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Mechanical Neck Pain: Causes, Symptoms & Exercises

Mechanical Neck Pain: Causes, Symptoms & Exercises

Last reviewed:

Written By

Last Reviewed

16/05/2025

Time to Read

9โ€“13 minutes

In nearly two decades of working as a Chiropractor at Active Health in Portsmouth UK, Mechanical or non-specific neck pain is by far the most common type of neck pain I see in clinic. Until youโ€™ve experienced it, you really canโ€™t appreciate how much it can affect your day to day life.ย 

Written and reviewed by Christopher Joseph Burdon, DC. Christopher is a registered practising chiropractor and founder of Active Health Hub. He holds a Master of Chiropractic from the Anglo-European College of Chiropractic and is registered with the General Chiropractic Council, registration number 03033. Learn more about Christopher.

What This Page Will Help You Understand

  • What does mechanical / non-specific neck pain actually mean?
  • Common symptoms and patterns I see in clinic
  • What are the causes of mechanical/non-specific neck pain?
  • Why does mechanical/non-specific neck pain persist?
  • What usually helps with mechanical/non-specific neck pain?
  • Products I often recommend to support recovery
  • When to seek further medical advice

Simple everyday things start becoming difficult and painful such as:

  • Having a good night sleep
  • Checking your blind spot in your car
  • Being able to concentrate at work
  • Socialising and relaxing

If youโ€™ve been suffering like this, you might be thinking the worstโ€ฆa life time of tiredness, irritability and pain.ย 

The reassuring news is that this type of neck pain is rarely serious, often very manageable, and usually improves once the right aggravating factors are identified and addressed.

My aim on this page is to help you understand whatโ€™s really going on โ€” and what you can realistically do about it.

NB: If your neck pain travels into your arm with pins and needles or numbness, you may want to read my Pinched Nerve in the Neck page.

What Is Mechanical (Non-Specific) Neck Pain?

I know, โ€œnon-specificโ€ sounds vague โ€” but it simply means the pain is coming from muscles, joints, ligaments or surrounding soft tissues, rather than a disc injury, nerve compression or serious condition.

In real life, you might notice this as pain that:

  • Moves around
  • Changes day to day
  • Feels worse with certain positions
  • Improves a little once you start moving

Many patients ask me, โ€œwhat exactly is causing it?โ€

The honest answer is that itโ€™s often a combination of structures, all irritated at once.ย 

Common Symptoms of Mechanical Neck Pain I See in Clinic

If youโ€™re suffering with mechanical neck pain right now, you may be able to relate to one or more of the following symptoms:

  • Dull ache or stiffness in the neck
  • Pain on one or both sides
  • Tightness across the shoulders or upper back
  • Reduced range of movement (often worse turning one way)
  • Morning stiffness that eases once you get moving
  • Pain that fluctuates โ€” better one day, worse the next

CLINIC NOTE:

A very common phrase I hear is:

โ€œItโ€™s not agony, itโ€™s just always there but occasionally it gets really bad for a day or two and I need to take some painkillers.โ€

Thatโ€™s a classic mechanical pattern.

What are the Causes of Mechanical Neck Pain?

These are the most common things that I discuss with patients in relation to the potential causes of their neck pain:

  • Prolonged desk and laptop work
  • Prolonged phone use (especially looking down)
  • Poor or sustained sitting posture
  • Repetitive one-sided positionsย 
  • Lack of movement variety
  • Reduced upper back and neck strength
  • Poor sleep or pillow support
  • Stress and tension (yes โ€” it really matters)

This is why you might be thinking:

โ€œBut I didnโ€™t do anything to cause it.โ€

In reality, the neck has simply reached its tolerance threshold. Once it does this, your body is having to heal itself, and pain is the brains protective signal that tissues are irritated and need a change in load or movement while recovery takes place.

Why Does Mechanical Neck Pain Persist

One of the biggest reasons mechanical neck pain lingers is that people continue doing the very things that caused it โ€” often without realising.

For example:

  • Working all day at a desk, then scrolling on the sofa in the evening
  • Driving frequently with poor head and seat positioning
  • Sleeping on a pillow that doesnโ€™t suit them
  • Jobs that require too much looking up/down (eg. plasterers/factory workers)

Our necks donโ€™t need perfection โ€” they need better balance and consistency.

What Usually Helps Mechanical Neck Pain?

1. Improving Desk and Sitting Setup

So many of my patients come to see me and already have a good idea of whatโ€™s causing their problem. They tell me their desk isnโ€™t set up right, they need a new chair, they probably sit too much, etc.

But they havenโ€™t done anything about it yet!

