Acupuncture for neck and shoulder pain: what the evidence says
Chronic neck and shoulder pain — desk-worker tension, post-injury stiffness, tension-type headaches — is one of acupuncture's stronger evidence areas. Usually treated in 6–10 sessions with electroacupuncture for musculoskeletal cases.
Strong evidence
Chronic neck and shoulder pain — whether from desk work, past injury, or tension-type patterns — has some of the stronger evidence for acupuncture in the musculoskeletal literature. Many acupuncturists treat this category more than any other single condition.
What the evidence shows
- Systematic reviews have consistently found acupuncture more effective than no treatment and at least as effective as standard conservative care (physical therapy, NSAIDs) for chronic neck pain.
- Electroacupuncture shows slightly stronger effects than manual acupuncture alone for musculoskeletal neck and shoulder pain.
- Benefits have been shown for tension-type headache that originates from neck tightness (very common, often underdiagnosed).
- Evidence is also positive for shoulder impingement, frozen shoulder, and cervical radiculopathy, though with smaller study bodies than general neck pain.
Most major clinical guidelines for chronic neck pain (including from the Joint Clinical Practice Guidelines and several international pain societies) include acupuncture as a recommended non-pharmacologic option.
How a typical treatment plan works
- First visit: Intake, posture assessment, range of motion, palpation of the cervical spine and shoulder muscles, identification of trigger points.
- Treatment: Needles in the neck, trapezius, between the shoulder blades, arms, and often in specific hand points that have referential effects. Electroacupuncture is common. Cupping over the upper back and shoulders is frequently added.
- Frequency: Twice weekly for 2 weeks, then weekly for 4–6 weeks. Most patients see meaningful change by session 4–6.
- Integration: Most experienced practitioners will give you 2–3 specific stretches or posture cues to do between visits. For desk workers, they'll ask about your setup.
When acupuncture is (and isn't) the right tool
Strong fit: - Chronic neck/shoulder pain lasting more than 4 weeks - Desk-worker tension or postural pain - Tension-type headaches - Shoulder impingement, mild to moderate - Post-injury or post-MVA (motor vehicle accident) pain
Probably not a solo fix: - Severe structural damage (large rotator cuff tears, advanced cervical stenosis) - Pain with progressive neurological symptoms (worsening weakness, numbness) - Pain immediately after significant injury — see a doctor first
Acupuncture pairs well with physical therapy. Don't skip PT; add acupuncture alongside it.
Find a musculoskeletal-focused practitioner
Look for practitioners who:
- List musculoskeletal pain, chronic pain, or specific shoulder/neck conditions in their specialties
- Use electroacupuncture regularly
- Coordinate with physical therapists or orthopedists
- Are comfortable with cupping, gua sha, or other adjunct techniques
Browse acupuncturists who treat neck and shoulder pain →
Related reading
- Acupuncture for back pain — often a related condition
- Acupuncture for migraines — for tension-headache overlap
- Acupuncture for TMJ disorders — jaw tension frequently accompanies neck tightness
This page is for educational purposes and is not medical advice. New, severe, or progressive neck pain — especially with neurological symptoms — should be evaluated by a physician.
Frequently asked questions
I sit at a desk all day and my neck is wrecked. Is acupuncture worth it?
Probably yes. Desk-worker neck/shoulder pain is one of the most common reasons people walk into acupuncture clinics, and the evidence is strong for it. Combined with some ergonomic changes and movement breaks, most patients get meaningful relief in 6–10 sessions.
How is this different from massage?
Acupuncture and massage treat overlapping issues through different mechanisms. Massage works on soft tissue directly — loosening knots, improving circulation. Acupuncture modulates the nervous system, reducing pain-signaling and muscle tension through points often distant from where it hurts. Many patients get good results from using both, in rotation.
Can acupuncture help a pinched nerve in my neck?
For cervical radiculopathy (nerve-root compression causing arm symptoms), the evidence is moderate and mostly positive — particularly with electroacupuncture. For more severe cases with progressive weakness or numbness, medical evaluation should come first. For milder cases with occasional tingling or ache, acupuncture is a reasonable conservative option.
Will it help my headaches too?
Often yes. Tension-type headaches frequently originate from neck and shoulder tightness, and acupuncture addresses both in the same session. If you get tension headaches or migraines alongside neck pain, tell your practitioner — they may add specific head/neck points to the protocol.
Find a practitioner who treats neck and shoulder pain. Browse the directory →