Head massage: ease headaches and stress in 10 minutes

Tension headaches usually start in the neck, jaw and scalp muscles – exactly where a head massage works. This 10-minute routine needs no oil, works on a chair, and is easy to learn.

The 10-minute routine

  1. Shoulders & neck (2 min): start where headaches are born – knead the upper trapezius as in the neck massage guide.
  2. Base of the skull (2 min): fingertips of both hands make slow circles along the bony ridge behind the ears to the center.
  3. Scalp (3 min): spread your fingers and move the whole scalp in slow circles – shift positions like shampooing. The scalp should move, not the fingers rubbing over it.
  4. Temples (1 min): two or three fingertips, very light circles – less pressure is more here.
  5. Jaw (1 min): find the chewing muscle (clench briefly to locate it) and make gentle circles – a hidden headache trigger for teeth-grinders.
  6. Finish (1 min): stroke from forehead over the crown to the neck.

Why it works

Tension-type headaches are frequently driven by tight neck, jaw and scalp muscles. Massage improves blood flow and lowers muscle tone – often noticeable within minutes. For recurring headaches, also address the underlying muscle tension.

💡 Grinding your teeth at night? The jaw circles from step 5 also work as a morning self-massage. Persistent or unusually severe headaches belong in medical hands.

The complete head & jaw routine on video

See exactly where to place fingers for the skull base, temples and jaw – with the right pressure.

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FAQ

Can I do a head massage on myself?

Yes – scalp, temple and jaw work is ideal for self-treatment. Only the neck part is easier with a partner.

With or without oil?

Head massage works best dry or with a few drops in the scalp – oil-covered temples get uncomfortable fast.

When should I see a doctor?

Sudden, very severe headaches, headaches after an injury, or ones with fever, stiff neck or vision problems need immediate medical care.