---
title: "RR Anterior Hip Pain"
entity: "page"
canonical_url: "https://www.reviverootholistic.com/anterior-hip-pain-acupuncture"
markdown_url: "https://www.reviverootholistic.com/llms/page/anterior-hip-pain-acupuncture"
lastmod: "2026-07-17T18:31:07.729Z"
---

# Acupuncture for Anterior Hip Pain

Pain at the front of the hip or groin is common in dancers and runners — and it usually has more than one contributing factor.

Anterior hip pain shows up at the front of the hip or groin, often sharp with deep flexion movements like high kicks, lunges, or climbing stairs, and can also present as a dull ache after long periods of sitting. It's especially common in dancers and runners, where the hip moves through extreme ranges repeatedly.

## Why It Happens

The front of the hip is a crowded area — hip flexor tendons, the joint capsule, and surrounding fascia all compete for space, and irritation in any of them can feel similar. Tightness in the hip flexors, weakness in the deep hip stabilizers, or restricted hip joint mobility itself can all funnel into this same pain pattern.

A motor pattern imbalance we see often, especially in dancers, is an underactive glute max paired with overactive hamstrings: when the glutes aren't doing their share of the work in hip extension, the hamstrings and hip flexors compensate, which alters how the femoral head sits and moves in the socket and increases anterior impingement with deep flexion or turnout-driven movement.

## How We Treat It

We use acupuncture and dry needling at the hip flexors and surrounding stabilizers to reduce irritation and improve activation, then treat the full kinetic chain — the low back, knee, and the fascial planes running through the front, back and inside of the thigh — to address the mobility and movement patterns contributing to the overload.

Where a glute max/hamstring imbalance is driving the pattern, we also work directly on retraining glute activation, since an underused glute max is a root cause we see often in dancers and other turnout-heavy movement backgrounds.

[Learn more about our Dance Medicine approach to performer-specific care](/dance-acupuncture)

## What to Expect

Mild cases often improve within 4–6 visits. More involved presentations, especially in dancers with significant range-of-motion demands, typically need 6–10 weeks of weekly care alongside targeted strengthening.

→ Part of Revive + Root's [Joint Sprains & Injuries](/joint-sprains-injuries) care

→ Learn about [Revive + Root's](/sports-orthopedic-acupuncture)[approach to orthopedic care](/sports-orthopedic-acupuncture)

→ Read: [Enhancing Performance — Acupuncture for Dancers and Athletes](/blog/boosting-performance-acupuncture-holistic-health-for-dancers-athletes)

## Ready to Address It?

Schedule Your Visit

Take the Resilient Body Assessment
