Best Colonic Hydrotherapy in Washington 2026.
10 clinics in Washington — ranked by Google rating. Typical price: $80 – $200 per session · varies by clinic.
Also known as: colonic hydrotherapy · colonic irrigation · colon cleanse · colonics · high colonic · colon detox · bowel irrigation · gut cleanse · intestinal lavage · colon flush
Editor’s Pick
This month in Washington
Holistic Colon Hydrotherapy Cen…
Washington
"Highly rated by patients in Washington. English spoken, experienced staff."
Colonic Hydrotherapy studios in Washington
★ Featured
★ Featured
★ Featured
★ Featured
Angel of Colonics by Dr. Angel (DACM)
More studios in Washington · 4
Washington counts 10 colonic hydrotherapy clinics listed on ColonicsFinder, with an average Google rating of 4.8★ across 828 public reviews. 90% of these clinics hold a 4.5★ rating or above — above the global market average of 35%. This is the editorial guide we wish we had when we started looking for colonic hydrotherapy in Washington.
10 colonic hydrotherapy clinics documented — 6 of them hold a Featured listing (Editor’s Pick program).
4.8★ average rating across 828 reviews. Median review count per clinic is 69 — a useful signal for how established these clinics are.
Rating distribution: 9 rated 4.5★ or above, 1 between 4.0 and 4.4★, and 0 below 4.0★. Always check recency of reviews before booking.
2. Georgetown Sun Cryo
3. ABC Colonic Wellness
4. CAPE VERDE TRADING
5. HealL Well LLC
6. Greenspringcolonhydrotherapy
7. Vital Body & Mind
8. Sensational Touch
9. Angel of Colonics by Dr. Angel (DACM)
10. LBN Colonic Clinic
Ranking combines public Google rating and review volume. See the full 10-clinic list above.
Washington sits in the world’s largest colonic hydrotherapy market by volume, with practitioner certification available through I-ACT and NBCHT. With 10 clinics documented in our directory, Washington represents a mid-sized colonic scene. Colonic hydrotherapy is a wellness service, not a medical treatment — finding a practitioner with proper training and sterilization protocols matters.
Quality signals are encouraging: 9 of 10 clinics hold a 4.5★ rating or above. The average rating across all Washington clinics is 4.8★, based on 828 public Google reviews. The median review count per clinic is 69 — a proxy for how established each practice is in the local market.
Before booking your first session in Washington, consult your healthcare provider — especially if you have any existing digestive conditions, are pregnant, or take prescription medications. Colonic hydrotherapy has specific contraindications (listed below) that your practitioner should screen for.
Based on publicly available price lists from Washington clinics and United States-wide market data, here are typical 2026 pricing ranges:
| Format | Price range |
|---|---|
| Single session (45–75 min) | $80–175 |
| Course of 3 sessions | $200–450 |
| Introductory / first visit | $60–120 |
Prices vary by clinic tier, equipment type (open vs closed system), and practitioner credentials. Some clinics include a consultation in the first-visit price. Always confirm current pricing directly with the clinic — these ranges are market-level estimates, not guarantees.
Insurance note: colonic hydrotherapy is generally not covered by health insurance or public health systems (including the NHS in the UK and Medicare in Australia). In the US, it is not FDA-approved for non-medical colon cleansing. Some private health funds may offer partial rebates under complementary therapy cover — check with your insurer.
| City | Clinics | Avg rating | Total reviews | 4.5★+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Washington (this page) | 10 | 4.8★ | 828 | 9 |
| New York | 12 | 4.9★ | 1,510 | 12 |
| Los Angeles | 8 | 4.9★ | 318 | 8 |
| San Francisco | 9 | 4.9★ | 573 | 9 |
| Miami | 11 | 4.9★ | 2,149 | 11 |
Washington accounts for 5% of the 193 colonic hydrotherapy clinics we track across United States. New York, Miami, Chicago, Boston, Seattle, Houston, Dallas, Atlanta, Phoenix have a larger directory. Los Angeles, San Francisco, Austin, Philadelphia, Scottsdale have fewer listed clinics. Clinic count alone does not determine quality — check certifications (I-ACT, ARCH, RICTAT), equipment type, and review recency before choosing.
What is the difference between a colonic and an enema?
An enema cleanses only the lower portion of the colon (rectum and sigmoid) using a small volume of water self-administered at home. A colonic (colon hydrotherapy) involves a trained practitioner using specialized equipment to gently flush the entire length of the colon with a larger volume of temperature-controlled water, typically over 45–75 minutes. In Washington, all 10 listed clinics offer professional colonic hydrotherapy sessions with trained therapists.
Is a colonic the same as a colonoscopy?