If this is you, go through the list below, then it might be worth highlighting the areas where you think you could improve and start making some changes.ย 

Helpful steps include:

  • Raising screens to eye level
  • Supporting the upper and lower back properly
  • Using an ergonomic chair
  • Using a lumbar or thoracic support cushion
  • Standing up every 30โ€“45 minutes
  • Using a sit-stand desk for position switching

For patients who work on laptops at home or in bed, a stable lap desk can reduce strained neck flexion and arm strain. I personally use the one shown above because it allows screen height adjustment and rotation

2. Posture Awareness (Not โ€œPerfect Postureโ€)

Nobody holds perfect posture all day โ€” and trying usually just creates more tension.

What helps instead:

  • Regular posture changes
  • Awareness of sustained positions

This applies just as much when:

  • Sitting on the sofa
  • Socialising
  • Driving
  • Using your phone

3. Regular, Gentle Movement

Necks are extremely mobile structures and like to move. They get grouchy if they havenโ€™t had a chance to show off their flexibility for a while:

Keep your neck happier with:

TRUE STORY FROM CLINIC: I once had a patient who had been suffering with mechanical neck pain for several months.ย 

My treatment always helped but the improvements werenโ€™t lasting. During one of our sessions, he admitted that he probably wasnโ€™t moving or doing my recommended exercises as much as he should (he worked on computers) and committed to a plan of action.

He went away and set an alarm to remind him to move or exercise in some way for 2 minutes for every hour when he was sat. After doing this for 2 weeks, his neck was the most comfortable it had been for months.

4. Improving Sleep and Pillow Support

Many neck problems start โ€” or worsen โ€” at night.

Helpful changes may include:

  • A well-supported ergonomic pillowย 
  • Avoiding pillows that are too high or too flat
  • Adjusting sleeping positionย 
  • Improving mattress support if needed

Many of my patients just KNOW when their pillow isnโ€™t right โ€” trust that instinct.

Iโ€™ve always been lucky with a pillow that Iโ€™ve had for years that I still find comfortable.

5. Building Strength and Tolerance (Long-Term Fix)

Once pain settles, the goal is to help the neck tolerate everyday loads again.

This often includes:

  • Gentle neck and upper back strengthening
  • Scapular and postural muscle activation
  • Gradual progression, not rushing

You can explore my recommended neck strengthening and mobilisation exercises here.

This step is particularly important in preventing future flare ups.ย 

How Long Does It Take to Improve Mechanical Neck Pain?

This is one of the most common questions Iโ€™m asked. The honest answer is that itโ€™s always hard to give an exact time scale.

As a general guide:

  • Mild flare-ups: 1โ€“3 weeks
  • Moderate symptoms: 4โ€“6 weeks
  • Persistent or recurring pain: several months

Recovery depends heavily on:

  • Daily habits
  • Desk and posture setup
  • Sleep quality
  • Stress levels
  • Consistency with changes

TOP TIP: Make many small changes over time and stay consistent. You might not notice improvements straight away, but keep going and Iโ€™m sure youโ€™ll start to see results.

When to Seek Further Medical Advice

You should seek medical advice if you experience:

  • Progressive arm weakness
  • Significant or worsening numbness
  • Severe pain following trauma
  • Unexplained weight loss or fatigue

These are not typical of mechanical neck pain.

Final Thoughts

Mechanical neck pain is extremely common โ€” and incredibly frustrating โ€” but most people improve when the right daily factors are addressed.

Most people improve when they:

  • Reduce aggravating habits
  • Improve desk and posture setup
  • Move more, with better balance
  • Build strength gradually

Use the links on this page to explore:

Remember, take it step by step โ€” necks are strong, adaptable structures when given the right conditions.

Medical Disclaimer: This page is for educational purposes only and does not replace individual medical assessment or advice

Affiliate Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links meaning I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.ย 

When to seek urgent help

Seek urgent medical advice if pain is severe, worsening, linked with a fall or injury, or comes with fever, unexplained weight loss, chest pain, shortness of breath, new problems with bladder or bowel control, numbness around the saddle area, progressive weakness, or symptoms that feel unusual for you.

If you are unsure whether symptoms are serious, it is safer to contact NHS 111, your GP, or emergency services depending on severity.

Medical disclaimer

This article is for general education only and is not a diagnosis or a substitute for personalised medical advice. If your symptoms are severe, worsening, unusual, or linked with trauma, fever, unexplained weight loss, changes in bladder or bowel control, saddle numbness, progressive weakness, chest pain, or shortness of breath, seek urgent medical help.

Exercises should feel comfortable and controlled. Stop if pain spreads, symptoms worsen, or you feel unwell. For individual advice, book an assessment with a registered healthcare professional.

Read the full medical disclaimer.

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