Licensed or Certified
None of the above. This industry has no nationally-accepted definitions.NCBTMB is the closest thing, but not every state recognizes it as a standard. Boston requires 500 hours of traning, but no exam. Across the river in Cambridge, you need 900 hours and the exam.A NY license requires 1000 hours of training, but no NCBTMB exam. In DC, you only need 500 hours and the exam. NYers have to take the exam before they can even APPLY for a license in MD or DC.ABMP will "Certify" you if you prove you studied more than 500 hours and take X CEUs every so often. No test needed. Is this Certified?Not in VA. In VA, you can only call yourself a Certified MT if you are so certified by the Board of Nursing. Does not matter if you are Nationally Certified by NCBTMB. Does not matter if you are "Certified" by ABMP. If you do not fill out the VA BoN form and get approved, you cannot legal call yourself a certified massage therapist.You can be licensed by a state, city or county, but those are meaningless in other jursidictions. Other health professionals - nurses, doctors, PTs - have their credentials recognized by other states. Massage does not, and never will, so long as so many therapists resist licensure and examination as a minimum standard of quality.