What Is Aromatherapy Massage? Benefits, Oils and What to Expect

Aromatherapy massage is a massage treatment in which essential oils – concentrated aromatic extracts from plants – are diluted in a carrier oil and smoothed into the skin using slow, flowing strokes. It combines the physical ease of massage with the sensory experience of natural fragrance, and is most commonly chosen for relaxation, easing everyday tension and creating a settled sense of calm.

If you’re considering an aromatherapy massage for the first time, it’s natural to have questions. What actually happens during the treatment? Which oils are used, and how are they chosen? Will it suit you? This guide walks through each of those questions calmly and honestly, so you can decide whether an aromatherapy massage is the right way to take some time for yourself.

How Does Aromatherapy Massage Work?

Aromatherapy massage works through two things at once: intentional touch and natural aroma.

The massage itself uses unhurried, flowing techniques – long strokes, gentle kneading and rhythmic pressure – that many people find ease general muscular tightness and encourage the body to slow down. The pressure is typically lighter and more fluid than remedial styles of massage, because the aim is rest rather than intensive muscular work.

The aroma adds a second layer to the experience. As the diluted essential oils are worked into the skin, their scent is carried on the warmth of the room and each breath you take. The sense of smell is closely connected to the areas of the brain associated with emotion and memory, which is one reason a familiar fragrance can feel so instantly settling. During the treatment, the scent isn’t a background detail – it’s part of the ritual, quietly encouraging the mind to soften while the hands do their work.

Neither element is rushed. The combination of touch, scent, warmth and stillness is what gives aromatherapy massage its distinctly immersive, restorative character.

How Is Aromatherapy Massage Different from a Regular Massage?

The main difference is the oils – and the intention behind them. In a standard oil massage, the oil is chosen chiefly for glide. In an aromatherapy massage, the blend is selected for its aromatic character as well: calming, brightening or balancing, depending on how you’d like to feel.

That choice starts with a short consultation. Rather than simply asking where you hold tension, your therapist will also ask about scent preferences, skin sensitivities and the kind of experience you’re hoping for. The treatment is then shaped around that conversation.

It also helps to know how aromatherapy massage sits alongside other treatments:

If your priority is to switch off completely and enjoy a scent-led, softly paced experience, aromatherapy massage is usually the natural choice.

What Happens During an Aromatherapy Massage?

An aromatherapy massage typically moves through three stages: a short consultation, the treatment itself, and a quiet, unhurried close.

Consultation and oil selection. Your therapist will begin by asking how you’re feeling, whether you have any allergies, skin sensitivities or health considerations, and how you’d like to feel afterwards – calmer, brighter or simply more balanced. Based on that, a suitable professionally blended oil is chosen and diluted appropriately for your skin.

The treatment. You’ll be settled comfortably on a warm treatment bed in a softly lit room, covered with towels so only the area being massaged is uncovered. The warmed oil blend is applied with slow, continuous strokes, usually moving across the back, legs, arms and shoulders, with the sequence adapted to your preferences. Many guests drift into a deeply relaxed, almost meditative state – some fall asleep entirely, which is perfectly welcome.

Winding down. The treatment closes gently rather than abruptly. You’ll be given time to come round slowly, along with water or herbal tea, so the sense of calm carries with you out of the treatment room.

Which Essential Oils Are Commonly Used?

Several essential oils appear regularly in aromatherapy massage, each with its own aromatic character and traditional associations:

Essential oils are never used neat in massage. They’re diluted in a carrier oil – commonly sweet almond, grapeseed or jojoba – which allows the blend to be worked smoothly into the skin at a safe, comfortable concentration.

Which oils are right for you depends on your preferences, your skin and your therapist’s professional guidance on the day. A good therapist will always let you smell a blend before it’s used, and will happily adjust if a scent doesn’t feel right.

What Are the Potential Benefits of Aromatherapy Massage?

Most people book an aromatherapy massage for one simple reason: to feel calmer. The potential benefits many guests describe include:

It’s worth being honest about the evidence. Research into aromatherapy is still developing, and studies to date are mixed – so aromatherapy massage shouldn’t be seen as a treatment for any medical condition. What it reliably offers is an unhurried, sensory experience of intentional care, and experiences naturally vary between individuals. For most guests, that dedicated pause is precisely the point.

Who May Enjoy an Aromatherapy Massage?

Aromatherapy massage tends to suit people who want relaxation rather than firm, remedial pressure. It’s a lovely first spa treatment, because the pace is gentle and nothing about it is demanding. It’s commonly chosen by people carrying general work or life tension, by couples marking an occasion, by anyone who responds strongly to scent, and by regular spa-goers who simply want an experience built entirely around calm.

