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Animal Care

SEG Awards Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage (RQF)

Qualify as a canine massage therapist online. Master anatomy, techniques, and assessment for a career in canine therapy.

6–12 monthsDuration
OnlineStudy Method
Level 3 RQFQualification Level
FlexibleStart Date

Is This Course Right For You?

This course is for you if...

  • You are passionate about canine health, wellbeing, and the therapeutic benefits of massage for dogs
  • You want to qualify as a canine massage therapist and work professionally with dogs and their owners
  • You are already working in animal care, veterinary nursing, or a related field and want to specialise in canine massage therapy
  • You want to set up your own canine massage therapy practice or add massage services to an existing animal care business
  • You need a recognised, Ofqual-regulated Level 3 qualification in canine massage to establish professional credibility
  • You want to understand canine anatomy, physiology, and the science behind therapeutic massage in depth

Your career after this course

  • Work as a qualified canine massage therapist in private practice, veterinary clinics, or animal welfare settings
  • Set up your own canine massage therapy business serving pet owners, dog sports competitors, and working dog handlers
  • Provide pre-event and post-event massage for performance and sporting dogs
  • Develop post-rehabilitation massage programmes for dogs recovering from injury, surgery, or orthopaedic conditions
  • Progress to further qualifications in canine physiotherapy, hydrotherapy, or advanced animal therapy
  • Build a professional profile and gain recognition from industry bodies in the growing canine therapy sector

About This Course

The SEG Awards Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage (RQF) is a comprehensive, specialist qualification for those who want to pursue a professional career in canine massage therapy. Awarded by SEG Awards, an Ofqual-regulated awarding organisation with a strong track record in vocational animal care qualifications, this diploma provides a rigorous grounding in the science and practice of canine massage, covering anatomy, physiology, assessment techniques, a broad range of massage modalities, and the professional and business skills required to operate as a therapist.

The canine massage therapy sector has grown substantially over the past decade as pet owners, veterinary professionals, and sporting dog handlers have come to recognise the significant benefits that skilled, evidence-informed massage can offer. From reducing muscular tension and improving range of motion in aging or arthritic dogs, to supporting recovery from orthopaedic surgery, and enhancing the performance and recovery of working and sporting dogs, canine massage occupies an important and expanding space in the broader landscape of companion animal healthcare. This diploma equips graduates with the depth of knowledge and the practical skills to operate competently and confidently within this specialist field.

The qualification is structured across ten mandatory units. The programme opens with the fundamentals of canine massage, establishing a firm theoretical understanding of massage principles, strokes, and their physiological effects, before progressively introducing more advanced and specialised techniques. Dedicated units address water massage, essential massage strategies, the physical and behavioural assessment of canines, common nerve and orthopaedic conditions relevant to massage therapy, and the specific considerations involved in providing massage for sporting and athlete dogs. Units on canine behaviour in a therapy environment and the management of post-treatment care plans ensure graduates can handle a wide variety of canine presentations safely and professionally.

Assessment is knowledge and portfolio based, completed online with no external examinations. Graduates are equipped to practise professionally and have a strong foundation for continuing professional development within the growing animal therapy sector.

What You'll Study

The Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage is structured across ten mandatory units that progress from fundamental massage principles through to specialist assessment, advanced techniques, and professional practice. All ten units must be completed to achieve the diploma.

10 mandatory unitsOnline assessmentNo external examsSEG Awards certified
01The Fundamentals of Canine Massage

Establish a thorough foundation in the theory and practice of canine massage therapy. This unit introduces the recognised massage techniques used in canine therapy, including effleurage, petrissage, tapotement, friction, and vibration, and develops your understanding of when each technique is appropriate and what physiological effects it produces. You explore the principles of applying stretching alongside massage to improve flexibility, reduce muscular restriction, and support joint health. The unit also addresses the measurable outcomes of canine massage therapy — including improvements in soft tissue mobility, circulation, lymphatic drainage, and general wellbeing — and how these outcomes are communicated to dog owners and veterinary professionals. Safe handling, positioning, and consent throughout massage sessions are also introduced.

