Hip Pain When Walking: Arthritis, Tendons, Back, Or Something Else?

Uncategorized | 2026 May

Author: DokterSingapura Editorial Team
Clinical review: Dr Terence Tan, licensed medical doctor in Singapore
Founder, The Pain Relief Clinic
Reviewed: May 2026

Hip pain when walking is common.

Some people describe:

“It hurts after a few minutes of walking.”
“My groin aches when I walk.”
“My outer hip burns when I walk uphill.”
“Walking makes my hip feel stiff or heavy.”

But “hip pain” can be misleading.

Pain felt around the hip region may come from:

  • the hip joint
  • tendons
  • bursae
  • lower back
  • sacroiliac region
  • nerves
  • muscles
  • even vascular causes in selected cases

The practical question is:

Is the pain truly from the hip, or is something else creating a hip-like pain pattern?

Where Exactly Is The Pain?

Location matters.

Different patterns suggest different possibilities.

Groin Pain

More suggestive of:

  • hip joint problems
  • hip arthritis
  • labral pathology
  • femoroacetabular impingement
  • joint-related stiffness

Outer Hip Pain

More suggestive of:

  • gluteal tendon irritation
  • greater trochanteric pain syndrome
  • bursitis-like patterns
  • load-related tendon pain

Buttock Pain

May suggest:

  • lower back referral
  • sacroiliac-related pain
  • sciatic nerve-related pain
  • deep gluteal pain
  • hip in selected cases

Pain Down The Leg

Raises broader questions such as:

  • lumbar nerve irritation
  • sciatica-like symptoms
  • spinal stenosis
  • referred pain

Location alone does not confirm diagnosis—but it helps narrow the possibilities.

Common Cause 1: Hip Osteoarthritis

Hip arthritis commonly causes:

  • groin pain
  • stiffness
  • pain when walking
  • difficulty putting on socks
  • trouble getting into or out of a car
  • reduced hip rotation
  • discomfort after prolonged walking

NICE guidance for osteoarthritis recommends exercise, education, and weight management as core treatments for osteoarthritis management. (nice.org.uk)

Hip arthritis often becomes more noticeable with walking because the joint is repeatedly loaded.

Common Cause 2: Gluteal Tendon / Outer Hip Pain

Outer hip pain is often mistaken for “hip joint pain.”

But many cases come from soft tissue structures around the side of the hip.

Possible symptoms:

  • pain on the outer hip
  • pain walking uphill
  • pain lying on that side
  • pain climbing stairs
  • discomfort after long walks
  • tenderness over the outer hip

This pattern may fit gluteal tendon-related pain or greater trochanteric pain syndrome.

Common Cause 3: Lower Back Referred Pain

Not all hip-region pain starts in the hip.

Lumbar spine problems may refer pain into:

  • buttock
  • outer hip
  • groin (less commonly)
  • thigh
  • leg

This becomes more relevant if symptoms include:

  • back pain
  • numbness
  • tingling
  • pain below the knee
  • walking-limited leg heaviness
  • relief when sitting

According to Dr Terence Tan, patients often describe “hip pain” when the more relevant source is actually the lower back or nerve pathway.

Common Cause 4: Hip Labral Or Joint Mechanical Problems

In some patients, especially younger or active individuals, hip pain when walking may relate to internal joint problems.

Possible clues:

  • groin clicking
  • catching
  • sharp movement pain
  • twisting discomfort
  • reduced hip rotation
  • deep joint pain

This is less common than general overuse pain, but still relevant in selected cases.

Common Cause 5: Hip Flexor Or Muscle Overload

Walking-related pain may also come from muscular structures.

Possible contributors:

  • hip flexor overload
  • adductor strain
  • gluteal overload
  • deconditioning
  • sudden activity increase

Symptoms may be linked to:

  • faster walking
  • hills
  • new exercise routines
  • long distances
  • recent activity changes

Common Cause 6: Spinal Stenosis / Walking-Limited Nerve Symptoms

Some people describe “hip pain” when the true problem is walking-limited nerve symptoms.

Possible clues:

  • buttock pain
  • thigh heaviness
  • pain after walking a certain distance
  • relief with sitting
  • leaning forward helps
  • both legs affected

A JAMA review on lumbar spinal stenosis describes symptoms commonly worsening with walking or standing and improving with sitting or forward flexion. (jamanetwork.com)

This is different from classic hip joint arthritis.

