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Hip pain: what does it mean?

Hip pain can mean a lot of different things because the hip is a deep joint made up of bone, cartilage, muscles, tendons, and nerves. The meaning depends on where the pain is, how it feels, and what triggers it.

Here are the most common causes:


1. Muscle or tendon strain (most common)

  • Pain after walking, exercise, lifting, or sitting too long
  • Feels sore or tight on the outside of the hip or groin
  • Often improves with rest

This is usually from overuse or poor posture.


2. Hip joint wear (osteoarthritis)

Osteoarthritis

  • Deep aching pain in the groin or front of hip
  • Stiffness, especially in the morning
  • Worse with walking, climbing stairs, or long activity
  • More common with age

This is “wear and tear” of the joint cartilage.


3. Bursitis (inflammation of cushioning sacs)

Trochanteric bursitis

  • Pain on the outer side of the hip
  • Worse when lying on that side
  • Tender to touch

Often linked to repetitive movement or pressure.


4. Sciatica or nerve irritation

Sciatica

  • Sharp, burning pain that may travel from lower back to hip or leg
  • Can include tingling or numbness
  • Worse when sitting or bending

The hip may hurt, but the real issue is often the lower back.


5. Hip labral tear

Hip labral tear

  • Clicking, locking, or catching sensation in the hip
  • Deep groin pain
  • Worse with twisting or sports movements

6. Hip flexor strain

Hip flexor stretch

  • Front-of-hip pain
  • Common in runners, athletes, or long sitting hours
  • Pain when lifting the knee

7. Less common but important causes

  • Infections in the joint
  • Fracture (especially after a fall in older adults)
  • Autoimmune arthritis

When to take hip pain seriously

Get checked if you have:

  • Sudden severe pain after a fall
  • Can’t bear weight
  • Fever with joint pain
  • Pain lasting more than 2–3 weeks
  • Night pain that keeps worsening

Simple takeaway

Hip pain is usually from muscles, wear-and-tear arthritis, or nerve irritation, not something mysterious. The exact cause depends heavily on location (groin vs outer hip vs back) and what makes it worse.


If you want, describe your pain (where exactly, how long, and what you were doing when it started), and I can narrow it down more precisely.

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