02Water Massage for Canines

Investigate the principles and therapeutic applications of water-based massage modalities in canine therapy. This unit examines the unique physical properties of water — buoyancy, hydrostatic pressure, resistance, and thermal effects — and how these properties make water an effective medium for massage and physical rehabilitation in canines. You study the range of water apparatus used in canine massage therapy, including hydro-massage jets, underwater treadmills, and aquatic massage pools, and develop the knowledge to apply appropriate water massage techniques that promote healing, reduce inflammation, and support the recovery of dogs following injury, surgery, or periods of restricted mobility. The unit also addresses post-treatment management planning for canines following water massage, including owner guidance and monitoring protocols.

03Canine Conduct in a Therapy Environment

Develop a sophisticated understanding of canine communication, stress responses, and behaviour in the context of a massage therapy environment. This unit examines the verbal and non-verbal communication signals that dogs use, including calming signals, appeasement behaviours, stress indicators, and conflict-avoidance behaviours, and develops your ability to read canine body language accurately during massage sessions to ensure the dog's comfort and safety at all times. You explore the concept of discomfort in dogs and how unaddressed discomfort can escalate into fear, avoidance, and defensive behaviour, and consider how tension — both physical and psychological — manifests in canine behaviour and affects the massage process. The unit equips therapists to create calm, dog-centred therapy environments that prioritise the wellbeing and agency of the canine client.

04Essential Strategies for Canine Massage

Build advanced competence in the specific massage strategies that form the core technical repertoire of the professional canine massage therapist. This unit goes beyond the foundational strokes introduced in Unit 1 to examine the targeted application of massage strategies to specific muscle groups, fascial lines, and anatomical regions of the canine body. You develop your understanding of how different massage strategies produce different outcomes in muscle tissue — including releasing trigger points, reducing fibrosis, improving circulation to ischemic tissue, and restoring normal muscle tone — and how the selection of strategies is informed by the presenting condition of the individual dog. A dedicated section examines the purpose and application of massage strategies specifically designed for athletic and sporting dogs, where performance optimisation, rapid recovery, and injury prevention are primary goals.

05Physical and Behavioural Examination of a Canine

Master the assessment skills that allow a canine massage therapist to evaluate a dog thoroughly before, during, and after treatment. This unit develops your ability to conduct a structured physical examination of a canine client, including a visual assessment of posture and symmetry, manual palpation of muscle tissue to identify areas of tension, asymmetry, heat, or atrophy, and an assessment of joint range of motion and flexibility. You examine the biomechanics of canine gait — walk, trot, canter, and gallop — and develop the skills to identify lameness, asymmetry, and compensatory movement patterns that may indicate underlying musculoskeletal issues. Assessing the canine stance for weight distribution abnormalities and postural deviations is also addressed, as is the systematic manual examination of major muscle groups to identify areas that would benefit from targeted massage intervention.

06Frequent Nerve and Orthopaedic Conditions Introduced for Massage Therapy

Develop clinical understanding of the nerve and orthopaedic conditions most commonly encountered by canine massage therapists, and the ways in which massage can be appropriately incorporated into the management of these conditions. This unit examines the pathology, clinical presentation, and diagnostic processes associated with conditions including hip dysplasia, elbow dysplasia, spondylosis, intervertebral disc disease, osteoarthritis, cruciate ligament injury, and peripheral neuropathies. For each condition, you study the evidence base for massage as a complementary intervention, the specific massage approaches and contraindications that apply, and how the massage therapist operates within the boundaries of their professional scope, working alongside veterinary professionals rather than as a primary diagnostic or medical practitioner. The importance of veterinary referral and the use of client health intake forms are emphasised throughout.

07Pre- and Post-Event Massage for Canine Athletes

Specialise in the unique demands of providing massage therapy for dogs that compete in or train for canine sports and working roles. This unit examines the physiological demands placed on canine athletes across a range of disciplines, including agility, flyball, canicross, working trials, herding, gundog work, and sled racing, and develops your understanding of how targeted massage can optimise performance, support rapid recovery, and contribute to injury prevention in these populations. You study the principles and timing of pre-event massage, designed to warm tissues, activate circulation, and prepare the musculoskeletal system for intense physical activity without fatiguing the dog, alongside post-event massage protocols designed to address exercise-induced muscle soreness, facilitate the clearance of metabolic waste products, and support recovery. The unit also addresses maintenance massage for regularly training canine athletes.