No — these are completely different procedures. A colonoscopy is a medical diagnostic procedure performed by a gastroenterologist under sedation to examine the colon for polyps, cancer, and other conditions. A colonic (colon hydrotherapy) is a wellness service that flushes the colon with water. Colonoscopies are performed in medical facilities; colonics are performed in wellness clinics. If your doctor has recommended a colonoscopy, a colonic is not a substitute.
Is colonic hydrotherapy safe in Washington?
When performed by a trained practitioner using properly sterilized, single-use (disposable) equipment, colonic hydrotherapy is generally well-tolerated. Common side effects include temporary cramping, bloating, and changes in bowel habits. More serious risks — though rare — include dehydration, electrolyte imbalance, and bowel perforation (Mishori et al., J Fam Pract, 2011). The Mayo Clinic notes that “there’s no evidence that colon cleansing offers helpful effects” for detoxification, as the body has its own waste-removal systems. In Washington, look for clinics using FDA-registered or CE-marked equipment and ask about practitioner certification before booking.
What are the side effects of a colonic?
Common side effects reported after colonic hydrotherapy include: cramping and abdominal discomfort during or after the session, bloating, nausea, diarrhea in the hours following treatment, and anal soreness. These typically resolve within 24–48 hours. Less common but documented risks include dehydration, electrolyte imbalance (particularly dangerous for those with kidney or heart conditions), disruption of gut microbiome (beneficial bacteria may be flushed out alongside waste), and in rare cases, bowel perforation. If you experience persistent pain, fever, or rectal bleeding after a session in Washington, seek medical attention immediately.
How often should you get a colonic in Washington?
There is no medical consensus on optimal frequency for colonic hydrotherapy. Practitioners in Washington typically suggest an initial course of 2–3 sessions spaced 1–2 weeks apart, followed by maintenance sessions every 4–12 weeks depending on individual response. Medical authorities (Mayo Clinic, WebMD) caution that frequent colonics may disrupt the gut microbiome and recommend consulting a healthcare provider before beginning any ongoing protocol. The 10 clinics listed in Washington will typically discuss frequency during your initial consultation.
What is the difference between open and closed system colonics?
In a closed system (e.g., Angel of Water, LIBBE), the therapist controls the water flow, pressure, and temperature while the client lies on a treatment table. The waste exits through a sealed tube system. In an open system (gravity-fed), the client has more control and privacy — water flows in by gravity and waste exits into an open basin built into the table. Neither system is objectively “better” — preference is personal. Closed systems offer more practitioner involvement; open systems offer more privacy. When browsing Washington’s 10 clinics, ask which system each clinic uses before booking if you have a preference.
How much does a colonic cost in Washington?
A single colonic hydrotherapy session in Washington typically costs $80–175. Introductory or first-visit sessions (which often include a consultation) cost $60–120. A course of 3 sessions is usually $200–450. Prices reflect the United States market as of 2026. Colonic hydrotherapy is generally not covered by health insurance. Always confirm current pricing directly with the clinic.
Colonic hydrotherapy is a wellness service, not a medical treatment. Here is what major medical authorities and published research say:
- Mayo Clinic: “There’s no evidence that colon cleansing offers helpful effects” for detoxification. The digestive system already removes waste and toxins. Recommends checking with your healthcare provider first and choosing experienced practitioners with properly sterilized equipment.
- WebMD: “Scientific research on colon cleansing is limited. There’s no good evidence for most of the claims.” Notes that colonic devices are not FDA-approved for non-medical colon cleansing.
- Published research: Mishori et al. (Georgetown University, 2011) reviewed case reports and found no evidence supporting therapeutic claims. Common adverse events included cramping and electrolyte changes; rare events included perforation and infection.
- Constipation: This is the most common reason people book their first session. Some gastroenterologists use colonic irrigation for fecal impaction in medical settings, but there is no clinical evidence that wellness-setting colonics treat chronic constipation.
- Microbiome: Colonic irrigation may disrupt the gut microbiome by flushing out beneficial bacteria alongside waste. Some practitioners recommend probiotic supplementation after sessions, though evidence for this practice is limited.
In Washington’s 10 listed clinics, look for practitioners who discuss these limitations openly. A clinic that promises “detox” or “immune boosting” without qualification may not be following evidence-based practice.
Colonic hydrotherapy is contraindicated for several conditions. Do not book a session if you have any of the following without explicit medical clearance:
- Pregnancy — frequently searched, must be clearly stated
- Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis)
- Diverticulitis or diverticulosis
- Recent bowel or abdominal surgery
- Severe hemorrhoids
- Bowel obstruction
- Heart disease (risk of electrolyte imbalance)
- Kidney disease (risk of electrolyte imbalance)
- Active gastrointestinal bleeding
- Rectal or colon cancer
- Unrepaired abdominal hernia
Any reputable clinic in Washington should screen for these conditions before your first session. If they don’t ask, consider it a red flag.