It also pairs naturally with other restorative rituals – some guests enjoy following a massage with time in a private sauna or a floatation session to extend the stillness.

When Might Aromatherapy Massage Not Be Suitable?

There are a few situations where aromatherapy massage may not be appropriate, or where it’s sensible to check first:

None of this is meant to worry you – a good consultation exists exactly so these things can be discussed openly and the treatment adapted, or an alternative suggested, where needed.

How to Prepare for an Aromatherapy Massage

A little preparation helps the experience feel effortless:

What to Expect After the Treatment

Afterwards, most people feel deeply relaxed – sometimes pleasantly drowsy – with skin that feels nourished from the oils. Where you can, leave the oils to absorb for a few hours rather than showering immediately; the subtle scent fading slowly is part of the pleasure. Drink water, keep the rest of your day gentle, and let the stillness stretch as far into the evening as it will go. Any lingering sleepiness usually gives way to feeling clear and rested.

Choosing an Aromatherapy Massage in Leeds

If you’re looking for an aromatherapy massage in Leeds, a few things separate a genuinely good experience from an average one: qualified, experienced therapists; a proper consultation that asks about allergies, sensitivities and preferences before any oil touches your skin; professional-grade essential oils correctly diluted in a quality carrier oil; and a calm, private treatment room where the ritual is never rushed.

At Dragonfly Skin Day Spa in Central Arcade, just off Briggate in Leeds city centre, the aromatherapy massage is delivered as an Aromatic Body Ritual – a 60 or 90-minute experience shaped around how you want to feel on the day, in an award-recognised spa a short walk from Leeds train station. If you’re weighing it against other options, the full treatment menu sets out every ritual side by side.

Experience an Aromatherapy Massage at Dragonfly Skin

An aromatherapy massage is, at heart, an hour or more set aside entirely for you – warmth, mindful touch and natural fragrance working quietly together while everything else waits. If that sounds like the pause you’ve been needing, explore the Aromatic Body Ritual or make an enquiry and we’ll help you find the right experience.

Aromatherapy Massage FAQs

What's the difference between essential oils and fragrance oils?

Essential oils are concentrated extracts taken directly from plants – flowers, leaves, bark or peel – while fragrance oils are synthetic scents created in a laboratory. Aromatherapy massage uses genuine essential oils, valued for their natural aromatic character. Fragrance oils may smell pleasant, but they aren’t used in true aromatherapy treatments.

Are essential oils applied directly to the skin?

No. Essential oils are highly concentrated and are always diluted in a carrier oil – such as sweet almond, grapeseed or jojoba – before touching the skin. Dilution keeps the blend gentle and comfortable while still carrying the aroma, and it’s one of the markers of a properly trained therapist.

Will the aroma stay on my skin after the massage?

Yes, gently. A soft trace of the blend usually lingers for several hours as the oils absorb into the skin. Many guests enjoy this as an extension of the treatment. If you’d prefer the scent gone sooner, a warm shower later in the day will lift most of it.

How is aromatherapy massage different from deep tissue massage?

They serve different purposes. Deep tissue massage uses firm, focused pressure to work into specific areas of muscular tension, and can feel intense. Aromatherapy massage uses lighter, flowing strokes with scented oils, prioritising relaxation and sensory calm. If you want targeted muscular work, choose deep tissue; if you want to unwind, choose aromatherapy.

Can I enjoy aromatherapy massage if I'm sensitive to strong scents?

Usually, yes. Blends can be chosen with softer, subtler aromas, used at a lighter concentration, and you can smell any oil before it’s used. If fragrance really isn’t for you, a treatment with an unscented carrier oil offers the same relaxing massage without the aromatic element — just mention it during your consultation.

How long has aromatherapy been practised?

Aromatic plant oils have been used in bathing, massage and wellbeing rituals for thousands of years, with traditions recorded in ancient Egypt, China and India. The modern term “aromatherapy” emerged in early twentieth-century France, and the practice as we know it today grew popular across Europe through the decades that followed.

How often do people book an aromatherapy massage?

There’s no fixed rule – it depends on your lifestyle and what you want from it. Some guests visit monthly as a standing act of self-care; others book around busier seasons or special occasions. Many people find a rhythm of every four to six weeks keeps the sense of calm topped up.

Is it normal to fall asleep during an aromatherapy massage?

Completely normal – and rather a compliment to the treatment. The combination of warmth, rhythmic strokes and soothing aroma often carries guests into light sleep or a drifting, half-dreaming state. Your therapist will simply continue, and wake you gently as the ritual comes to a close.

Dragonfly Skin Day Spa, Unit 7A Central Arcade, Briggate, Leeds LS1 6DX.