-reviewed is Viyada Thai Spa with 1136 public reviews — a useful proxy for how established a practitioner is in the local scene. With 100% of practitioners rated 4.5★ or above, Boston sits on the high-quality end of the global lymphatic drainage directory. As always, a first visit is about information-gathering: ask about credentials, class formats, and session structure before committing to a multi-session pack.

For Boston practitioner owners

Run a lymphatic drainage practitioner in Boston?

Featured listings appear at the top of this Boston guide — above the general directory. Transparent pricing, monthly plan, no commission on bookings.

See pricing →

Spotted an error?Help us keep Boston accurate

If you see a listing that's out of date — a closed studio, a stale phone number, a wrong address — email us at [email protected] with the subject [CORRECTION] Boston — studio name. We correct within 48 hours for factual updates and within 7 business days for listing removals.

Wellness in Boston

Spa & wellness experiences in Boston.

Spa days, wellness retreats and recovery experiences.

Affiliate · powered by GetYourGuide. We may earn a small commission at no cost to you.

For practitioner owners

Own a practitioner? Get listed at the top.

Direct link to your website. Gold badge on your card. Editor's Choice rotation. No commissions — ever.

See Featured plans →

From €99/mo · Cancel anytime

Learn moreGuides
10 Benefits of Lymphatic Drainage → The Big 6 Lymphatic Drainage → Your First Session → How Often Lymphatic Drainage →
NearbyOther cities
Los Angeles (23 practitioners) New York (23 practitioners) Chicago (20 practitioners) Miami (20 practitioners) San Francisco (20 practitioners) Austin (17 practitioners)
Own a practitioner?Get Featured →