Pain & injury

When headaches start in your neck

Not every headache begins in your head. For a lot of people, the real source is a few inches lower — in the tight, irritated joints and muscles at the top of the neck. Here’s how that happens, how to spot it, and what tends to help.

What a cervicogenic headache actually is

A headache is a symptom, not a diagnosis. “Cervicogenic” simply means neck-related — a headache that is generated by the structures of the upper neck rather than by something inside the head itself. When the joints, muscles, and nerves at the top of the spine are stiff, strained, or irritated, they can send pain up into the head. People often describe it as a steady ache rather than a sudden, throbbing attack, and it usually shows up on one side.

Cervicogenic headaches are referred pain: you feel the ache in your head, but the driver is in your neck. Ease what’s happening at the top of the spine, and the head pain often settles with it.

How the neck refers pain to the head

The top three joints of the neck sit right at the base of the skull, and the nerves that serve them share pathways with the nerves that carry sensation to the forehead, temples, and behind the eyes. Your brain isn’t great at telling those signals apart. So when an upper-neck joint is stiff or a nearby muscle is knotted and irritated, the pain gets “mapped” onto the head instead of staying put in the neck. That crossover is why a problem you can feel at the base of your skull can end up aching above your eyebrow.

Everyday life sets this up. Hours hunched over a phone or keyboard push the head forward and load the muscles along the back of the neck. Sleeping in an awkward position, gripping the wheel on a long drive, carrying stress in your shoulders, or an old whiplash injury can all leave those upper joints moving less than they should. The muscles tighten to compensate, the shared nerve pathways get cranky, and the result surfaces as head pain.

Signs your headache may be coming from your neck

No single sign proves a headache is cervicogenic, but a cluster of these makes the neck a likely part of the story:

  • Pain that starts at the base of the skull and spreads forward toward the temple or eye
  • A steady ache, usually on one side, rather than a pounding all-over throb
  • Headaches that flare after long hours at a desk, on a phone, or behind the wheel
  • Reduced motion or stiffness when you turn or tilt your head
  • Neck or shoulder tension that seems to build alongside the headache
  • Pain that eases when you change position or gently move your neck

How it differs from tension headaches and migraines

These categories overlap more than the labels suggest. Tension-type headaches often involve the same tight neck and shoulder muscles. Migraines are their own condition, with throbbing pain, light or sound sensitivity, and sometimes nausea — but for many people, an irritated neck can be one of the triggers that tips a sensitive system over the edge. That’s why sorting out how much of your headache is coming from the neck is a useful step, whatever the label on your chart.

What tends to help

When the neck is a genuine driver, the goal is to calm the source rather than chase the ache. A few things reliably move the needle:

  • Restoring normal motion to stiff upper-neck joints with gentle, low-force care
  • Releasing the tight muscles and knots that pull on the base of the skull
  • Fixing the posture that keeps reloading the neck — screen height, chair setup, phone habits
  • Simple daily stretches and short movement breaks to keep the neck from locking up
  • Steadying everyday triggers like poor sleep, dehydration, skipped meals, and stress

There’s no guaranteed cure, and results vary from person to person. But for neck-driven headaches, addressing how the upper spine moves — along with the habits that strain it — often means headaches show up less often and hit less hard.

Red flags: when to see a medical doctor

Most headaches are not dangerous, but some need urgent medical attention rather than chiropractic care. Get prompt medical or emergency evaluation if you have any of the following:

  • A sudden, severe “worst headache of your life,” or one that peaks within seconds
  • A headache with fever and a stiff neck, or with a new rash
  • Weakness, numbness, trouble speaking, confusion, or sudden vision changes
  • A headache that follows a head injury, fall, or car accident
  • A new or clearly different headache pattern, especially after age 50
  • Headaches that keep worsening over days or weeks, or wake you from sleep

When in doubt, get checked by a medical provider first. This is general information, not medical advice, and it can’t replace an in-person evaluation. Once serious causes have been ruled out, we’re glad to look at the neck-related piece.

How we can help

At Snohomish Chiropractic & Nutrition, Dr. Andy Marrone, D.C., starts by checking how your upper neck moves and where muscles are holding tension, so you get an honest read on how much of your headache is coming from your spine. From there we use gentle, low-force care to restore motion and ease the muscle strain, and pair it with practical posture and lifestyle guidance — plus enzyme-nutrition support when everyday triggers are part of the picture. If you’re tired of living around your headaches, book a free consultation and we’ll help you figure out whether your neck is the missing piece.

Tired of living around your headaches?

Let’s find out whether your neck is the missing piece. Book a free consultation — honest answers, no pressure, no obligation.