08Contraindications and Safe Practice in Canine Massage

Develop a thorough and clinically sound understanding of the contraindications that govern safe practice in canine massage therapy. This unit examines the full range of absolute and relative contraindications to massage — conditions under which massage must not be applied, or must be applied with significant modification — including open wounds, skin infections, acute inflammation, active haemorrhage, systemic illness, certain cardiovascular conditions, malignancy, and the post-surgical healing phase. You develop the assessment frameworks and consultation procedures needed to identify contraindications in client dogs before treatment begins, and explore the professional and ethical responsibilities of a canine massage therapist when a contraindication is identified, including appropriate veterinary referral protocols. Health and safety in the therapy environment, including hygiene standards, equipment maintenance, and insurance requirements, are also addressed.

09Post-Treatment Care and Client Communication

Master the professional skills required to provide comprehensive after-care for canine massage clients and to communicate effectively with the dog owners and veterinary professionals who form part of the care network around each animal. This unit develops your ability to create detailed post-treatment management plans that include recommended rest periods, home care techniques such as passive range-of-motion exercises, monitoring guidance for owners, and suggested intervals for follow-up massage sessions. You explore how to communicate complex assessment findings and treatment rationale to dog owners in accessible, jargon-free language, and how to write professional treatment notes and referral letters for veterinary or physiotherapy colleagues. The unit also addresses the business aspects of post-treatment follow-up, including client retention strategies, rebooking protocols, and how to build long-term professional relationships with canine clients and their owners.

10Professional Practice, Ethics, and Business Development in Canine Massage

Develop the professional competencies and business acumen needed to establish and sustain a successful canine massage therapy practice. This unit addresses the legal and ethical framework within which canine massage therapists operate, including professional liability, data protection obligations under GDPR, client confidentiality, and the regulatory landscape for animal therapy practitioners. You explore the requirements for maintaining professional indemnity and public liability insurance, the importance of continuing professional development in a rapidly evolving field, and the role of professional membership bodies and industry networks in supporting therapist credibility and career development. Business development topics include marketing a canine massage practice, setting consultation fees, structuring treatment packages, building referral relationships with veterinary surgeons and other animal health professionals, and managing the administrative side of a therapy business.

What You'll Need

Open Entry — No Formal Qualifications Required

The Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage is a knowledge and skills-based qualification assessed entirely online. Access to dogs for practical development is strongly recommended to support your learning, though the qualification does not require a formal workplace placement.

  • Aged 16 or over at the time of enrolment
  • A genuine passion for canine health and animal wellbeing
  • Access to dogs on whom you can practise massage techniques as part of your practical development is strongly recommended
  • A good standard of English literacy to engage with written study materials and assessments
  • Access to a computer, tablet, or smartphone with a reliable internet connection
  • Commitment of around 8–12 hours of study per week over 6–12 months

Not Sure If You Qualify?

Our enrolment advisers assess each application individually. We look at your life experience, motivation, and readiness to study — not just your qualifications.

Speak to our team — we're here to help you find the right course and funding option.

Call 0800 088 5050

How You're Assessed

Assessment for the Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage is knowledge and portfolio based, completed entirely online. There are no external examinations. Written assignments and evidence submissions for each unit are assessed by a qualified assessor who provides detailed written feedback.

Written knowledge assignments submitted online for each of the ten mandatory units

Portfolio evidence demonstrating understanding of massage principles, assessment, and safe practice

Assessor feedback provided on every submitted piece of work with guidance for development

Resubmission opportunities available where initial submissions require further development

All ten mandatory units must be passed before the diploma certificate is awarded

No time-pressured external examinations — self-paced within your enrolment period

Where This Course Can Take You

The Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage opens the door to a specialist and rewarding career in canine therapy. Salary and income figures are indicative of the UK canine therapy sector based on 2024–25 industry data and are variable depending on whether you operate employed or self-employed.

Canine Massage Therapist (Self-Employed)

£22,000 – £45,000+typical salary range

Build your own canine massage practice, setting your own rates and client base. Income is highly variable and depends on session volume, specialism, and reputation. Experienced therapists in urban areas with a strong referral network can earn significantly above the midpoint.

