Check this — is your dizziness a non-spinning unsteadiness that comes on with neck pain or when you turn your head, rather than the room spinning? If yes, get the inner-ear causes ruled out first, then see a physical therapist. If the room truly spins or you have any red-flag symptom, seek medical assessment instead.
The top of your neck is full of tiny position sensors, like the balance sensors in a phone. When your neck is stiff or sore, those sensors send your brain the wrong readout, and it clashes with what your eyes and inner ear report. Your brain reads that clash as feeling unsteady. Calm the neck and retrain the sensors, and the clash settles.
▲ Red Flags — Refer Urgently, Do NOT Manipulate the Neck
Refer to: A&E / stroke pathway urgently for the blood-flow or artery-tear signs. ENT / neuro-otology for spinning or hearing changes. Never apply high-velocity neck manipulation when any of these are present.
Check this: is your dizziness a non-spinning unsteadiness that comes on with neck pain or when you turn your head?
If yes, get the inner-ear causes ruled out first, then see a physical therapist. If the room truly spins, or you have any red-flag symptom above, get a medical assessment instead. Do not treat your neck for something that is coming from your ear or your circulation.
Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.
The consistent pattern across the research: the durable ingredient is hands-on neck treatment plus active balance-and-position retraining, not passive treatment on its own.
Cervical balance and position-sense retraining (the active ingredient), paired with hands-on upper-neck manual therapy.
Tier 2 MODERATE (short-term): IFOMPT-screened traction-manipulation protocol; deep neck flexor endurance and postural work as part of the neck-pain backbone.
Tier 3 EMERGING: vestibular rehabilitation layered on when there is genuine inner-ear overlap (for example, mixed post-concussion presentations).
This is not a load-damaged tissue, so you keep training. Modify only what provokes the dizziness, then clear these before returning to unrestricted activity:
Evidence across 2022-2025 systematic reviews and meta-analyses points the same direction: hands-on neck treatment plus balance-and-position retraining reduces dizziness. But the trials are small, mixed together under a label with no confirmatory test, and mostly short-term, so the recommendation is conditional and long-term results are unproven.
A multicentre, assessor-blind trial of 200-plus patients whose inner-ear and brain causes were formally excluded, comparing retraining alone vs hands-on treatment alone vs the combination vs a sham, measured at 12 months. That would settle which ingredient does the work and whether the benefit lasts.
A validated confirmatory test with published accuracy would move this from a diagnosis of exclusion to a positive diagnosis, and would strengthen confidence in the whole picture.
Go Deeper
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Get free weekly protocolsThe top of your neck (the C0-C3 segments, especially the small suboccipital muscles) is packed with position sensors. Their signals travel to the brainstem and are blended there with input from the inner ear and the eyes to work out where your head is and how your body is oriented.
When those upper-neck signals are distorted by pain, muscle guarding, or joint stiffness, the neck sends a reading that conflicts with the inner ear and the eyes. Your brain reads the mismatch as unsteadiness, floating, or disorientation. Because the problem is a mismatch in signals rather than damage to an organ, it is in principle reversible: restore normal neck input and retrain the balance system, and the mismatch settles.
Two clues fall out of this: the dizziness tracks with neck pain or neck movement, and it is a non-spinning unsteadiness, not the room whirling around.
Cervicogenic dizziness is a diagnosis of exclusion. No neck test confirms it on its own. The sequence is: rule out the dangerous and the inner-ear causes first, then show a positive neck link.
Group studies show measurable neck balance-and-position deficits versus healthy people, but the tests perform inconsistently, so none stands alone as a rule-in.
Traditional position
Manual therapy to the neck is the treatment for cervicogenic dizziness.
Recent RCTs (PMID 36414518 n=152; 26678652 n=140)
Manual therapy PLUS balance-and-position retraining outperforms passive treatment; the retraining drives the durable gains.
Best practice: combine hands-on treatment with retraining. A 2025 review also notes the effect is real in direction but modest, and which neck target is best remains unresolved, with the underlying mechanism still called "unclear" (PMID 40618099).
With no confirmatory test, trial groups labeled "cervicogenic dizziness" are mixed, and likely include misdiagnosed inner-ear cases. That dilutes and destabilizes every reported effect size.
Most positive results are short-term (48 hours to a few months) from single-centre trials of 40 to 152 people. Real-world cases are often chronic, and durability beyond 6-12 months is essentially unproven.
The retraining benefit depends on doing the drills consistently at home. Unsupervised adherence is the usual point of failure, and the trials do not capture it.
The simple answer, "it's your neck," is only safe once the dangerous and the inner-ear causes are off the table. The single biggest error in this condition is not a technique failure. It is diagnostic: reassuring and treating a neck when the real generator is BPPV, an inner-ear disorder, or reduced blood flow at the back of the brain.
There is no surgery for cervicogenic dizziness. It is managed conservatively. If a structural lesion or a non-neck cause is actually driving the symptoms, management follows that diagnosis instead.
Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.
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