Your first episode of back pain can come at you fast. One minute you’re sitting criss-cross on the ground and yapping for hours or flinging a duffel over a shoulder no problem, and the next, you’re on the market for an ergonomic desk chair. That first dull ache or searing jolt may feel like the beginning of the end—that it’s all downhill from here. In reality, back pain in your 30s is common, and it probably has little to do with your body getting older.
CDC data suggests 35% of people ages 30 to 44 experience it, so know that you’re far from the only 30-something wincing at a backless stool or waxing poetic about a supportive couch. And in the majority of cases, there are simple steps you can take to find relief and thwart future episodes. Below, learn why back pain can rear its head in your 30s, what might signify a more serious issue, and how to alleviate everyday twinges.
Back pain in your 30s is typically caused by a few factors working in tandem.
The good news is, your back probably isn’t hurting because of your body’s natural aging process this early in life (unlike your knees, for instance, where tissue breakdown can spark joint pain in this decade). The discs, or gel cushions between vertebrae, do flatten out with age (sometimes beginning in your 30s), which may cause irritation, Claire Morrow, PT, DPT, a San Francisco-based physical therapist and head of clinical consulting at virtual clinic Hinge Health, tells SELF. But, as she points out, imaging studies suggest disc degeneration commonly occurs in folks without back pain, too.
What’s more likely at the root of back pain in your 30s comes down to lifestyle. It’s a period when you might be making strides at work, starting a family, or caring for aging parents—all of which can chip away at your physical activity, April Fetzer, DO, a board-certified physiatrist at the Hospital for Special Surgery at Naples Comprehensive Health, tells SELF. Just sitting down for long swaths may cause additional pressure within those discs. And letting your shoulders hunch forward (for instance, as you’re texting, driving, or working on a computer) makes matters worse, misaligning your spine in ways that could cause stiffness and discomfort in your neck and back, she adds.
At the same time, this decade’s mix of life stressors can directly pile onto back pain. Being emotionally on edge can translate into physical tension, Dr. Fetzer says, which you might carry in your shoulder girdle or low back. Research even shows a link between degree of stress and chronic low back pain: More of the former ups your risk for the latter.
It also gets easier to overexert yourself as you surpass 30. Patients in this demo tend to be “weekend warriors,” Dr. Fetzer says: They’re heads-down on work and life obligations during the week, so wind up cramming all their physical activity into their couple days off, making it more likely that they hurt themselves. With age, the threshold for injury also lowers, Dr. Morrow says. So pushing it just a little too much could leave you with a minor strain or sprain even if you’d have been fine with the same movement a few years ago.