Tennis Elbow
Pain on the outside of your elbow? Learn what causes tennis elbow, why it hurts during gripping and lifting, and how physiotherapy can help you recover without surgery.
Tennis elbow is one of the most common causes of outer elbow pain. It develops when the wrist extensor tendons become overloaded, making everyday activities such as lifting, gripping, typing, opening jars, or playing racquet sports painful.

QUICK OVERVIEW
Tennis Elbow at a Glance
| Information | Details |
|---|---|
| What is it? | Tennis elbow is a tendon disorder affecting the wrist extensor tendons where they attach to the outer part of the elbow. |
| Common Age Group | Most common between 35â60 years. |
| Typical Recovery Time | Many people improve within 6â12 weeks, although full tendon recovery may take 3â6 months or longer. |
| Common Causes | Repetitive gripping, lifting, manual work, racquet sports, weight training, and sudden increases in activity. |
| Pain Location | Outer (lateral) side of the elbow, sometimes extending into the forearm. |
| Treatment Success | Most people recover with conservative treatment. Surgery is rarely required. |
COMMON SIGNS & SYMPTOMS
Is This What You're Feeling?
Pain on the Outside of the Elbow
Pain is usually located over the bony prominence on the outer side of the elbow.
Pain While Gripping
Opening jars, shaking hands, carrying shopping bags, or holding tools becomes uncomfortable.
Pain During Lifting
Symptoms often increase when lifting objects, particularly with the palm facing down.
Weak Grip Strength
Many people notice their grip feels weaker because of pain.
Forearm Pain
Discomfort may spread from the elbow into the upper forearm.
Pain During Computer Work
Extended mouse use or repetitive typing may aggravate symptoms in some individuals.
Sports-Related Pain
Pain often increases during tennis, badminton, squash, golf, climbing, or weight training.
Morning Stiffness
Some people notice mild stiffness or discomfort when first using the arm in the morning.
COMMON CAUSES
Why Does It Happen?
Repetitive Overload
Repeated gripping, lifting, or wrist extension can exceed the tendon's ability to recover.
Tendon Degeneration
Modern research suggests tennis elbow is primarily a tendinopathy, involving changes within the tendon rather than ongoing inflammation.
Sudden Increase in Activity
Rapid increases in workload, gym training, gardening, or sporting activity may overload the tendon.
Poor Technique
Incorrect lifting technique or sports technique may increase stress on the extensor tendons.
Inadequate Recovery
Repeated loading without sufficient recovery time may contribute to tendon overload.
Muscle Weakness
Reduced strength or endurance in the forearm, shoulder, or scapular muscles may increase stress on the elbow.
RISK FACTORS
Who Is Most at Risk?
Office Workers
Frequent mouse use and repetitive keyboard tasks.
Manual Workers
Electricians, carpenters, mechanics, plumbers, painters, and construction workers.
Racquet Sport Players
Tennis, badminton, squash, and pickleball.
Golfers
Although golfer's elbow is different, some golfers may also develop lateral elbow tendinopathy.
Weightlifters
Heavy gripping and repetitive pulling exercises.
Individuals Aged 35â60 Years
Peak age for tendon-related elbow disorders.
People Returning to Activity Too Quickly
Sudden increases in training volume or workload increase tendon loading.
DIAGNOSIS
How Is It Diagnosed?
Clinical Assessment
Medical History
- Pain location
- Duration of symptoms
- Occupation
- Sporting activities
- Repetitive gripping tasks
- Previous elbow injuries
- Aggravating movements
Physical Examination
- Elbow movement
- Wrist movement
- Grip strength
- Tenderness over the lateral epicondyle
- Functional tasks
Special Tests & Imaging
Special Tests
- Cozen's Test
- Maudsley's Test
- Mill's Test
- Grip strength assessment
- Cervical spine screening if indicated
No single special test confirms tennis elbow. Diagnosis is based on your history, examination findings, and clinical reasoning.
Imaging
Routine imaging is usually not necessary. Ultrasound or MRI may be considered when symptoms persist despite rehabilitation, another diagnosis is suspected, or surgery is being considered.
SEEKING HELP
When Should You Get Help?