Canine Rehabilitation Therapist

£25,000 – £38,000typical salary range

Work in a veterinary rehabilitation clinic or alongside physiotherapists and hydrotherapists to provide massage as part of integrated post-surgical or post-injury recovery programmes for canine patients.

Canine Sports Massage Therapist

£25,000 – £42,000typical salary range

Specialise in working with competitive and performance dogs across agility, working trials, canicross, flyball, and field sports, providing pre-event, post-event, and maintenance massage to optimise canine athletic performance.

Animal Therapy Centre Practitioner

£22,000 – £32,000typical salary range

Work as an employed therapist within a dedicated animal therapy centre, providing canine massage alongside colleagues offering hydrotherapy, physiotherapy, and other complementary animal therapies.

Veterinary Clinic Canine Massage Practitioner

£23,000 – £35,000typical salary range

Provide massage therapy services within a veterinary practice setting, working alongside veterinary surgeons and nurses to support patients with musculoskeletal conditions, post-operative recovery, and chronic pain management.

Canine Therapy Educator

£26,000 – £40,000typical salary range

Combine clinical practice with teaching, delivering canine massage training and CPD courses to aspiring and practising therapists. Typically requires several years of professional practice experience alongside the Level 3 qualification.

Ready to Unlock Your University Place?

Graduates of this course go on to universities across the UK, including Russell Group institutions. Enrol today and start your journey.

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  • Dedicated tutor support throughout your studies
  • SEG Awards diploma certificate on successful completion
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Frequently Asked Questions

Canine massage therapy is the skilled application of manual massage techniques to the soft tissues of the canine body, including muscles, fascia, tendons, and ligaments, for therapeutic, rehabilitative, and performance enhancement purposes. The benefits of skilled canine massage are well evidenced and include: reducing muscular tension and soreness, improving circulation and lymphatic drainage, supporting post-surgical and post-injury rehabilitation, increasing joint range of motion and flexibility, reducing anxiety and stress in sensitive or nervous dogs, improving proprioception and body awareness, and enhancing recovery and performance in sporting and working dogs. As awareness of canine massage's benefits has grown among veterinary professionals and pet owners, the demand for qualified canine massage therapists has increased significantly.

Yes — the Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage is awarded by SEG Awards, an Ofqual-regulated awarding organisation, and is listed on the Register of Regulated Qualifications. SEG Awards is a respected awarding body within the vocational animal care and therapy sectors. Holding an Ofqual-regulated Level 3 qualification in canine massage demonstrates to veterinary professionals, clients, and professional membership bodies that you have met a recognised national standard of competence in the subject.

No — canine massage therapy is a distinct profession from veterinary medicine or veterinary physiotherapy, and you do not need veterinary qualifications to practise as a canine massage therapist. The Level 3 Diploma provides the qualification baseline for professional practice. However, canine massage therapists operate within clearly defined professional boundaries and must always work with veterinary awareness and — in many cases involving rehabilitation or medical conditions — alongside or with the knowledge of a veterinary surgeon. Building good professional relationships with local veterinary practices is a key part of developing a sustainable canine massage business.

The Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage is primarily assessed through written knowledge assignments submitted online, so you do not strictly require access to dogs to complete the academic elements of the qualification. However, access to dogs on whom you can practise massage techniques is very strongly recommended to develop your practical skills and build confidence before working with client dogs professionally. Most learners practise on family pets, dogs belonging to friends and neighbours, or through voluntary work with dog rescues and shelters.

Yes — the Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage includes a dedicated unit on professional practice, ethics, and business development that specifically prepares graduates for self-employment. Topics covered include setting up and marketing a canine massage practice, structuring session fees and packages, obtaining professional indemnity and public liability insurance, managing client records and GDPR compliance, and building referral relationships with veterinary professionals. Many graduates go on to establish successful self-employed canine massage therapy practices, either from home, on a mobile basis, or from a dedicated therapy space.

Canine massage therapy, physiotherapy, and hydrotherapy are distinct but complementary disciplines within canine rehabilitation and wellness. Canine physiotherapy is typically carried out by veterinary physiotherapists who have degree-level qualifications and use a broader range of rehabilitation modalities including electrotherapy, therapeutic exercises, and manual therapy. Canine hydrotherapy uses water-based exercise and treatment in a specialist facility. Canine massage therapy focuses specifically on manual soft-tissue techniques — massage strokes, trigger point release, and facilitated stretching — and can be practised by therapists holding a Level 3 specialist qualification. In practice these disciplines complement each other, and canine massage therapists frequently work alongside physiotherapists and hydrotherapists as part of integrated rehabilitation teams.

