When you sit, put a cushion under your thighs (not directly under your tailbone) and lean slightly forward to lift the load off the tailbone. Get up every 30 minutes. If your pain is constant, wakes you at night, or comes with numbness around the back passage, book an appointment this week instead.
The tailbone is a kickstand at the base of your spine that takes your weight every time you sit and gets levered hard the moment you stand up. The pain is that little stand and the muscles anchored to it getting irritated and overloaded. It calms down when you stop grinding it against a hard chair.
You can keep training around tailbone pain. Modify the seated, high-pressure work for a few weeks and use these checkpoints before going back to it fully.
Most tailbone pain is harmless. These specific signs are the exception. If any apply, get it checked before treating it as ordinary coccydynia.
Why it matters: these can signal a tumour, infection, fracture, or nerve problem rather than simple mechanical tailbone pain. Refer to: your GP for screening and imaging; A&E for new leg weakness, bowel/bladder changes, or signs of infection.
When you sit, put a cushion under your thighs (not directly under the tailbone) and lean slightly forward to lift the load off it. Stand up every 30 minutes.
If your pain is constant, wakes you at night, or comes with numbness around the back passage, skip the self-treatment and book an appointment this week instead.
Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.
There is a clear treatment ladder for tailbone pain. The honest caveat: the order is well supported, but the individual steps rest on small studies, so think "climb one rung at a time," not "guaranteed cure at step one." Nothing here reaches top-tier, multiple-RCT proof.
Take the pressure off the tailbone and reduce what provokes it. This alone settles many cases.
Loosen the muscles that pull on the tailbone and, where present, calm an over-tight pelvic floor. A physical therapist can add hands-on coccyx mobilization.
When simpler measures plateau, a targeted anti-inflammatory injection to the tailbone. Historically ~60% respond, and ~85% when combined with manipulation, though the proving trials are old.
An image-guided injection at a small nerve cluster behind the tailbone, for refractory pain. Use image guidance and non-particulate steroid (see "What doesn't work").
Salvage for the minority who fail everything else and have a structural reason (instability/hypermobility/spur) on imaging. Success ~71–90% in correctly selected patients, best after a clear injury.
PRP, radiofrequency ablation, neuromodulation, and cement augmentation (coccygeoplasty) are case-report level. Not part of the standard ladder yet.
The shape of the pathway is well supported: most tailbone pain is benign and conservative-first, and surgery is reliable salvage for a carefully selected minority. What is weak is the comparative ranking of the conservative options and all of the dosing — there is no guideline, no head-to-head trial, and no validated test for coccydynia.
The ~71–90% coccygectomy success comes from specialist single-surgeon series that hand-pick patients. A multi-surgeon registry applying one uniform selection rule (failed conservative care plus a structural abnormality) would tell us whether that success generalizes or whether patient selection is doing the work.
A trial that sorts patients by their dynamic-X-ray subtype (luxation, hypermobility, immobility, normal) and pits the conservative options head-to-head (subtype-matched manual therapy vs injection vs shockwave) with 12-month outcomes would finally rank the middle of the ladder and could lift several steps from moderate to high confidence.
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Join The Verdict — freeThe coccyx is the small, three-to-five-segment tail at the very bottom of your spine. It is not a useless leftover. It is a real load-bearing anchor for ligaments and pelvic-floor muscles. When you sit, and especially when you stand back up, the joint where the tailbone meets the sacrum is levered, and the tailbone takes load.
Pain comes from the local structures: the sacrococcygeal joint itself, the bone's surface, the ligaments, and the muscles attached to it. A sitting-versus-standing X-ray often reveals abnormal coccyx movement that a normal still X-ray misses, and it sorts people into recognizable patterns: the tailbone tipping backward (posterior luxation), too much flex (hypermobility), a rigid or spurred segment, or normal motion. Higher body weight and a previous fall are the documented drivers of the tipping-backward pattern.
The honest gap on tests: there is no validated special test with published accuracy numbers that diagnoses or grades tailbone pain.
Focal tailbone palpation accuracy: not established reproduces the pain but has no published score. Dynamic sitting-vs-standing X-ray accuracy: not established subtypes the mechanism and predicts pain, but again has no formal sensitivity/specificity. Diagnosis stays clinical: positional pain plus focal tenderness, with imaging used to subtype or to rule out something sinister.
There is no national guideline (NICE, APTA) for tailbone pain. The real disagreements live inside the evidence:
The dynamic-X-ray subtypes respond differently, but most care happens without those films, so patients are lumped together. That dilution is part of why average treatment effects look modest.
The ~71–90% coccygectomy success is from expert units that hand-pick patients (failed conservative care plus a structural abnormality). Applied to unselected patients, that number would be lower.
Trials used set numbers of sessions or injections as study protocols, not validated doses. There is no evidence-based correct number of PT sessions or injections. Dose to response, and climb when a step plateaus.
The simple message ("offload it and it gets better") is true for most people. The nuance is the small minority and the two things that distinguish them.
Surgery vs conservative. Most tailbone pain improves without surgery. Coccygectomy is a reliable salvage operation, with ~71–90% success in correctly selected patients, and it works best when the pain followed a clear injury rather than appearing out of nowhere. It carries real surgical risk (wound infection is the main one) and is irreversible, so it sits at the top of the ladder, not the middle.
The rare sinister cause. "Tailbone pain" occasionally hides a tumour, an infection, a fracture, or a small disc problem at the coccyx. That is why night/constant pain, a lump, or numbness changes the plan entirely: image and refer, do not just cushion it.
Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.
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