In 40 seconds
The equine world adopted PEMF therapy decades before mainstream human medicine caught on. Horse trainers, vets, and rehabilitation centres use PEMF for tendon and ligament injuries, kissing spines, back pain, hock and stifle issues, post-surgical recovery, and general training-load management. The mechanism is identical to humans — improved microcirculation, reduced inflammation, accelerated tissue repair — but applied via specialised boots, blankets, and applicators. PEMF is not a banned substance for competition: drug-free, non-invasive, no residue. Used widely in flat racing, jumps, dressage, eventing, and showjumping yards.
Quick facts
- Used for: Tendon/ligament injury, back pain, hock/stifle, post-op
- Equipment: Equine boots, blankets, hand-held applicators
- Sessions: 30–60 min, typically 2–3× per week in active recovery
- Competition safe: No banned-substance issues
- Adopted by: Most major UK racing and dressage yards
Common equine conditions PEMF helps
- Tendon injuries: Superficial digital flexor (SDFT), deep digital flexor (DDFT), suspensory
- Ligament strain: Suspensory branch, check ligament
- Back pain: Kissing spines, sacroiliac dysfunction
- Joint issues: Hock, stifle, fetlock arthritis
- Hoof problems: Laminitis recovery, abscess healing, navicular
- Post-surgical recovery: Bone healing, soft-tissue repair
- Training-load recovery: Daily and weekly recovery for sport horses
Typical equine protocol
| Use case | Frequency | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Tendon injury | Daily for 1–2 weeks → 2–3× per week | 3–6 months total |
| Back pain | 2–3× per week | 4–8 weeks |
| Training recovery | 1–2× per week | Ongoing |
| Post-op | 3× per week | 4–6 weeks |
Contraindications
Don't apply over fractures with metal implants where contraindicated by the vet, over open wounds, or when active infection is present. Always work with a qualified equine vet.
Frequently asked questions
Why is PEMF such a big deal in equine recovery?
Horses live in a world of high mechanical load and slow tendon and bone healing. PEMF accelerates both. The horse-racing and dressage worlds adopted PEMF early — it's now standard kit at most major yards.
What injuries does it help in horses?
Tendon and ligament injuries (suspensory, deep digital, superficial digital), kissing spines and back pain, hock and stifle issues, post-surgery recovery, hoof problems, and general training-load recovery.
Is PEMF safe for horses?
Yes. It is non-invasive, drug-free, and has no banning issues for competition (no drug residue). Always work with a vet for diagnosis and treatment plan.
How do you do PEMF on a horse?
Specialised equine PEMF systems use boots, blankets, or hand-held applicators. Sessions are typically 30–60 minutes. Horses tend to relax visibly during treatment.
Where can I find equine PEMF in the UK?
Many equine vets and rehab centres now offer it. Some yards have on-site equipment. PEMF UK directory will list verified equine providers.
Looking for a PEMF clinic near you?
We list every credible PEMF therapy provider in the UK so you can find one near home.