The English word 'spa,' meaning a place with curative mineral springs or a health resort, derives from the proper name of the Belgian town of Spa, located in the Ardennes region of the province of Liège. The town's mineral springs were known since at least the fourteenth century, and by the sixteenth century Spa had become one of the most fashionable health resorts in Europe.
The origin of the town name itself is uncertain. The most plausible theory connects it to Walloon 'espa' (fountain, spring), a word that may itself derive from Latin 'spargere' (to scatter, to sprinkle). A widely circulated folk etymology claims that 'SPA' is an acronym for the Latin phrase 'Sanitas Per Aquam' (health through water) or 'Sanus Per Aquam.' This is a backronym — a reverse-engineered acronym applied
Spa's rise to prominence began in the fourteenth century, when the iron-rich springs were promoted for their curative properties. By the sixteenth century, the town attracted visitors from across Europe. Henry VIII's physician praised the waters, and Peter the Great of Russia visited in 1717. The town became a byword for mineral spring therapy.
The transition from proper noun to common noun occurred in English during the seventeenth century. By the 1620s, English writers were using 'spa' (or 'spaw') to refer generically to any mineral spring or health resort with such springs. Towns like Bath, Tunbridge Wells, and Harrogate in England were described as 'spas.' The word crossed
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, 'spa' underwent a further semantic expansion. It broadened from mineral spring resorts to encompass any commercial establishment offering health, beauty, and relaxation treatments — day spas, hotel spas, medical spas — regardless of whether mineral springs are involved. This meaning is now the dominant one in everyday English, though the original mineral-spring sense persists in European usage.
The town of Spa continues to trade on its name. The mineral water brand 'Spa' has been bottled from the town's springs since 1583 and remains one of Belgium's most recognized products. The Spa-Francorchamps motor racing circuit, located in the forested hills near the town, is one of the most famous in the world, hosting the Belgian Grand Prix since 1925.