Health

The Difference Between Soreness and Pain (And Why It Matters)

By Dr. Lisa Wang — Not a real doctor. Just someone who pushed through pain and regretted it.

Last updated: May 2026


You finish a workout. The next day, your muscles hurt. You are not sure if this is normal or if you injured yourself. You wonder: should I push through or take a break?

This is a common question. The answer matters. Push through normal soreness and you get stronger. Push through injury pain and you get more injured.

Here is how to tell the difference.


Soreness vs. Pain: The Basics

FeelingSorenessPain
SensationDull acheSharp, stabbing, throbbing
Timing12-24 hours after exerciseDuring exercise or immediately after
LocationThroughout the muscleSpecific spot (joint, tendon, bone)
MovementFeels better with movementFeels worse with movement
Duration2-3 daysMore than a week

Soreness is your muscles repairing themselves. Pain is your body telling you something is wrong.


What Is Soreness?

Soreness is called DOMS (Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness). It happens when you do exercise your body is not used to. New movements. Heavier weights. Longer runs.

During exercise, you create tiny tears in your muscle fibers. Your body repairs those tears. The repair process makes the muscle stronger. The soreness is a side effect.

Signs of normal soreness:

  • Dull ache, not sharp
  • Shows up the next day, not during exercise
  • Affects the whole muscle (not one spot)
  • Feels better when you move
  • Goes away in 2-3 days

What to do: Keep moving. Light activity helps. Stretch gently. Drink water. Sleep well. Do not stop moving completely. That makes the soreness worse.


What Is Pain?

Pain is different. It is your body’s warning system. Something is damaged or about to be damaged.

Signs of injury pain:

  • Sharp, stabbing, or throbbing
  • Shows up during exercise or immediately after
  • Affects a specific spot (a joint, a tendon, a bone)
  • Feels worse when you move
  • Lasts more than a week

What to do: Stop. Rest the area. Ice if it is swollen. See a doctor if it does not improve in a few days.


Common Examples

ActivityNormal SorenessInjury Pain
RunningSore calves and thighs the next daySharp knee pain during the run
WeightliftingAchy chest and arms the next daySharp shoulder pain when lifting
SquatsSore glutes and quads the next dayLow back pain during the squat
YogaStretched muscles feel soreSharp pain in a joint

If you are not sure, err on the side of caution. Take an extra rest day. See how you feel.


Why People Get Confused

They think soreness means a good workout.

Soreness is a side effect, not the goal. You can have a great workout and feel no soreness. You can have a bad workout and feel very sore.

They think pain means weakness.

Pushing through pain is not brave. It is stupid. Pain is information. Listen to it.

They do not know the difference between “hurt” and “harm.”

Some things hurt but are not harmful (soreness). Some things are harmful (injury). Learn the difference.


When to See a Doctor

Go to a doctor if:

  • Pain is sharp or throbbing
  • Pain lasts more than a week
  • You cannot move the area normally
  • There is swelling or bruising
  • Pain wakes you up at night

Do not “push through” these. You will make it worse.


How to Prevent Injury

StrategyWhy It Helps
Warm up before exercisePrepares muscles and joints for work
Increase load slowlyToo much too fast is the #1 cause of injury
Rest between hard workoutsMuscles need time to repair
Listen to your bodyPain is information. Do not ignore it.
Learn proper formBad form puts stress on joints and tendons

Most injuries are preventable. Do not let “no pain no gain” ruin your body.


The Bottom Line

Soreness is dull. Shows up the next day. Feels better with movement. Goes away in a few days. That is normal.

Pain is sharp. Shows up during exercise. Feels worse with movement. Lasts more than a week. That is not normal.

Learn the difference. Push through soreness. Stop for pain. Your body will thank you.


About the author: Lisa Wang pushed through pain. She regretted it. Now she listens to her body.

This article is for informational purposes. If you are unsure about an injury, see a doctor. This is not medical advice.