Massage for plantar fasciitis in Surrey.
At Therapy Now, plantar fasciitis massage means focused therapeutic massage for heel pain, arch tension, calf tightness, foot stiffness, Achilles tension, and movement patterns that may contribute to pain under the foot. Treatment may support walking comfort, running strain, work-related standing, and ICBC injury recovery.
Focused massage for heel pain, arch tension, and lower-leg tightness.
Plantar fasciitis is commonly used to describe pain under the heel or arch of the foot, often worse with the first steps in the morning, after sitting, or after long periods of standing or walking. At Therapy Now, plantar fasciitis massage focuses on the foot, calf, Achilles region, ankle, and related areas that may be contributing to symptoms.
Your Registered Massage Therapist may ask where your foot pain is located, when it is worst, what footwear you use, whether symptoms are connected to running, standing, work, sports, pregnancy, or injury, and whether hip, knee, ankle, or calf tension may be contributing.
The goal is simple.
We want to help reduce surrounding muscle tension, improve comfort, support mobility, and help you better understand what may be contributing to your heel or arch pain.
- ✓Focused on foot, calf, and ankle tension patterns
- ✓May include calf, Achilles, foot, and lower-leg work
- ✓Can support walking, standing, running, and daily movement
- ✓Pressure and positioning are adapted to your comfort
When should you book massage for plantar fasciitis?
People often book plantar fasciitis massage when heel pain, arch tension, calf tightness, or foot stiffness starts affecting walking, standing, work, running, workouts, or daily life.
Heel Pain
Focused massage may support surrounding foot and calf tension that contributes to heel discomfort, especially with first steps or long standing.
Running & Sports Strain
Running, jumping, gym training, and repetitive loading can increase demand on the feet, calves, Achilles region, hips, and knees.
Knee, Hip & Foot Compensation
Foot pain can overlap with knee, hip, ankle, and gait patterns. Treatment may include related areas depending on your symptoms.
Hip & Glute Tension
Hip and glute tension may influence walking, running, and lower-limb mechanics that contribute to recurring foot strain.
Walking & Movement Mechanics
If pain keeps returning with walking, standing, or running, kinesiology may support strength, mobility, and movement strategies.
ICBC Foot & Leg Injuries
If foot, ankle, or leg pain started after a car accident, massage therapy may be part of your ICBC injury recovery plan.
Foot pain location can give useful clues.
Different areas of foot pain may involve different tissues and movement patterns. Your massage therapist can adapt treatment based on where you feel symptoms and what activities make them worse.
Heel Pain
Heel pain is commonly reported with plantar fasciitis, especially with first steps in the morning or after sitting.
Arch Pain
Arch discomfort may overlap with foot muscle tension, plantar fascia sensitivity, standing, running, or footwear changes.
Calf & Achilles Tightness
Calf and Achilles tension can affect ankle mobility and increase demand through the foot during walking, running, and stairs.
Whole Lower Limb
Foot pain can be influenced by the ankle, knee, hip, glutes, and low back. Your therapist may assess related tension patterns.
Your appointment is based on your foot pain pattern.
A plantar fasciitis massage appointment usually starts with a short discussion about where you feel pain, when it started, what makes it better or worse, and whether symptoms are connected to walking, standing, running, work, footwear, sports, or injury history.
Intake & Goals
Your therapist may ask about morning pain, standing time, footwear, running, work demands, previous injuries, and whether symptoms travel into the calf or ankle.
Movement Check
Your therapist may check ankle mobility, foot tension, calf tightness, gait patterns, tenderness, or related hip and knee tension when appropriate.
Focused Treatment
Treatment may include the foot, calves, Achilles region, hamstrings, quads, hips, glutes, or surrounding areas depending on your symptoms and comfort.
Home Care
Your therapist may suggest gentle stretches, heat or ice guidance, footwear considerations, movement breaks, strengthening considerations, or follow-up care when helpful.
Heel pain can come from more than one place.
Plantar fasciitis symptoms may be related to calf tightness, foot stiffness, sudden activity changes, long standing, running, footwear changes, ankle mobility limits, hip and knee compensation, weight-bearing demands, pregnancy, or repetitive strain.
Book sooner if:
- ✓Heel pain affects walking, standing, work, or sleep
- ✓Your first steps in the morning are painful
- ✓Foot pain keeps returning with running or long standing
- ✓Foot pain is linked with calf, knee, hip, or back tension
Other services that may support plantar fasciitis recovery.
Some patients benefit from combining massage therapy with other Therapy Now services depending on pain pattern, strength, mobility, activity level, footwear demands, sport demands, or injury history.
Registered Massage Therapy
For direct billing, official RMT receipts, assessment, treatment planning, and foot-pain-focused massage therapy.
Knee Pain Massage
Helpful when foot pain overlaps with knee tension, running strain, lower-limb compensation, and gait changes.
Hip Pain Massage
Helpful when foot pain overlaps with hip, glute, low back, and movement patterns through the lower limb.
Kinesiology
Helpful when foot pain is connected to strength, ankle mobility, walking, running, standing, or return to activity.
Sports Massage
Support for activity-related foot pain, running strain, training soreness, movement restrictions, and sport recovery goals.
Acupuncture
May support pain relief, stress, sleep, muscle tension, and whole-body regulation.
Plantar Fasciitis Massage FAQ
What is plantar fasciitis massage?
Plantar fasciitis massage is therapeutic massage focused on the foot, calf, Achilles region, ankle, and related problem areas that may contribute to heel pain, arch tension, and walking discomfort.
Can massage help plantar fasciitis?
Massage therapy may help reduce surrounding muscle tension, improve comfort, support mobility, and address soft tissue restrictions that may contribute to plantar fasciitis symptoms.
Can massage help heel pain?
Massage may help address tension in the foot, calf, Achilles region, and surrounding areas that may contribute to heel discomfort.
Should massage include the calf?
Often, yes. Calf and Achilles tightness can affect ankle mobility and foot loading, so treatment may include the calf, ankle, and related lower-limb areas.
Can massage help runners with plantar fasciitis?
Massage may help address lower-limb muscle tension and recovery needs related to running. Your therapist may also recommend movement or kinesiology support when appropriate.
Is plantar fasciitis massage covered by insurance?
If your appointment is with a Registered Massage Therapist, you may be able to use extended health benefits or direct billing when eligible. Student massage and bodywork are not directly billable.
Should I book massage or kinesiology?
Massage may help with soft tissue tension and comfort. Kinesiology may help with strength, mobility, walking mechanics, and return to activity. Some patients benefit from both.
Where is Therapy Now located?
Therapy Now is located in Newton, Surrey at 240 - 13711 72 Avenue, Surrey, BC, across from the Newton Bus Loop.
Ready to book plantar fasciitis massage?
Book online or contact Therapy Now if you need help choosing the right massage appointment for heel pain, arch tension, calf tightness, running strain, standing discomfort, or lower-limb compensation patterns.