Does acupuncture hurt?
The most-searched question about acupuncture — and the one that keeps a lot of people from trying it. Short answer: for most people, no, not really. Longer answer below, along with what to do if it does hurt.
The most-asked question about acupuncture, by a large margin, is whether it hurts. It's also the biggest reason people who might benefit from it never try it.
Short answer: for the great majority of patients, no — not in the way people expect, and usually not enough to be a meaningful barrier. But the honest long answer has a few moving parts.
The needles are not what you're picturing
When most people hear "needle," they picture a hypodermic needle — the kind used for vaccinations or blood draws. Those needles are hollow, relatively thick, and designed to push through skin and vein walls so fluid can pass through.
Acupuncture needles are nothing like that. They are:
- Solid, not hollow. Nothing is injected or drawn out. The needle is just a thin, flexible piece of surgical stainless steel.
- Extremely thin. A typical acupuncture needle is about 0.18 to 0.30 millimeters in diameter — somewhere between the thickness of a human hair and a piece of sewing thread. A hypodermic needle used for a vaccine is 3 to 10 times thicker.
- Sharper and smoother. The tip is tapered rather than beveled, so it displaces tissue as it enters rather than cutting through it.
For most points, insertion produces a quick, small pinch at most — and often nothing at all. A number of patients genuinely don't notice the needle going in.
What you might feel
Once a needle is in place, the sensations people report vary:
- Nothing at all. Common. Some points, some days, some people — you simply don't feel it.
- Dull heaviness or pressure. A fullness at the point, sometimes spreading outward. This is called de qi (pronounced "duh chee") in traditional Chinese medicine and is considered a sign the point has been engaged. It's normal and expected.
- Warmth. A gentle warmth radiating from the needle.
- A brief muscle twitch. Some points — particularly trigger points in tense muscles — produce a small, quick twitch when the needle engages. Brief and harmless.
- An electrical or zinging sensation. Less common. Usually a sign the needle has landed close to a nerve branch; the practitioner will typically adjust slightly.
Most of these are pleasant or neutral. Many patients find the overall sensation so relaxing they fall asleep during treatment.
What isn't normal
Sharp, persistent, or genuinely painful sensations are not how acupuncture is supposed to feel. If you experience:
- A sharp or burning pain that doesn't fade within a few seconds
- A sensation that gets worse over time
- Significant ache at any point
- A persistent electrical feeling
- Anything that causes you to tense up
...tell your practitioner immediately. They will adjust the needle angle or depth, or remove the needle entirely, and reassess. A skilled practitioner wants to know when something doesn't feel right, and won't be offended by your feedback.
Some points are more sensitive than others
Certain locations tend to be more sensation-prone than others:
- Hand and foot points (particularly near fingers and toes) tend to be more sensitive. Brief, sometimes surprising — then fading.
- Face and scalp points are often felt more clearly, though not usually painful.
- Back and leg points are generally the least felt.
- Electroacupuncture (where a very low-frequency electrical current is applied to inserted needles, often for musculoskeletal pain) produces a rhythmic pulsing sensation that's initially strange but generally not painful.
If you're needle-averse, you can ask your practitioner to start with less sensitive points and fewer needles. Most practitioners are happy to work gently for the first few visits and build up as you get more comfortable.
After the session
Some patients experience:
- Brief soreness at one or two needle sites for a few hours after treatment — similar to mild post-massage tenderness. Usually resolves overnight.
- Small, pinpoint bruises at one or two sites. Uncommon, but possible. These are harmless and resolve normally.
If you're on blood thinners or have a bleeding disorder, tell your practitioner — they'll adjust technique and needle choice accordingly.
What to do if you're genuinely needle-phobic
Severe needle phobia is real, and for some people it can make acupuncture impractical. If that's you, a few options:
- Ear seeds or press-tacks — tiny adhesive pieces placed on acupuncture points rather than inserted needles. Effective for some conditions, though with a milder effect than traditional needling.
- Non-insertion techniques — some Japanese-style practitioners use very fine rounded-tip tools that contact the skin without penetrating. Effective for some applications.
- Auricular (ear) magnets — magnets placed on ear points, used in some protocols.
These are legitimate alternatives for people who genuinely can't tolerate needles. Ask a practitioner who works with needle-averse patients — many do.
The bottom line
For most people, acupuncture is significantly less uncomfortable than they expected going in. The combination of extremely fine needles, skilled technique, and the deep relaxation that follows means the session itself is usually pleasant — often the most rested patients feel all week. The anticipation is almost always worse than the actual experience.
If you've been curious about acupuncture but held off because of the needles, a single first visit will almost certainly calibrate your expectations for you.
Continue reading
- What to expect at your first visit — a full walkthrough
- How to choose a practitioner — what matters when picking one
- Different styles of acupuncture — including gentler Japanese style
Ready to find a practitioner? Browse verified, licensed acupuncturists →