What Makes Walking Worse?

Walking loads multiple systems.

Pain may worsen because of:

  • joint compression
  • tendon loading
  • muscle fatigue
  • nerve sensitivity
  • reduced conditioning
  • poor biomechanics
  • stiffness
  • inflammatory irritation

The pattern helps interpretation.

Questions That Help Differentiate

Does Sitting Help?

If sitting helps significantly, spinal or nerve-related causes become more relevant.

Does Lying On The Side Hurt?

This points more toward outer hip tendon or bursal pain.

Is Putting On Socks Difficult?

This points more toward hip joint stiffness.

Does Pain Travel Below The Knee?

This raises back or nerve questions.

Is There Groin Pain?

This makes hip joint causes more relevant.

Is Walking Distance Reducing?

This matters because progressive walking limitation deserves review.

Does Hip Pain Need Imaging?

Not automatically.

Imaging depends on the likely question.

X-Ray May Be Useful For:

  • hip arthritis
  • joint space narrowing
  • bony alignment
  • degenerative change
  • fracture in selected situations

MRI May Be Useful For:

  • unclear persistent pain
  • suspected labral injury
  • occult stress injury
  • tendon pathology in selected cases
  • deeper soft tissue questions
  • unexplained symptoms

MRI is most useful when the result would change management.

When To Seek Earlier Assessment

Consider assessment if:

  • walking pain is worsening
  • walking distance is shrinking
  • groin stiffness is significant
  • night pain develops
  • symptoms follow injury
  • pain travels below the knee
  • numbness or weakness appears
  • diagnosis remains unclear

Seek prompt review if there is:

  • inability to weight-bear after injury
  • severe trauma
  • progressive neurological weakness
  • major swelling
  • systemic illness symptoms

Common Patient Mistakes

Mistake 1: Assuming All Hip Pain Is Arthritis

Outer hip or back-related pain is often mistaken for arthritis.

Mistake 2: Ignoring Back Symptoms

Hip-like pain may actually be spinal.

Mistake 3: Stretching Aggressively Without Diagnosis

This may worsen tendon or nerve-sensitive problems.

Mistake 4: Waiting Too Long With Progressive Walking Limitation

Function decline matters.

Practical Questions To Ask

If hip pain appears with walking, ask:

  • Is the pain in the groin, outer hip, buttock, or thigh?
  • Does sitting help?
  • Does leaning forward help?
  • Is putting on socks difficult?
  • Does pain travel below the knee?
  • Is there numbness or tingling?
  • Is walking tolerance shrinking?
  • Did symptoms follow injury?
  • Is lying on the painful side uncomfortable?

These questions often guide the next step.

The Main Takeaway

Hip pain when walking is not always a hip joint problem.

It may come from arthritis, gluteal tendon overload, lower back referral, nerve-related walking limitation, hip labral problems, or muscular causes.

The pattern matters:

  • groin stiffness suggests hip joint involvement
  • outer hip pain suggests tendon-related causes
  • buttock or leg symptoms raise back questions
  • walking-limited symptoms relieved by sitting may suggest spinal causes

The goal is not simply to label it “hip pain.”

The goal is to identify the likely source and choose the next step logically.


FAQ

Why does my hip hurt when I walk?

Possible causes include hip arthritis, tendon irritation, gluteal pain, muscular overload, lower back referral, or nerve-related problems.

How do I know if hip pain is actually from my back?

Pain below the knee, numbness, tingling, buttock pain, walking-limited heaviness, or relief with sitting may suggest spinal involvement.

Does hip arthritis always cause groin pain?

Groin pain is common, but hip arthritis can sometimes present differently.

Do I need MRI for hip pain?

Not always. X-ray may be more useful first for suspected arthritis. MRI is generally reserved for specific structural questions or persistent unclear pain.

When should hip pain be checked?

Seek review if walking distance is reducing, stiffness is worsening, groin pain becomes significant, symptoms follow injury, or neurological symptoms appear.


About The Medical Reviewer

Dr Terence Tan is a licensed medical doctor in Singapore and founder of The Pain Relief Clinic. He has over 20 years of clinical experience in musculoskeletal assessment and practical non-surgical care pathways.


Medical Disclaimer

This article is for general educational purposes only and does not replace personalised medical assessment, diagnosis, or treatment by a licensed healthcare professional.

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