Headache

How common are headaches?

Headaches are extremely common. Nearly everyone has a headache occasionally. When they occur repeatedly, they are a symptom of a headache disorder. The most common headache disorder is tension-type headache. In developed countries, tension-type headache affects over one third of men and over one half of women. Recent studies suggest the same in developing countries. Less well recognized is the toll of headache disorders characterized by very frequent headache: up to 1 adult in 20 has a headache every – or nearly every – day.

Migraine is also very common affecting at least 1 adult in every 7 in the world. It occurs across all continents, but for reasons not yet known appears to be somewhat less common in the Far East. It is up to 3 times more common in women than men, a pattern seen everywhere. This difference is hormonally-driven. Migraine has been better studied than other headache disorders. Often starting at puberty, migraine most affects those aged between 35 and 45 years but can trouble much younger people, including children.

Headache disorders are painful and disabling. They can cause substantial personal suffering, impaired quality of life and high financial cost. Repeated headache attacks – and often the constant fear of the next one – can affect family life, social life and employment. Despite this, many people – including many health care professionals – tend to perceive headache as a minor or trivial complaint. As a result, the physical, emotional, social and economic burdens of headaches are poorly acknowledged.

The above content from WHO posted on 11 February 2014

Learn more about headache disorders

The most common primary headaches

Primary headaches occur when the pain in your head is the condition. In other words, your headache isn’t being triggered by something that your body is dealing with, like illness or allergies.

These headaches can be episodic or chronic:

  • Episodic headaches may occur every so often but no more than 15 days in one month. They can last anywhere from half an hour to several hours.
  • Chronic headaches are more consistent. They occur more than 15 days in a month. In these cases, a pain management plan is necessary.
tension headaches, migraine headache, cluster headache, allergy or sinus headache (not a headache disorder but a description of symptoms), caffeine headache, hormone headache (menstrual migraine), hemicrania continua, hypertension headache, rebound headache, post-traumatic headache, exertion headache, spinal headache, thunderclap headache, ice pick headache
Visual of different types of headaches. Design by Maya Chastain.

Learn more about 14 Types of Headaches by Medically reviewed by Deena Kuruvilla, MD – By Kathryn Watson and David Rossiaky – updated on November 29, 2021 at www.healthline.com