Hi,
I'm a newly minted massage therapist in New England who's moving to Phoenix next month. I have my local license and NCTMB and I'm wondering what the market is like out west.
Around here (Boston area) MT's tend to charge around $70/hour and are quite busy. The more experienced and highly trained therapists are charging $80, $90, or even upwards of $100/hour.
I checked the Cortiva listings for Phoenix. Several chiropractors and spas are hiring at $12 or $15/hour. Wow--that sounds more like what unskilled laborers make, not highly trained therapists. I had no idea massage therapists were working for that kind of money anywhere, even in a relatively low cost of living kind of place like Arizona.
Anyway, this is just a part time thing for me right now; I'm going to school full time. I was hoping to pick up some part time work but $15/hour is almost not worth it after taxes, supplies, marketing etc. Oh another question--can you work out of your home in Phoenix? Thanks for any advice!
-bp
I'm a newly minted massage therapist in New England who's moving to Phoenix next month. I have my local license and NCTMB and I'm wondering what the market is like out west.
Around here (Boston area) MT's tend to charge around $70/hour and are quite busy. The more experienced and highly trained therapists are charging $80, $90, or even upwards of $100/hour.
I checked the Cortiva listings for Phoenix. Several chiropractors and spas are hiring at $12 or $15/hour. Wow--that sounds more like what unskilled laborers make, not highly trained therapists. I had no idea massage therapists were working for that kind of money anywhere, even in a relatively low cost of living kind of place like Arizona.
Anyway, this is just a part time thing for me right now; I'm going to school full time. I was hoping to pick up some part time work but $15/hour is almost not worth it after taxes, supplies, marketing etc. Oh another question--can you work out of your home in Phoenix? Thanks for any advice!
-bp