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Published on: 3/1/2026

Shin Pain? Why Your Shin is Hurting & Medically Approved Next Steps

Shin pain is most often due to overuse such as shin splints, muscle strain, or tendon inflammation, but it can also indicate a stress fracture or, rarely, compartment syndrome. There are several factors to consider, including focal pain that persists at rest, numbness or weakness, marked swelling, fever, or pain after trauma; see the complete breakdown below.

Next steps that are medically recommended include reducing impact, icing 15 to 20 minutes, checking footwear, gradual return with strength work, and seeing a clinician if pain lasts more than 1 to 2 weeks or is severe or worsening; important details that could change your next steps are outlined below.

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Explanation

Shin Pain? Why Your Shin Is Hurting & Medically Approved Next Steps

Shin pain is common, especially if you walk, run, jump, or stand for long periods. For some people, it's a mild ache. For others, it can stop workouts—or even make everyday walking uncomfortable.

The good news? Most shin pain is not dangerous. But it does deserve attention. Understanding why your shin is hurting helps you choose the right next step and avoid making it worse.

Below, you'll learn the most common causes of shin pain, how to tell them apart, and what medically approved steps you can take now.


What Is the Shin?

Your shin refers to the front part of your lower leg. The main bone there is the tibia, also called the shinbone. Muscles, tendons, nerves, and blood vessels surround it.

When people say "my shin hurts," they usually mean pain:

  • Along the front of the lower leg
  • On the inner edge of the shinbone
  • Sometimes spreading toward the ankle or knee

The exact location and type of pain matter.


Common Causes of Shin Pain

1. Shin Splints (Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome)

This is the most common cause of shin pain.

What it feels like:

  • Dull, aching pain along the inner shin
  • Tenderness when you press on the area
  • Pain that starts during or after exercise
  • Often affects both shins

Who gets it:

  • Runners (especially beginners)
  • People who increase training too quickly
  • Those who exercise on hard surfaces
  • People with flat feet or worn-out shoes

Shin splints happen when repetitive stress irritates the bone and surrounding tissue.


2. Stress Fracture

A stress fracture is a small crack in the shinbone caused by repeated force.

What it feels like:

  • Sharp, focused pain in one spot
  • Pain that worsens with activity
  • Pain that may continue even at rest (as it worsens)
  • Swelling in a specific area

Unlike shin splints, stress fracture pain is usually in one exact location—not spread out.

This condition needs medical evaluation. Continuing to exercise on a stress fracture can make it worse.


3. Muscle Strain

The muscles that run along your shin help lift your foot when walking.

What it feels like:

  • Tightness in the front of the shin
  • Pain when lifting your toes upward
  • Mild swelling
  • Soreness after overuse

This often happens after:

  • Increasing workouts
  • Walking uphill a lot
  • Wearing unsupportive shoes

4. Tendon Inflammation

Tendons connect muscles to bones. Overuse can inflame them.

Pain may:

  • Travel down toward the ankle
  • Worsen with movement
  • Be tender to touch

Sometimes shin pain overlaps with discomfort in the back of the ankle. If your lower leg pain is radiating down toward your heel or ankle area, it's worth checking if you're experiencing Achilles tendon pain using a free symptom checker to help identify the source.


5. Compartment Syndrome (Rare but Serious)

This is uncommon but important.

It happens when pressure builds up inside the muscles of the lower leg.

Warning signs include:

  • Severe, tight pain in the shin
  • Numbness or tingling
  • Weakness in the foot
  • Pain that feels out of proportion to activity

Sudden, severe shin pain—especially after an injury—needs urgent medical attention.


How to Tell What Might Be Causing Your Shin Pain

Ask yourself:

  • Is the pain spread out (more likely shin splints)?
  • Is it sharp and in one exact spot (possible stress fracture)?
  • Did I increase activity recently?
  • Do I feel pain even at rest?
  • Is there visible swelling?
  • Did I have a fall or direct blow to the shin?

If your shin pain:

  • Is mild
  • Started after increased activity
  • Improves with rest

It's often related to overuse.

If your shin pain:

  • Is worsening
  • Keeps you from walking normally
  • Hurts even when not active
  • Is associated with fever, redness, or major swelling

You should speak to a doctor promptly.