Self-Management
Usually appropriate if:
- Mild pain
- Improving symptoms
- Full elbow movement
- Able to perform daily activities
Book a Physiotherapy Assessment
Recommended if:
- Pain lasts longer than two weeks
- Reduced grip strength
- Difficulty working
- Pain affecting sport
- Symptoms repeatedly return
Seek Medical Assessment
Seek prompt medical evaluation if you experience:
- Severe pain after trauma
- Obvious deformity
- Inability to move the elbow
- Progressive numbness or weakness
- Fever with a swollen elbow
- Suspected fracture
TREATMENT
Treatment Options
Education
Understanding tendon healing, modifying aggravating activities, and maintaining appropriate loading are essential.
Progressive Exercise Therapy
Gradual tendon-loading exercises are considered the cornerstone of treatment.
Manual Therapy
Joint mobilization and soft tissue techniques may provide short-term pain relief when combined with exercise.
Activity Modification
Reducing excessive gripping or repetitive wrist extension while maintaining general activity supports recovery.
Bracing
A counterforce elbow strap or wrist brace may provide temporary symptom relief for some individuals but should not replace rehabilitation.
Medication
Short-term pain relief may be appropriate under medical supervision. Long-term reliance on anti-inflammatory medication is generally not recommended for chronic tendinopathy.
Injections
Corticosteroid injections may provide short-term pain relief but are associated with poorer long-term outcomes compared with exercise alone.
Surgery
Surgery is rarely required and is generally reserved for persistent symptoms that do not improve after 6â12 months of well-managed conservative treatment.
PHYSIOTHERAPY
How Physiotherapy Helps
Physiotherapy aims to reduce pain, improve tendon capacity, restore strength, and help you safely return to work, sport, and everyday activities.
Treatment may include:
- Progressive tendon-loading programme
- Isometric pain-relief exercises
- Eccentric and concentric strengthening
- Grip strengthening
- Shoulder and scapular strengthening
- Manual therapy when indicated
- Ergonomic advice
- Return-to-work planning
- Return-to-sport progression
- Long-term prevention strategies
RECOVERY JOURNEY
Recovery Timeline
EXERCISE LIBRARY
Recommended Exercises
Isometric Wrist Extension
EasyTarget: Common extensor tendon
Hold: 30â45 seconds
Repetitions: 4â5 holds
Eccentric Wrist Extension
ModerateTarget: Wrist extensor tendons
Repetitions: 10â15 Ã 3 sets
Precaution: Lower the weight slowly over 3â5 seconds.
Resistance Band Wrist Extension
ModerateTarget: Wrist extensors
Repetitions: 10â15 Ã 2â3 sets
Grip Strengthening
ModerateTarget: Forearm and hand muscles
Repetitions: 10â15 squeezes à 2â3 sets
Forearm Pronation and Supination
EasyTarget: Forearm rotators
Repetitions: 10â15 Ã 2 sets
Scapular Retraction
EasyTarget: Middle trapezius and rhomboids
Repetitions: 12â15 Ã 2 sets
LONG-TERM HEALTH
Prevention Tips
Build Tendon Strength
Regular progressive strengthening improves tendon capacity and resilience.
Warm Up Before Sport
Prepare the forearm, wrist, and shoulder muscles before racquet sports or weight training.
Improve Technique
Correct tennis, badminton, golf, or lifting technique reduces unnecessary tendon loading.
Increase Training Gradually
Avoid sudden increases in playing time, gym volume, or work demands.
Improve Workplace Ergonomics
Optimize desk setup and avoid prolonged repetitive gripping without breaks.
Strengthen the Shoulder and Upper Back
Strong shoulder and scapular muscles help distribute forces more efficiently throughout the upper limb.
EXPLORE MORE
Related Conditions
Golfer's Elbow (Medial Epicondylalgia)
Elbow Pain
Radial Tunnel Syndrome
Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
Distal Biceps Tendinopathy
Wrist & Hand Pain
Cervical Radiculopathy
Shoulder Pain
Repetitive Strain Injury (RSI)
Forearm Tendinopathy
LEARN MORE
Related Resources
Ready to Get Back to Pain-Free Grip and Movement?
Whether you're struggling to lift, grip, work, or play sport because of outer elbow pain, a physiotherapy assessment can identify the underlying cause and create a personalised rehabilitation programme to reduce pain, restore tendon strength, and help you return to the activities you enjoy.
Book Your Physiotherapy Assessment TodayEarly intervention often leads to faster and better outcomes.