Snapping hip syndrome is one of the most common and least understood hip complaints — and despite the alarming sound, it’s usually far less serious than it seems. Here’s what’s actually causing it and what to do about it.
4 min read · Educational
- Snapping hip syndrome is the popping or clicking sensation felt when moving the hip — and despite how it sounds, it’s usually not a serious problem.
- The two most common causes are tight hip flexor muscles and the iliotibial band snapping over the greater trochanter of the femur.
- Dancers and athletes are most commonly affected due to repetitive hip flexor loading.
- Stretching, hip strengthening, and physical therapy resolve most cases without surgery.
- If the snapping is painful, follows an injury or surgery, or feels like a “catch” rather than a pop, it needs professional evaluation.
What Is Snapping Hip Syndrome?
Snapping hip syndrome is the audible or felt popping, clicking, or snapping sensation in the hip joint that occurs during walking, rising from a chair, or certain movements. Unless accompanied by pain, it is typically more of an annoyance than a significant medical problem — and in most cases responds well to stretching, strengthening, and physical therapy.
Our bodies make all kinds of sounds, but a popping or snapping hip tends to get people’s attention quickly. The good news is that snapping hip syndrome sounds considerably worse than it usually is. The vast majority of cases are mechanical — a tight muscle or band of connective tissue catching over a bony prominence as the hip moves — rather than a sign of joint damage or serious pathology.
What Causes Snapping Hip Syndrome?
There are two primary mechanical causes, and understanding which one is driving your symptoms matters for how it gets treated.
| Type | What’s Happening | Where You Feel It |
|---|---|---|
| Iliotibial band snapping | The IT band — a thick band of connective tissue on the outer thigh — flicks over the greater trochanter (the bony bump on the outer hip) during hip flexion and extension | Outside of the hip |
| Iliopsoas tendon snapping | The hip flexor tendon catches and releases over a bony ridge of the pelvis as the hip moves | Front of the hip or groin |
| Intra-articular (less common) | Something inside the joint — loose cartilage, labral tear — causes a catching or locking sensation | Deep inside the hip joint |
The first two types are by far the most common and are almost always related to tightness or overuse of the hip flexors and surrounding musculature. Dancers, runners, cyclists, and athletes who perform repetitive hip flexion movements are particularly susceptible — which is why snapping hip is sometimes called “dancer’s hip.”
Painless vs. Painful Snapping Hip Syndrome
The single most important distinction with snapping hip syndrome is whether the snapping is painful. This changes everything about how it should be managed.
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Painless Snapping
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Painful Snapping — Seek Evaluation
|
How Snapping Hip Syndrome Is Treated
Stretching and Flexibility Work
For the most common mechanical causes, targeted stretching of the hip flexors and IT band is consistently effective. The goal is to reduce the tissue tension that’s causing the catching — giving the tendon or band enough slack that it glides over the bony prominence smoothly rather than snapping across it. Hip flexor stretches, IT band mobilization, and piriformis stretching are typically the foundation of a home program.
Strengthening the Hip
Flexibility alone isn’t enough. Weak hip abductors and external rotators — the muscles that control how the femur sits and moves in the socket — contribute significantly to snapping hip by allowing the hip to track in ways that increase friction over the bony prominences. Targeted hip strengthening, particularly hip and knee extension exercises and hip abductor work, addresses this mechanical driver and prevents recurrence.
Physical Therapy at PhysioFit
A physical therapy assessment identifies which structure is causing the snapping, what’s driving the tightness or weakness behind it, and whether there’s anything more complex going on. Treatment combines hands-on manual therapy to release tight tissue, targeted exercise progression, and movement pattern correction — producing faster, more lasting results than stretching alone. Call us at (650) 947-8500 to discuss your hip symptoms.
Frequently Asked Questions About Snapping Hip Syndrome
Is snapping hip syndrome serious?+
Will snapping hip syndrome go away on its own?+
Why is snapping hip syndrome more common in dancers?+
Can snapping hip syndrome cause long-term damage?+
Whether your snapping hip is painless or starting to cause discomfort, PhysioFit can identify what’s driving it and build a plan to fix it. Serving Los Altos and Silicon Valley.
Kim Gladfelter is a physical therapist, Pilates instructor, educator, author, and founder of PhysioFit Physical Therapy & Wellness in Los Altos, CA. She is a highly regarded expert in healing through movement, orthopedic physical therapy, and women’s health — and a trusted voice in the Silicon Valley health community.
Kim has helped men and women of all ages stay active, move without pain, and avoid unnecessary medications or surgery. She writes regularly on physical therapy, pain science, and wellness — and is dedicated to making advanced, evidence-based care accessible to everyone in her community.
Los Altos, CA