Sources: Mayo Clinic, WebMD (reviewed Nov 2023), Mishori et al. J Fam Pract 2011 (PMID: 21814639). This page does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare professional before beginning any colonic hydrotherapy protocol. ColonicsFinder is an editorial directory and does not endorse specific health outcomes.
The colonic hydrotherapy clinics scene in Washington is a growing scene — 10 clinics documented with consistently high quality signals. For reference, the top-reviewed clinic has 268 reviews. The logistics below apply across the colonic hydrotherapy practice worldwide, but local conventions in Washington may differ — always confirm specifics with the clinic before booking.
What to wear
Loose clothes for before and after — you may feel bloated or tender. The studio provides a gown and draping sheets. You will undress from the waist down but remain covered throughout the session.
Diet the day before
Light diet the day before: soups, cooked vegetables, broths. Avoid red meat, alcohol, processed food, and large meals. Stop eating 2 hours before your appointment.
Arrival and intake
Arrive 15 minutes early for a first visit. A certified practitioner (I-ACT or equivalent) will review your health history, medications, and any bowel or digestive conditions. This is mandatory and saves you from serious complications.
The session itself
Duration: 30–60 minutes. The practitioner inserts a small, sterile, single-use speculum and filtered water flows in at body temperature, then out. You are draped throughout — the practitioner sees only what is necessary. No odour escapes because the system is closed.
After the session
You may have one or two natural bowel movements in the hour after. Drink electrolyte water or coconut water, eat a light cooked meal (soup, rice, steamed vegetables), and rest. Avoid raw vegetables, alcohol, and coffee for 24 hours.
Payment and packages
Single sessions run €60–150. Packs of 3 to 6 are typical. Be wary of long protocol sales — 3 sessions is the standard maximum for non-clinical use.
What about IBS, Crohn's, or ulcerative colitis?
Absolute contraindication for active inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's, ulcerative colitis). For IBS, case-by-case — some clients report relief, others a flare. Always consult your gastroenterologist first.
Does it really “detoxify”?
The concept of “toxin removal” through colonic hydrotherapy is not supported by current medical research. The colon's function is primarily water reabsorption, and toxin elimination is handled by the liver and kidneys. What colonic hydrotherapy can do: soften hard stool, support constipation relief, and provide mechanical flushing. That's real — “detox” is marketing.
Will I fart or have an accident during the session?
The system is closed — nothing leaks out. Any gas or waste flows through a sealed tube into the disposal system. You are fully covered by a sheet throughout. This is one of the most common fears and it is engineered around.
Can the practitioner see my anatomy?
No. The draping protocol covers the perineal area throughout. The practitioner guides the speculum by touch and feel, not by sight. If a practitioner undresses you fully or removes the drape, that is a red flag.
Can I do colonic during my period?
Yes, physically — the colon and the menstrual cycle are separate systems. Many clients prefer to reschedule for comfort, but there is no medical contraindication. Tampon in place is fine.
Does it hurt?
Most clients describe it as strange, not painful. There may be brief cramping as the colon contracts — this is the sign it is working. Sharp pain is a warning sign. Tell the practitioner immediately.
Absolute contraindications
Pregnancy (any trimester), active Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, recent colorectal surgery (under 6 months), diverticulitis flare, bowel obstruction, severe hemorrhoids, recent heart attack or abdominal surgery. (Source: I-ACT — International Association for Colon Hydrotherapy.)
Medical clearance required
History of colorectal cancer, diverticulosis without flare, severe hypertension, chronic kidney disease, anemia. Written physician clearance before booking.
Medications
Blood thinners, recent chemotherapy, high-dose NSAIDs (increased bowel wall fragility). Tell the practitioner what you take.
Disclaimer
This list is informational and not exhaustive. Consult a licensed healthcare professional. See our medical disclaimer.
Non-sterile equipment or reused parts
The speculum and tubing must be single-use, sterile, and unwrapped in front of you. Reused equipment is a serious hygiene and infection risk.
Coffee enemas as “add-on”
Coffee enemas are not evidence-based and have documented risks (colitis, electrolyte imbalance). A practitioner pushing them as a premium upgrade is selling risk as luxury.
Unlimited package sales
Serious practitioners limit non-clinical use to 1–3 sessions. Anyone selling you 10+ sessions for “deep detox” is selling a myth and a potential microbiome disruption.
The Washington colonic hydrotherapy landscape has 10 documented clinics. The most-reviewed is Holistic Colon Hydrotherapy Center with 268 public reviews — a useful proxy for how established a clinic is in the local scene. With 90% of clinics rated 4.5★ or above, Washington sits on the high-quality end of the global colonic hydrotherapy directory. As always, a first visit is about information-gathering: ask about credentials, class formats, and session structure before committing to a multi-session pack.
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