Medically Approved Next Steps for Shin Pain

1. Rest (But Not Total Inactivity)

Reduce high-impact activities like:

  • Running
  • Jumping
  • Intense sports

Switch to lower-impact options:

  • Swimming
  • Cycling
  • Elliptical

Complete bed rest is usually not necessary unless a doctor advises it.


2. Ice the Shin

Ice can reduce pain and inflammation.

  • Apply for 15–20 minutes
  • Use a cloth barrier (don't apply ice directly to skin)
  • Repeat 2–3 times daily

This is especially helpful in the first few days.


3. Check Your Shoes

Worn-out or unsupportive shoes are a major cause of shin pain.

Make sure:

  • Running shoes are replaced every 300–500 miles
  • Shoes match your foot type
  • Insoles provide proper arch support if needed

Sometimes simply changing footwear significantly reduces shin pain.


4. Gradually Return to Activity

When pain improves:

  • Increase activity slowly (no more than 10% per week)
  • Warm up properly
  • Stretch calves and shin muscles
  • Avoid sudden training spikes

Rushing back too quickly can restart the cycle.


5. Strength and Flexibility Work

Stronger lower legs reduce stress on the shinbone.

Helpful exercises may include:

  • Calf raises
  • Toe lifts
  • Gentle shin stretches
  • Foam rolling (if not too painful)

If pain persists, a physical therapist can create a personalized plan.


6. Consider Medical Evaluation

See a doctor if:

  • Pain lasts more than 1–2 weeks despite rest
  • You suspect a stress fracture
  • The shin is swollen and very tender
  • You have numbness or weakness
  • Pain is severe

Your doctor may order imaging like an X-ray or MRI if a stress fracture is suspected.

Always speak to a doctor immediately if your shin pain is severe, worsening rapidly, or associated with symptoms like fever, redness spreading, or inability to move your foot.


When Shin Pain Is an Emergency

While rare, seek urgent care if you experience:

  • Sudden severe shin pain after trauma
  • A visible deformity
  • Loss of feeling in your foot
  • Extreme swelling and tightness
  • Signs of infection (redness, warmth, fever)

These situations should not be managed at home.


Preventing Shin Pain in the Future

You can lower your risk of shin pain by:

  • Increasing exercise gradually
  • Wearing supportive footwear
  • Running on softer surfaces when possible
  • Cross-training
  • Maintaining strong calves and shin muscles
  • Replacing shoes regularly

Consistency matters more than intensity.


The Bottom Line

Shin pain is common and usually caused by overuse. Shin splints, muscle strain, and tendon irritation are far more common than serious problems. But stress fractures and rare conditions like compartment syndrome do happen—and ignoring worsening shin pain can lead to longer recovery times.

Listen to your body.

If your shin hurts:

  1. Reduce impact activities.
  2. Ice and rest.
  3. Check your footwear.
  4. Return to exercise gradually.
  5. Speak to a doctor if pain persists or worsens.

Above all, don't ignore persistent or severe shin pain. When in doubt, speak to a qualified healthcare professional. Early evaluation can prevent minor shin problems from becoming major ones.

(References)

  • * Winters, M., Moen, M. H., Zimmermann, W. O., & Struijs, P. A. A. (2017). Diagnosis and Treatment of Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome: An Evidence-Based Update. *Current Sports Medicine Reports*, *16*(4), 254-259. PMID: 28700305.

  • * Moen, M. H., Tol, J. L., & Weir, A. (2020). Bone Stress Injuries in Sport: Epidemiology, Etiology, Diagnosis, and Management. *Journal of Athletic Training*, *55*(10), 990-999. PMID: 33026601.

  • * Al-Mohrej, O. A., & Al-Fawaz, A. (2018). Chronic exertional compartment syndrome: a critical review of the literature. *World Journal of Orthopaedics*, *9*(3), 215-221. PMID: 29599980.

  • * Beck, B. R., & Moeller, L. (2019). Lower Leg Pain in Athletes: Stress Fractures and Shin Splints. *Current Reviews in Musculoskeletal Medicine*, *12*(4), 487-495. PMID: 31598506.

  • * Winters, M., van der Worp, H., Groenwold, R. H. H., Janssen, I. W., & Struijs, P. A. A. (2018). Medial tibial stress syndrome: Part 2. Treatment options and prognoses. *Sports Health*, *10*(2), 126-133. PMID: 29543501.

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