(Thai Yoga & Healing Art Training Center)
802 25 Soi Pradu, Bang Kho Laem, Bangkok 10120
The instructor credentials here are the real draw. Both lead teachers hold formal positions inside the Foundation for Development of Foot Reflexology Thailand, which makes this a rare place where you are learning from people who wrote the curriculum, not just completed it. For serious practitioners, that difference matters considerably.
Walk down Soi Pradu off Charoen Krung 107 and the noise of the river district drops away almost immediately. The training center sits in a low-rise block near Sathorn Pier, close enough to the Chao Phraya that the air carries some of that particular Bangkok damp in the mornings. Inside, the rooms are set up for instruction, not atmosphere: mats on the floor, space enough for a teacher to walk the full perimeter of a student and correct posture from any angle. Small groups mean the correction happens quietly and often, a hand repositioning your spine rather than a verbal note called across a large class.
The school runs four distinct programs. Thai Yoga Massage is the headline course, framed here as dynamic bodywork therapy covering both basic and advanced traditional technique. Thai Foot Reflexology, which the school calls Chemical Balance Therapy, is taught by Master Kraijakkri Rungrojsakulporn and Master Milo Pilaspilas, who hold the President and Vice President positions respectively at the Foundation for Development of Foot Reflexology Thailand. The Advanced Instructor License course adds pedagogical structure for those who intend to teach, including network school affiliation. The fourth discipline, Ruesi Datton, is the one that takes the longest to absorb. Classified as Ascetic Yogi Self-Stretching, the practice covers approximately 200 poses across two levels. Learning it is not like learning a massage sequence you apply to another person. Each pose involves diagnosing your own spinal and muscular alignment, then moving through a slow progression that demands attention to sensation rather than form. By the second level the distinctions between poses that look similar from outside become significant, and the correction an instructor offers in a small group carries weight it would not in a room of thirty people.
One-day intensive courses begin at 3,500 baht (Basic) and 4,500 baht (Professional), making a structured entry point accessible without committing to a full certification track. The school lists itself as LGBTQ+ friendly and a transgender safe space.
Hours run Monday through Friday, 9AM to 3PM only. Weekend sessions are not offered, so schedule planning matters if you are fitting this around other Bangkok commitments.