A chiropractor can often help improve “tech neck” by reducing pain and restoring mobility in the neck, upper back, and shoulders. Chiropractic adjustments, soft-tissue work, and targeted rehab exercises may ease stiffness and headaches tied to prolonged screen posture. However, tech neck is usually a repetitive strain issue—lasting improvement typically requires changing the daily habits that caused it.
When your head drifts forward, the muscles at the back of your neck and upper shoulders work overtime. A chiropractor may help by improving joint motion, calming irritated tissues, and addressing tight areas in the upper back that contribute to neck overload. Many people notice short-term relief after care, especially when their symptoms are mainly muscular tension and reduced range of motion.
If the root cause is hours of looking down at a phone or laptop, treatment alone won’t “fix” it permanently. Without posture changes and strengthening, symptoms commonly return. Also, if you have numbness, arm weakness, shooting pain, or symptoms after an accident, those may require additional medical evaluation.
The most effective approach is combining care with simple, repeatable posture fixes. Small adjustments—like raising your screen, taking micro-breaks, and practicing chin tucks—reduce the constant forward-head load that drives tech neck. For practical, everyday tips you can start using right away, see this guide to beating text neck with easy phone posture fixes.
Seek prompt medical care if tech neck comes with severe or worsening pain, fever, unexplained weight loss, loss of balance, new weakness, or numbness/tingling down the arm. These signs aren’t typical “posture-only” issues and should be checked out.
Helpful options include chin tucks, chest (pec) stretches, upper-trap and levator scapulae stretches, and mid-back strengthening like rows or band pull-aparts. Aim for brief sessions throughout the day rather than one long workout, especially if you’re on screens for hours.
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