Pressure increases as tissue allows, reaching the deeper layers without triggering a protective guarding response.
Book online in under 2 minutes. No payment required upfront. Tuesday to Saturday, 10 AM to 8 PM.
Our team holds membership with the Natural Health Practitioners of Canada.
The difference between a massage that produces lasting relief and one that feels good but changes nothing almost always comes down to whether the pressure reached the right layer. Here is what each level actually does.
Works in the superficial fascia and outer muscle layer. Increases local circulation and produces a relaxation response, but does not reach the deeper trigger points or fascial restrictions driving chronic pain.
Reaches the belly of the muscle and addresses moderate tension. Effective for recent-onset tension that has not yet fully embedded. Most generic "deep tissue" massage operates at this level.
Works at the muscle-to-bone attachment level, into the deep fascia, and directly onto trigger points. Requires a progressive approach: warming the tissue first, then increasing specificity as the muscle releases. This is what we do at Easy Cozy.
Deep tissue massage produces the most significant and lasting results for conditions driven by chronic, embedded muscular tension rather than acute injury or inflammation.
Paraspinal muscles, erector spinae, and the thoracolumbar fascia that have been in sustained contraction for months or years respond to the sustained deep pressure that lighter massage never reaches.
Active trigger points are dense bands of contracted muscle fibre that refer pain to other areas. They do not release with stretching or light pressure alone. Sustained deep acupressure directly on the knot is the most effective manual approach.
Rounded shoulders, forward head posture, and the muscular imbalances that develop from sustained screen use embed progressively deeper over time. Deep tissue work is required to reverse the pattern once it has been present for more than a few weeks.
Trades workers, healthcare professionals, and anyone whose occupation involves sustained physical loading accumulate tension in layers that standard massage does not address. Deep tissue work is specifically calibrated for this kind of chronic loading pattern.
Overloaded muscle groups from training, competition, or repetitive movement patterns develop structural tension that requires deeper treatment to fully resolve, particularly in the hamstrings, glutes, calves, and shoulder girdle.
If you have had multiple relaxation or moderate-pressure massages without lasting relief, this is usually the clearest sign that the tension lives in a layer those techniques were not reaching. Deep tissue work is the next logical step.
Deep tissue massage is not the right choice for every situation. Here is an honest assessment of when it works and when it does not.
You have chronic tension that has been present for weeks or months
You can feel specific knots or hard bands in your muscles
You have tension associated with desk work, physical labour, or driving
Stretching provides minimal lasting relief
Lighter massage provides temporary relief but the tension always returns
Your pain worsens after sitting, standing, or physical work
Your pain refers or radiates from a specific point to another area
You have been told you "hold tension" in your neck, shoulders, or back
Deep tissue work is not suitable for acute injuries in the first 48 to 72 hours when active inflammation is present, immediately post-surgery, over areas of suspected fracture or active infection, or for clients with significant blood clotting disorders. If you are uncertain whether your condition is appropriate, call us before booking and we will advise honestly.
The biggest mistake in deep tissue work is starting too hard too fast. Our progressive acupressure approach earns depth rather than forcing it, which is why the results last longer and the session is more tolerable throughout.
We start by asking specifically where the tension is, how long it has been there, what makes it worse, and whether you have tried other treatments. Two minutes of context determines which muscle groups and depths to prioritise for the entire session.
(Intake)
We begin every deep tissue session with broader, moderate strokes across the affected area. This increases local circulation, warms the superficial tissue, and begins to communicate to the nervous system that deeper work is coming. A muscle that is not prepared resists; one that has been warmed releases far more effectively.
(Surface preparation)
As the surface tissue softens, we increase specificity and depth toward the target: a trigger point, a fascial restriction, or a chronically contracted muscle belly. This is where our acupressure training differs from generic deep tissue work. We hold sustained pressure on specific points rather than grinding across the muscle, which allows the tissue to release rather than brace against the pressure.
(Deep acupressure)
Throughout the session, we check in verbally about pressure intensity and watch for non-verbal cues such as breath-holding or flinching, both of which signal that the muscle is guarding rather than releasing. We adjust in real time. You remain in control of the session depth at all times.
(Active feedback)
We close every session with broader, lighter strokes across the worked area to flush the released metabolic byproducts and help the nervous system integrate the changes that have just occurred. This reduces post-session soreness, which is a common concern with deep tissue work.
(Easy Cozy technique)
Chronic tension that has been building for months rarely resolves in a single session, but most clients notice meaningful change after their first properly calibrated deep tissue treatment.
Specific trigger points deactivated
The dense, tender knots that have been referring pain to other areas become less reactive and eventually stop producing the referral pattern entirely.
Noticeably greater range of motion
Bending, rotating, and reaching become easier within the same session as the deep fascial restrictions release their grip on the joints.
Longer-lasting relief than lighter massage
Because deep tissue work addresses the actual source of tension rather than the surface symptom, the relief typically lasts days to weeks rather than hours.
Reduced referred pain patterns
Pain that radiates from a source point to another area, such as trigger points in the neck referring headaches, often reduces significantly as the originating point releases.
Improved posture without effort
When the deep muscles holding you out of alignment release, the body naturally returns toward a more neutral posture. Clients often describe feeling taller after a session.
Less reliance on pain medication
As the root tension is progressively resolved across multiple sessions, the need for over-the-counter pain relief between appointments typically decreases.
For isolated tension or cervicogenic headaches, a 30-minute focused session is often highly effective. For headaches accompanied by significant neck, shoulder, or jaw tension, the 60-minute session provides time to address the full contributing chain.
30 Minutes
$38
Best for focused head, neck, or shoulder tension. Not recommended as a first session for lower back pain.
60 Minutes
$70
Covers one condition area fully with preparation, progressive depth, and integration. The recommended starting point for most deep tissue clients.
90 Minutes
$105
For long-standing tension across multiple connected areas: back and neck, lumbar and hips, or shoulder and upper back treated as a complete chain.
120 Minutes
$135
Comprehensive full-body deep tissue work for clients with widespread chronic tension requiring integrated treatment from neck to lower back.
Deep tissue massage should produce a sensation of working pressure, often described as a productive discomfort, but should not cause sharp or unbearable pain. If pressure feels genuinely painful rather than intense, communicate with your practitioner immediately so they can adjust. A properly calibrated deep tissue session works with the muscle, not against it.
Regular relaxation massage works in the superficial muscle layer with lighter, broader strokes. Deep tissue massage works in the deeper muscle and fascial layers with more targeted, sustained pressure aimed at specific areas of chronic tension or trigger points. The goal is therapeutic change rather than surface-level relaxation.
For chronic pain conditions, weekly sessions for three to four weeks are commonly recommended to address the deeper layers of accumulated tension before transitioning to bi-weekly or monthly maintenance. Most clients notice meaningful improvement within two to three sessions.
At Easy Cozy Wellness, our deep tissue massage uses a progressive acupressure approach: starting with moderate pressure to warm the tissue, then increasing specificity and depth as the muscle allows. This is more precise than generic deep tissue work because each session adapts in real time to where the tension lives rather than applying uniform intensity throughout.
Yes. Same-day and next-day appointments are frequently available at Easy Cozy Wellness. Book online at easycozy.ca/booking — the process takes under 2 minutes and no payment is required upfront. We are open Tuesday to Saturday, 10 AM to 8 PM.
