Back Pain or Kidney Pain? 5 Quick Ways to Tell the Difference
Back pain is muscle, disc, or nerve discomfort in the lower spine. Kidney pain is deeper, flank-area ache from organs under the ribs.
Both pains hide in the same postcode—your lower back—so Google searches spike at 3 a.m. when someone wonders if it’s a gym strain or a brewing infection.
Key Differences
Back pain worsens with bending, eases with heat, and can shoot down a leg. Kidney pain stays high and dull, may burn when you pee, and can spike a fever.
Which One Should You Choose?
Test yourself: press the outer lower ribs—sharp pain hints kidneys. Try gentle stretches—relief means muscles. If fever, nausea, or blood appear, skip choice and call a doctor.
Can kidney pain move like sciatica?
No, it stays in the flank and upper abdomen; it won’t travel down your leg.
Will a heating pad fix both?
Heat helps muscle strain but can mask infection signs—use caution.