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Condition Tension · Cervicogenic

Headaches that start in the neck.

Many recurring headaches are not actually head problems — they are referred patterns from the upper cervical spine and the muscles around it. Identifying which kind of headache you are dealing with is the first step.

What it is

Headaches come in many forms, and chiropractic care is appropriate for some — not all. The two patterns most commonly addressed in practice are tension-type headaches (band-like pressure, often bilateral) and cervicogenic headaches (originating from the cervical spine and referred to the head).

Migraines are a distinct neurological condition. Some patients find that addressing cervical and muscular contributors reduces migraine frequency or severity, but chiropractic care does not treat migraine itself — it works alongside medical management.

Common causes

Tension-type and cervicogenic headaches commonly arise from a combination of:

  • Sustained postures — long hours at a desk, on a phone, or driving.
  • Upper cervical joint restriction — particularly at the C1–C3 segments, which refer pain to the head.
  • Suboccipital and trapezius tension — muscles at the base of the skull are common pain generators.
  • Jaw and bite contributions — TMJ dysfunction often coexists with headache patterns.
  • Stress and breathing patterns — chronic guarding loads the neck and shoulders.
  • Sleep posture and pillow fit — awkward overnight positioning is an underrated contributor.

How chiropractic care may help

For tension-type and cervicogenic headaches, chiropractic care typically combines manual mobilization or adjustment of the cervical spine, soft-tissue release of the suboccipital, upper trapezius and surrounding muscles, and home strategies — postural work, simple stretching, and pillow or workstation adjustments.

Most patients see noticeable change within a focused series of visits. If headache patterns do not respond as expected, the plan is reassessed openly — and referral made when warranted.

For headaches with a strong jaw component, the Neck & Jaw Specific Treatment is often the right starting point.

Treat the source, not the symptom — most headaches are referred patterns, not problems with the head itself.

When to consider other care

Please consult a physician promptly — not a chiropractor — for any of the following: sudden “thunderclap” headaches; headaches following head trauma; headaches accompanied by fever, vision changes, neurological symptoms, or weakness; or any abrupt change in pattern from your usual headaches.

Migraines, cluster headaches and headaches secondary to other medical conditions require medical management. Chiropractic care can be one part of a broader plan, not a replacement for it.

Related conditions

Find the source.

Begin with an assessment

Book a New Patient Examination — we will identify which kind of headache you are dealing with before any treatment is delivered.