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7 Reasons Why Shoulder Pain Increases at Night (And How to Sleep Without Pain)

Raushan Kumar
Last Updated: February 08, 2026
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Person experiencing shoulder pain at night while lying in bed

If your shoulder pain feels tolerable during the day but becomes sharp, deep, or throbbing at night, you are not imagining it.

Many people say:

“I’m okay while moving around, but as soon as I lie down, my shoulder starts hurting badly.”

This happens for real physical and neurological reasons – not because your condition suddenly gets worse at night.

Let’s understand what is really happening inside your shoulder.

Why shoulder pain feels worse at night

During the day, your body is busy.

You are:

  • Moving
  • Using your arms
  • Distracted by work, walking, talking
  • Getting constant sensory input

At night:

  • You stop moving
  • Your body goes into repair mode
  • Your brain becomes more sensitive to pain signals
  • Inflammation fluid builds up

So pain that was manageable suddenly becomes very noticeable.

But there is more happening inside your shoulder.

1. Inflammation increases when you lie down

Shoulder pain almost always involves inflammation.

This may be from:

  • Frozen shoulder
  • Rotator cuff injury
  • Bursitis
  • Tendinitis
  • Arthritis

When you stand or sit:
Gravity helps pull excess fluid away from the shoulder.

When you lie down:
Fluid spreads into the inflamed tissues.

This causes:

  • Pressure inside the joint
  • Tissue swelling
  • Nerve irritation

Which creates deep aching or throbbing pain.

That is why many people wake up at night with shoulder pain even if they felt okay when going to bed.

2. Your sleeping position compresses the shoulder

Your shoulder is a complex ball-and-socket joint with tendons, bursae, and nerves packed tightly together.

When you sleep:

  • On your painful side
  • With your arm under your head
  • With your shoulder rolled forward

You unknowingly squeeze these sensitive tissues.

This causes:

  • Reduced blood flow
  • Increased pressure
  • More nerve stimulation

The result:

Sharp, burning, or aching pain that wakes you up.

3. Nerves become more sensitive at night

Your brain processes pain differently when you rest.

During the day:
Your brain is distracted.

At night:
There are fewer signals coming in – so pain signals become louder.

Your nervous system enters a hypersensitive state, especially when:

  • You have long-term pain
  • You have inflammation
  • You are stressed or tired

So even mild shoulder irritation feels stronger at night.

4. Muscles and tendons stiffen when you don’t move

During sleep:
Your shoulder stays in one position for hours.

This leads to:

  • Reduced circulation
  • Muscle tightening
  • Tendon stiffness

When stiff tissues are inflamed, they produce pain chemicals.

That is why your shoulder may feel:

  • Locked
  • Heavy
  • Very painful when you turn in bed

5. Certain shoulder conditions are famous for night pain

Some problems are especially bad at night:

a. Frozen Shoulder

Pain is often worst between 12 am to 4 am because the capsule is inflamed and stiff.

b. Rotator Cuff Injury

Lying down increases pressure on damaged tendons.

c. Bursitis

The inflamed bursa gets compressed when resting.

d. Arthritis

Joint surfaces rub more when fluid builds up.

Night pain is a warning sign that the problem is inflammatory, not just muscular.

How to reduce shoulder pain at night

Here are physiotherapy-approved ways to protect your shoulder while sleeping:

1. Sleep position matters

  • Do NOT sleep on the painful shoulder
  • Sleep on the opposite side
  • Place a pillow under the painful arm to support it

This reduces pulling and compression.

2. Use pillow support

Place a pillow:

  • Between your arm and body
  • Under the elbow
  • Under the shoulder if lying on back

This keeps the shoulder in a neutral, relaxed position.

3. Gentle movement before bed

Light shoulder movements improve:

  • Blood flow
  • Fluid drainage
  • Tissue flexibility

This reduces night stiffness.

4. Heat or cold (as advised)

  • Stiffness → Heat
  • Swelling → Cold

This helps calm pain signals before sleep.

When night shoulder pain is serious

See a physiotherapist or doctor if:

  • Pain wakes you up every night
  • You cannot lift your arm
  • You have numbness or weakness
  • Pain is getting worse week by week

Night pain usually means the shoulder needs treatment, not just rest.

Final truth

Your shoulder doesn’t suddenly become worse at night.

What happens is:

  • Inflammation builds up
  • Nerves become more sensitive
  • Pressure increases
  • Movement stops

And all of this makes pain louder.

If your shoulder hurts more at night, it is your body telling you:

“Something inside needs care, not ignoring.”

Before You Go – A Quick Thought for You

If you’re reading this at night because your shoulder is hurting right now, take a moment and look at how you’re sitting or lying.

Are you:

  • Lying on the painful side?
  • Letting your arm hang without support?
  • Keeping your shoulder rolled forward?

Small changes in position can immediately reduce pressure on your shoulder.

Sometimes, relief doesn’t come from stronger medicine – it comes from better positioning, gentle movement, and understanding what your body is asking for.

📝 Tell Us Your Experience

You’re not alone in this.

Many people struggle with:

  • Waking up due to shoulder pain
  • Not being able to sleep on one side
  • Feeling stiffness every morning

If you feel comfortable, share in the comments:

Does your shoulder pain wake you up at night? And which side hurts more?

Your experience might help someone else feel less alone – and sometimes that’s just as powerful as treatment.

Written By

Raushan Kumar

Hi, I’m Raushan Kumar, the founder of MystPhysio, an online physiotherapy education platform dedicated to explaining core physiotherapy concepts, exercise therapy, and rehabilitation principles for learning and general awareness. Our goal is to provide clear, easy-to-understand information that supports students, professionals, and individuals interested in physiotherapy knowledge.

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