What You Actually Feel
The word 'needle' understandably creates anxiety. However, acupuncture needles bear no resemblance to injection needles — they are hair-thin, solid (not hollow), and flexible. Most insertions are barely noticeable.
What practitioners aim for is 'de qi' — a sensation of heaviness, dull ache, warmth, or mild electrical tingling at the needle site. This feeling indicates the Qi has been activated and is considered therapeutically significant.
What Most Patients Report
The most common report during treatment is deep relaxation — many patients fall asleep. After the session, patients often describe feeling lighter, calmer, and less tense.
Sensitivity varies between individuals and between body regions. Fleshy areas (calf, forearm) are less sensitive than thin-skinned areas (hands, feet, face). We always adjust needle depth and stimulation to your comfort.
If You Are Needle-Anxious
Let us know before your first appointment. We can begin with fewer needles, use superficial insertion techniques, and work at a pace that builds your comfort over time. Many highly needle-anxious patients become enthusiastic regular attendees.
Key Takeaways
- Acupuncture needles are 25–40x thinner than hypodermic needles
- Most patients describe mild tingling, warmth, or dull ache — not pain
- Deep relaxation is the most commonly reported experience
- We always work within your comfort level
- Needle anxiety is very common — please tell us and we will work with you
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Come and experience for yourself — most patients are surprised by how comfortable acupuncture really is.
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