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Glossary›Reiki Master

Glossary

Reiki Master

A practitioner trained to the highest level of Usui Reiki, qualified to teach, attune students, and perform advanced energy-healing techniques.

What is a Reiki Master?

A Reiki Master is a practitioner who has completed the third (and often fourth) degree of training in the Usui System of Natural Healing, a Japanese energy-healing modality. The title designates someone authorized to teach Reiki, perform attunements—ritual initiations that open students to channel universal life-force energy—and practice advanced healing techniques using symbols and intention. In traditional lineages, reaching Master level required years of practice, apprenticeship, and direct transmission from a teacher within an unbroken chain tracing back to Mikao Usui, Reiki’s founder. Today the term is used variably: some systems distinguish between “Reiki Master” (practitioner) and “Reiki Master Teacher” (authorized to teach), while others collapse the roles.

Origins & Lineage

Mikao Usui founded his first Reiki clinic and school in Tokyo in 1922, after what is described as a 21-day meditation on Mount Kurama during which he suddenly felt “One Great Reiki” and attained enlightenment. Usui was born on 15 August 1865 in the village of Taniai in Gifu Prefecture, Japan, and taught Reiki to over 2,000 people during his lifetime. Eleven of these students continued training to reach the Shinpiden level, equivalent to the Western Master level. Usui died on March 9, 1926, from a stroke while traveling to Fukuyama to teach.

The lineage passed through key figures: Dr. Chujiro Hayashi, a former naval officer who set up a Reiki clinic in Tokyo, and Hawayo Takata, who brought Reiki from Japan to the West in 1937 and continued teaching until her passing in 1980. Takata initiated 22 Reiki Masters before her death in December 1980, seeding the global spread of Usui Reiki. The term “Reiki Master” as understood in the West originates largely from Takata’s system, which formalized three degrees of training.

How It’s Practiced

A Reiki Master’s practice centers on channeling energy, teaching, and transmission. Masters learn the Master symbol (often called Dai Ko Myo), which is used for deep spiritual healing and attunement ceremonies. A final attunement is learned at this level, giving Reiki Masters the widest variety of healing techniques. In hands-on sessions, Masters may employ intuitive hand placements, symbol visualization, and breath work.

The attunement process—central to the Master role—is a ceremonial initiation in which the teacher uses symbols, breath, and intention to “open” a student’s energy channels. Once a Reiki Master takes a student through a series of four initiations called the Reiki Attunement, the student is able to tap into the always-flowing energy of the universe, called Reiki. Masters also mentor apprentices, design curricula, and preserve lineage through oral and written transmission.

Reiki Master Today

Today, seekers encounter Reiki Masters in varied contexts: wellness centers, hospitals, retreat settings, online courses, and private practices. Reiki is not standardized or regulated, but there are generally accepted levels of training and roles; however, requirements can vary widely across the globe. Some organizations—like the International Center for Reiki Training (ICRT)—offer multi-year Licensed Reiki Master Teacher programs with mentorship and standardized curricula. Others teach Master-level courses in weekend intensives or via distance attunement.

Reiki Master training typically requires completion of Levels One and Two, with a minimum of six months to one year between Level Two and Master training. Cost and rigor vary dramatically: some programs charge hundreds of dollars and require months of apprenticeship; others are accessible online for similar or lower fees. In most states, no license or certification is required to practice, though some practitioners pursue massage or ministerial credentials to meet local “license to touch” laws.

Common Misconceptions

Not a medical degree. Despite the honorific “Dr. Usui” in some accounts, Usui was not a medical doctor. Reiki Masters are not diagnosing or treating disease in a clinical sense; they work as complementary practitioners.

Not a single, unified lineage. While traditional narratives emphasize a direct chain from Usui through Hayashi to Takata, there is no “lineage bearer” or “Grand Master” of the organization started by Usui Sensei. Multiple branches, innovations, and non-Usui Reiki systems exist.

“Master” does not mean mastery. The Master level attunes practitioners to energy for spiritual healing at the soul level and is about mastering oneself and deepening personal relationship with Reiki—not claiming expertise over others.

Training is not standardized. Because this training isn’t standardized, practitioners encounter an overwhelming variety of trainings available. Credentials from one teacher or organization may not be recognized by another.

How to Begin

If you are drawn to becoming a Reiki Master, start by completing Reiki Levels One and Two with a teacher whose lineage and approach resonate with you. Ask about their training path, lineage chart, and mentorship model. Expect to practice consistently for at least six months to a year before pursuing Master training.

Read foundational texts: Frank Arjava Petter’s research has clarified much of Usui’s actual history; William Lee Rand’s manuals are widely used in Western training. Join professional organizations like the International Association of Reiki Practitioners (IARP) to connect with the broader community. Seek teachers who emphasize ethics, self-practice, and humility—those who understand that the title “Master” is less about authority and more about stewardship of a lineage and commitment to service.

Related terms

reikienergy healingattunementusui reikireiki practitionerhands on healing
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