Most people entering the massage industry in Malaysia don’t realize this — but it’s the law, not just advice.
Starting 1 March 2025, the government’s enforcement of regulations in the massage and wellness industry has made it mandatory for all practicing massage therapists to hold a valid SKM (Sijil Kemahiran Malaysia) certification — typically at Level 3 (SKM-3) or higher (DKM-4) — in order to work legally in massage therapy. Without it, you are not compliant with industry standards and could be breaching national regulations (Department of Skills Development.).
In Malaysia, Sijil Kemahiran Malaysia (SKM) is a government-recognized skills qualification issued by the Department of Skills Development (Jabatan Pembangunan Kemahiran, JPK) that proves a practitioner has met national competency standards in a vocational field.
Even if you completed short courses or received private certificates, those do not substitute for the nationally recognized SKM credential required by law.
If you aspire to work professionally — whether in a spa, wellness centre, or private practice — getting SKM is not optional. It’s a legal baseline.
Before choosing any massage course, ask:
📌 “Does this lead to SKM-3 or equivalent certification accepted by JPK?”
If the answer is no, you may be learning useful skills — but you’re not meeting the government’s legal requirement to work as a therapist in Malaysia.
#SKM #SijilKemahiranMalaysia #MassageTherapist #MassageMalaysia #Akta775 #JPK #ProfessionalMassage #WellnessIndustry #MassageCareer #MassageLaw #TerapisUrut #KerjayaUrut #MassageCertification #LegalRequirement
Japan