Conditions · Pain & musculoskeletal

Acupuncture for migraines: what the evidence says

Acupuncture has some of the strongest evidence in the complementary medicine literature for migraine prevention. It can reduce both frequency and severity, often comparing favorably to standard preventive medications. Here's how to use it.

Strong evidence

Migraine is one of the most-studied uses of acupuncture in modern medicine, and the evidence is genuinely strong — strong enough that several national guidelines now include it as a recommended preventive option.

If you have frequent migraines and want to reduce reliance on daily preventive medication, or want a non-pharmacologic addition to your current plan, acupuncture is worth a real look.

What the evidence shows

A useful framing: the goal of preventive treatment is not to make migraines disappear — it's to reduce their frequency and severity to the point where they're no longer dominating your life. Acupuncture, in well-designed trials, hits that bar consistently.

How a typical treatment plan works

Migraine prevention is a course, not a single session. Standard protocols:

Track your progress with a simple weekly log. Look for trend changes over a month, not session-to-session shifts.

When acupuncture is (and isn't) appropriate

Acupuncture is most likely to help when:

Acupuncture is probably not the right first step when:

Acupuncture works alongside, not instead of, your neurologist's plan.

Find a migraine specialist near you

Some acupuncturists specifically focus on headache and migraine; others treat it generally. If migraines are your primary concern, look for practitioners who:

Browse acupuncturists who treat migraines →

Related reading


This page is for educational purposes and is not medical advice. Sudden, severe, or "worst-ever" headaches should be evaluated by a physician immediately. Always coordinate complementary treatments with your existing medical care, and never stop or change prescribed medications without the prescriber's guidance.

Frequently asked questions

Will acupuncture stop a migraine in progress?

Sometimes, but acupuncture is studied primarily for prevention — reducing how often migraines happen — not for stopping an active attack. If you're in the middle of an attack, your usual abortive medication is the right first move. Some patients do go for an emergency session and find relief, but the evidence for that use is weaker.

How does it compare to migraine medication?

Cochrane reviews have found that for migraine prevention, acupuncture appears at least as effective as commonly-used preventive medications such as beta blockers — with fewer side effects. It's not a replacement for your neurologist's plan, but it can reduce reliance on daily medication for many patients.

How many sessions before I know if it's working?

Most preventive protocols use 8–12 sessions over 6–8 weeks, then assess. The relevant question isn't 'do you feel different right now' — it's 'has your migraine frequency dropped over the past month.' Keep a simple tracker (date, severity 1–10, duration, triggers if known).

Should I tell my neurologist I'm trying acupuncture?

Yes — for two reasons. First, they need to know what you're doing as part of your overall care. Second, many neurologists are now familiar with acupuncture's evidence base and can help you interpret results. Don't change or stop any prescribed medication without their input.

Find a practitioner who treats migraines. Browse the directory →