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Pressure Points for Headaches: 7 Points That Actually Work

Your hands, neck, and feet hold built-in headache relief switches. Here are 7 acupressure points backed by clinical research — with exact locations, techniques, and which headache types they help most.

You're at your desk, a headache building behind your eyes, and you don't have painkillers on hand. Or maybe you do, but you've been reaching for them too often lately and your doctor told you to cut back.

Good news: your body has a handful of built-in pressure switches that can reduce headache pain — sometimes significantly. Acupressure has been used for over 2,000 years, and modern research is catching up to what traditional Chinese medicine practitioners have known all along.

A 2017 Cochrane review found acupressure effective for both treating and preventing tension headaches. For migraines, a study in the American Journal of Chinese Medicine demonstrated a 44% reduction in pain intensitywithin 30 minutes from a single pressure point. That's comparable to some over-the-counter medications — without the rebound headache risk.

Below is an interactive guide to 7 of the most effective pressure points. Each one includes the exact location, technique, how long to hold, and what the research says. Try them and mark which ones work for you — everyone responds differently.

How Acupressure Works for Headaches

Acupressure works by stimulating specific points on the body that lie along meridians — pathways that traditional Chinese medicine maps across the body. In Western terms, pressing these points does a few measurable things:

  • Releases endorphins — your body's natural painkillers
  • Increases blood circulation to the area, which can relieve muscle tension
  • Activates the parasympathetic nervous system — your body's "rest and digest" mode, which counters the stress response that often triggers headaches
  • Reduces muscle tension in the surrounding area, particularly helpful for tension-type headaches

The key is firm, sustained pressure. Light rubbing won't cut it. You should feel a deep, dull ache at the point — that sensation is called "de qi" and it's the sign you've found the right spot with the right pressure.

The 7 Pressure Points: Interactive Guide

Tap any point below to see detailed instructions. Mark the ones you try so you can track which provide the most relief for your headache type.

Union Valley

LI4 (Hegu)

How to find it

In the webbing between your thumb and index finger, at the highest point of the muscle when thumb and finger are pressed together.

Technique

Pinch this spot firmly between the thumb and index finger of your opposite hand. Apply steady, deep pressure with a slight circular massage. You should feel a dull ache — that means you've found it.

Hold for 4-5 minutes per hand

Best for

Tension headachesMigrainesSinus headachesGeneral pain relief

What the research says

This is the single most studied acupressure point for headaches. A 2012 study in the American Journal of Chinese Medicine found it reduced migraine intensity by 44% within 30 minutes. Avoid during pregnancy — it can stimulate uterine contractions.

The Best Pressure Point Combinations

Individual pressure points work. Combinations work better. Here are the three most effective pairings based on clinical practice:

The "Four Gates" (LI4 + LV3)

Press Union Valley on both hands andGreat Surge on both feet simultaneously (you'll need to sit in a position where you can reach your feet). This combination is considered one of the most powerful in acupressure — it addresses headaches from both ends of the body and is especially effective for migraines and stress headaches.

The "Neck Reset" (GB20 + GB21)

Start with Shoulder Well to release trapezius tension, then move up to Wind Pool at the skull base. This is the go-to sequence for headaches that start with tight shoulders and creep up the back of your neck — classic tension headache territory.

The "Screen Fatigue Fix" (Yintang + Taiyang)

Third Eye point between the eyebrows plus both temples. Perfect for the end-of-workday headache from too much screen time. Takes about 5 minutes total and you can do it without leaving your chair.

Tips for Getting the Best Results

  • Be consistent with pressure. Firm and steady beats pressing hard then releasing. Think 70% of your maximum grip strength, held evenly.
  • Breathe slowly. Deep, diaphragmatic breathing while pressing amplifies the parasympathetic response. Inhale for 4 counts, exhale for 6.
  • Start early. Acupressure works best at the first sign of a headache, not once you're at peak pain. If you notice your early warning signs, start pressing.
  • Use both sides. For points that appear on both sides of the body (hands, feet, neck), always press both. Unilateral pressure is less effective.
  • Combine with other methods. Acupressure + a cold compress + hydration is a powerful drug-free combination. Track which combos work for you.
  • Avoid during pregnancy. LI4 (Union Valley) and GB21 (Shoulder Well) should be avoided during pregnancy. The Third Eye and Temple points are considered safe.

When Pressure Points Aren't Enough

Acupressure is a great tool in your headache relief kit. But it's one tool, not the whole toolkit. If you're experiencing headaches more than a couple of times per month, pressure points alone won't solve the underlying problem.

That's where tracking comes in. When you log your headaches alongside the relief methods you try, patterns emerge:

  • Which pressure points consistently help your specific headache type?
  • Are your headaches triggered by weather, sleep, food, or hormonal patterns?
  • Is the frequency increasing, decreasing, or holding steady?

This data changes the conversation with your doctor from "I get headaches sometimes" to "I average 6 migraines per month, they respond well to GB20 acupressure and cold compress, and they spike around barometric pressure drops." That kind of specificity leads to faster, better treatment decisions.

Stop guessing. Start tracking.

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People Also Ask

Do pressure points actually work for headaches?

Yes. A Cochrane systematic review (the gold standard of medical evidence reviews) found acupressure and acupuncture effective for both treating and preventing tension headaches. For migraines, LI4 (Union Valley) has been shown to reduce pain intensity by up to 44% in clinical trials. Results vary by person and headache type — which is why tracking what works for you specifically is valuable.

How long should you hold a pressure point for headaches?

Most points need 3-5 minutes of firm, sustained pressure to be effective. The Third Eye point between the eyebrows works with just 2-3 minutes. The key is consistency — don't press for 30 seconds and give up. Set a timer and commit to the full duration.

Which pressure point is best for migraines?

LI4 (Union Valley) — the point between your thumb and index finger — has the strongest research support for migraines specifically. For best results, combine it with GB20 (Wind Pool) at the base of your skull. If your migraines are stress-triggered, adding LV3 (Great Surge) on your feet creates the "Four Gates" combination that practitioners consider the most powerful pairing.

Can I use pressure points while taking migraine medication?

Generally yes — acupressure is a complementary technique, not a replacement for medication. Many neurologists recommend combining acupressure with prescribed treatments. That said, always check with your doctor, especially if you're on blood thinners or have any condition that affects circulation.



Sources: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (Linde et al., 2016), American Journal of Chinese Medicine (Allais et al., 2012), International Journal of Neuroscience, World Health Organization traditional medicine guidelines. This content is for educational purposes and does not replace professional medical advice.