Acupuncture for TMJ: Gentle Relief from Jaw Tension
If your jaw feels tight, you’re hearing clicking, or chewing feels less like a joy and more like a chore, you’re far from alone. TMJ, or temporomandibular joint disorder, is surprisingly common—especially in people aged 20–40—and it often feels like everything is tangled up: stress, teeth grinding, posture, and tension all roll into one.
Instead of masks, splints, or muscle relaxers, sometimes the best relief starts with something a bit more grounded – acupuncture.
Why Acupuncture Makes Sense for TMJ – Ever noticed how your jaw tightens up when stress ramps up? In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), tension often reflects stagnation—a place where Qi, blood, and circulation need a gentle nudge. That’s where acupuncture shines:
It relaxes key chewing muscles like the masseter, temporalis, and pterygoids, and even the muscles around the jaw joint.
It helps reduce inflammation and supports natural pain relief, calming down the stress signals looping through your nervous system.
What Does the Research Show? – There’s growing clinical support for acupuncture’s role in TMJ relief:
A 2024 meta-analysis of randomized trials found that acupuncture—especially for muscle-origin (myofascial) TMJ pain—offers significant short-term relief in pain and jaw function.
Another 2024 study found acupuncture reduced pain and improved function more than sham (fake) acupuncture, especially in cases rooted in myofascial discomfort.
A 2020 case report described complete elimination of a patient’s painful symptoms using acupuncture.
A wider narrative review from 2025 showed warm acupuncture and electroacupuncture improved jaw movement, reduced pain, and increased chewing ability compared to medications in several clinical trials.
Taken together, the evidence suggests that acupuncture is a safe, non-invasive option that complements other therapies—and can be more effective than many conventional routes.
What Does This Look Like in Practice? – Imagine this at your next appointment:
Assessment: Your practitioner listens to your TMJ story—when the pain started, what triggers it (stress? chewing gum?), and maybe how you sleep.
Needle Placement: You might feel needles placed locally near your jaw—especially at muscle tight spots. But because meridians interconnect, needles may also go in your hands, feet, or arms to gently shift energy to the jaw area.
Sensory Shift: Within minutes, many people feel tension easing, muscles relaxing, and a noticeable drop in pain.
Bottom Line: A Holistic Path to Jaw Healing – When TMJ feels like a tight knot of tension, acupuncture can be the release that helps the jaw—and the rest of you—find balance again. It’s about more than just treating the joint; it’s about calming the entire system.
If TMJ has been holding you back—literally—I invite you to consider this gentle, evidence-backed approach.
Acupressure Points for TMJ
Rubbing acupuncture points with your finger for 30-60 seconds can stimulate and promote the circulation of Qi within your own body, restoring health and well-being.
Stomach 6 (ST6):
Location: one finger width anterior and superior to the angle to the mandible. You can find this point when you clench your teeth.
Functions: Alleviates facial pain, TMJ, toothache. facial twitching, facial pain and paralysis.
Stomach 7 (ST7):
Location: To best locate this point, open the mouth. The point is located anterior to the ear, in the depression between the zygomatic arch and the mandibular notch.
Functions: Benefits the ears, jaw and teeth. Good for hearing issues, tinnitus, ear pain and TMJ.
Gallbladder 3 (GB3):
Location: First locate ST7, then run a finger superior, over the zygomatic arch, into the hollow.
Functions: Helps the ears, alleviates facial pain and TMJ. Locate point for headaches.
References:
de Almeida Leite, R. A., et al. (2024). Acupuncture therapy in the management of temporomandibular disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Oral Health, 24(1). https://bmcoralhealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12903-023-03806-1
Chen, Y. F., et al. (2020). Acupuncture for the treatment of temporomandibular joint disorder: A case report. Journal of Medical Case Reports, PMC7536091
Kim, S. Y., et al. (2025). Efficacy of electroacupuncture and warm acupuncture in TMJ disorders: A narrative review. Journal of Integrative Medicine, https://www.integrmed.org/journal/view.php?number=74
Vas, J., et al. (2017). Acupuncture therapy in the management of the temporomandibular joint disorders: A controlled clinical trial. Medicine (Baltimore), 96(13), e6064. https://journals.lww.com/md-journal/fulltext/2017/03030/acupuncture_therapy_in_the_management_of_the.13.aspx
Morningside Acupuncture NYC. (n.d.). Acupuncture for TMJ. https://www.morningsideacupuncturenyc.com/blog/acupuncture-for-tmj
The TMJ Association. (n.d.). Other Treatment Options.