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AI Work Index

Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist)

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AI Exposure Rank

9/100

Very Low

Range 9–11/100 across source-weight sensitivity checks

Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist) has an AI Exposure Rank of 9/100, meaning its work is more exposed to current AI capabilities than approximately 9% of Singapore occupations. The evidence currently points to limited direct change; this is a relative rank, not a probability of job loss.

Limited direct change

Service & Sales Workers·SGD 1,600/mo (1,550–1,945)·~2.3K workers in SG·Updated 2026-06-11

Relative AI exposure, not a prediction of job loss. Hiring, wages and role design depend on many forces this rank does not forecast.

Wage 47% below group median Exposure 14pp below group median #42 of 45 in Service & Sales Workers →
01

Why This Score

The evidence behind this occupation's AI exposure, with human-work and demand context shown separately. Score stability: watch. How this works

Tasks AI can handle

With 13% AI task overlap (based on Felten AIOE, Anthropic Economic Index, and Eloundou GPT exposure), the Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist) tasks most exposed include: reservation management, menu recommendations, order processing, loyalty program tracking, and basic customer query handling via chatbots.

  • • Design the arrangement of radiation fields to reduce exposure to critical patient structures, such as organs, using computers, manuals, and guides.
  • • Plan the use of beam modifying devices, such as compensators, shields, and wedge filters, to ensure safe and effective delivery of radiation treatment.
  • • Identify and outline bodily structures, using imaging procedures, such as x-ray, magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography, or positron emission tomography.

O*NET tasks for this occupation with the most observed AI usage (Anthropic task data).

What AI can't do here

At 37% human bottleneck protection, the tasks that remain hardest to automate for Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist) include: genuine hospitality and warmth, reading customer moods, handling complaints gracefully, creating memorable experiences, and adapting service to cultural expectations.

Main insulation channels: Non-routine work + High-stakes decisions — the work-context dimensions behind this occupation's human bottleneck.

Skills to focus on

Emotional IntelligenceConflict De-escalationCultural SensitivityExperience Crafting

Brynjolfsson et al. (2023) found customer service agents using AI saw +14% productivity, with the biggest gains among junior workers — AI compressed the experience gap.

Sources: Felten AIOE (2021), Anthropic Economic Index (2026), Eloundou GPT Exposure (Science, 2024), Pizzinelli et al. bottleneck model. Full methodology.

02

Singapore Now

Current labour market conditions and how they affect this role.

Cooling, but not collapsing. Vacancies are softer, yet retrenchment remains low and hiring still exceeds resignations.

Vacancy

3.1%

↓ 11.4% YoY

Hiring

2.6%

vs 1.6% resign

Retrenchment

1.5

per 1,000 · low

Re-entry

78.5%

find work in 12mo· -1.6pp

Clerical, Sales & Service Workers · 2025 Q4

Top Industries

Accommodation & Food Services
26%
Wholesale & Retail Trade
25%
Administrative & Support Services
13%

Industry vacancy overlays use the latest published detailed cross-tab, which can lag the main labour monitor.

03

What You Can Do

Frequently asked questions

Will AI replace Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist)?

Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist) has an AI Exposure Rank of 9/100, meaning its work is more exposed to current AI capabilities than approximately 9% of Singapore occupations. The evidence currently points to limited direct change; this is a relative rank, not a probability of job loss. AI Exposure Rank: 9/100 (Very Low). Median wage: SGD 1,600/month.

What is the AI exposure rank for Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist)?

Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist) has an AI Exposure Rank of 9/100, rated Very Low. It ranks higher than approximately 9% of Singapore occupations for exposure to current AI capabilities; it is not a job-loss probability.

What career transitions are available for Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist)?

Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist) has modeled transition pathways to related occupations. The strongest adjacent pathway is Slimming consultant, based on skill and wage similarity (model-estimated). Transition scoring accounts for wage preservation, training ease, and destination quality.

How does Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist) salary compare in the live market?

Masseur (non-medical) (including foot reflexologist) earns a median gross wage of SGD 1,600/month in the live market (25th-75th percentile: SGD 1,550-1,945). This is 64% below median across all 562 scored occupations, and 47% below group median within Service & Sales Workers occupations.