Hip pain can mean many different things depending on where you feel it, how it started, and what it feels like. The hip is a deep joint with muscles, tendons, nerves, and cartilage around it — so the cause isn’t always the joint itself.
Here’s how to think about it:
📍 1. Pain in the front of the hip / groin
Often related to the actual hip joint.
Common causes:
- Hip flexor strain (common after exercise or sudden movement)
- Labral tear (cartilage damage inside the joint)
- Osteoarthritis (more common over 50)
- Hip impingement (FAI)
Feels like:
- Deep ache in groin
- Clicking or catching sensation
- Stiffness when walking or getting up
📍 2. Pain on the outside of the hip
Very common, especially in adults.
Most common cause:
- Greater trochanteric pain syndrome (often called bursitis)
Feels like:
- Pain when lying on that side
- Tender to touch
- Worse when walking or climbing stairs
📍 3. Pain in the buttock or back of hip
Often not the hip joint at all.
Common causes:
- Piriformis syndrome
- Sciatica
- Lower back issues (like disc irritation)
Feels like:
- Shooting pain down the leg
- Numbness or tingling
- Worse when sitting
📍 4. Sudden severe hip pain
Needs urgent evaluation if:
- You can’t put weight on the leg
- There was a fall or injury
- Fever + hip pain (possible infection)
- Pain in a child with limping
⚠️ Age matters
- Young athletes → strains, impingement, labral tears
- Middle age → bursitis, tendon problems
- Older adults → osteoarthritis, fractures
🏥 When to see a doctor
- Pain lasts more than 1–2 weeks
- Getting worse instead of better
- Swelling, redness, or fever
- Leg weakness or numbness
- Difficulty walking
If you’d like, tell me:
- Your age
- Where exactly the pain is (front, side, back?)
- How long it’s been there
- What makes it worse or better
That will help narrow it down.