Canine massage therapy can benefit dogs with a wide range of musculoskeletal, neurological, and behavioural presentations. Conditions that commonly respond well to massage include: osteoarthritis and joint stiffness, post-surgical recovery (with veterinary clearance), hip and elbow dysplasia, spondylosis and spinal stiffness, soft tissue injury during the rehabilitation phase, muscle atrophy and post-disuse weakness, anxiety and generalised muscle tension, exercise-induced muscle soreness in sporting dogs, and compensatory muscle tension arising from gait abnormalities or lameness. This diploma covers the clinical knowledge you need to assess each of these presentations and apply appropriate massage strategies safely.

Most learners complete the Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage in 6 to 12 months, studying around 8 to 12 hours per week. The course is fully online and self-paced, so you can progress more quickly if you have extended study time available, or at a slower pace if you are balancing study with work, family, or your own animal care responsibilities. All ten mandatory units must be completed and passed before the SEG Awards diploma certificate is issued.

Yes — professional indemnity insurance and public liability insurance are both essential for anyone practising canine massage therapy professionally, whether employed or self-employed. Professional indemnity insurance protects you in the event that a client makes a claim relating to your professional advice or treatment, while public liability insurance covers you if a dog or owner is injured on your premises or during a session. This diploma covers insurance requirements as part of the professional practice unit. Several specialist animal therapy insurance providers offer tailored policies for canine massage therapists.

Yes — many canine massage therapists build a broader portfolio of animal therapy skills by combining this diploma with other specialist qualifications. Common progressions include the Level 3 Certificate in Small Animal Hydrotherapy, canine physiotherapy assistant qualifications, animal behaviour and welfare diplomas, and advanced canine nutrition certificates. Holding multiple complementary qualifications allows therapists to offer a more comprehensive service to clients, develop additional income streams, and position themselves within the growing integrated animal healthcare sector.

Everything Else You Need to Know

Study Support & Platform

  • Dedicated personal tutor assigned from enrolment
  • Online learning platform accessible 24/7 on any device
  • Comprehensive study materials for all ten mandatory units
  • Assessor written feedback on every submitted assignment
  • Student support team available by phone, email, and live chat
  • Flexible study schedule — no fixed class times or attendance requirements

Qualification & Recognition

  • Awarded by SEG Awards — Ofqual-regulated awarding organisation
  • Listed on the Register of Regulated Qualifications
  • Level 3 Diploma on the Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF)
  • Recognised baseline qualification for professional canine massage practice
  • Suitable as a foundation for CIMSPA-recognised animal therapy CPD
  • Diploma certificate issued on successful completion of all ten units

Career & Business

  • Qualification designed for both employed and self-employed practice
  • Professional practice unit covers setting up a canine massage business
  • Insurance guidance included within the professional practice unit
  • Referral relationship building with veterinary professionals covered in curriculum
  • Progression pathway to Level 4 and Level 5 animal therapy qualifications
  • 30-day money-back guarantee on all enrolments

Hear From Our Learners

I'd been a dog groomer for eight years and always wanted to offer more to the dogs I worked with. The Level 3 Canine Massage Diploma gave me a completely new set of skills and a much deeper understanding of canine anatomy. I now run monthly massage sessions alongside my grooming and my regular clients love it.

Claire B.

SEG Awards Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage

I enrolled after my own dog was recovering from cruciate ligament surgery and I wanted to understand how massage could support his rehabilitation. The unit on orthopaedic conditions was outstanding — I came away with real clinical understanding. I'm now working towards setting up my own mobile canine massage practice.

Andrew F.

SEG Awards Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage

The online format worked brilliantly around my shifts as a veterinary receptionist. The canine behaviour unit was fascinating — it completely changed how I read the dogs I work with every day. I've since had several referrals from the vets at our practice to offer post-treatment massage to their patients.

Sarah N.

SEG Awards Level 3 Diploma in Canine Massage

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