A man experiences anterior hip pain while walking.
Table of Contents
Pain in the front of the hip or the front of the thigh is common—especially if you sit a lot, run/jog often, or do repeated movements like climbing stairs, getting out of a chair, kicking, or sprinting. The tricky part is that “front hip/front leg pain” can come from muscles, tendons, bursae, the hip joint itself, or even nerves.
This article focuses on the anterior (front) hip and thigh muscles that most often drive symptoms, what they do during walking and jogging, why they get overworked, and how an integrative chiropractic plan can help by improving motion, reducing overload, and building better strength and control.
Your body uses a team of muscles to:
Lift the knee up (hip flexion)
Bring the leg forward when you walk/run
Help you stand up from a chair
Straighten the knee (knee extension)
Stabilize the pelvis so your spine and hips don’t wobble with every step
A classic way to think about it is:
Front hip muscles = hip flexors (they lift the thigh)
Front thigh muscles = quadriceps group (they straighten the knee and help control bending)
When these muscles are tight, irritated, strained, or weak (or when other muscles aren’t doing their share), you can feel pain in the groin/front hip crease, the front of the thigh, or even the front of the knee.
Hip flexors aren’t just “one muscle.” They are a group. The most important ones for front-hip pain include:
Iliopsoas (psoas major + iliacus)
Rectus femoris (a quadriceps muscle that crosses the hip)
Sartorius
Tensor fasciae latae (TFL)
Pectineus (often grouped with the front/inner hip region)
If your pain is in the front hip crease and is worse when you lift your knee, climb stairs, or rise from a chair, these are prime suspects.
The iliopsoas is often referred to as the “main hip flexor.” It helps pull your thigh upward and forward. It also lies close to the hip joint and may be associated with irritation in the anterior hip region.
Common pain pattern
Deep ache or sharp pain in the front hip/groin
Worse with hip flexion (lifting the knee), stairs, getting up, and sometimes running
Common diagnoses involving the iliopsoas
Iliopsoas irritation/syndrome (front hip irritation often linked to overload and weakness patterns)
Iliopsoas tendinopathy/strain (overuse or sudden load)
A key detail: there’s a fluid-filled cushion called the iliopsoas bursa that helps reduce friction, and it can become irritated when the tendon is repeatedly rubbed or overloaded.
The rectus femoris is part of your quadriceps, but it also crosses the hip—so it helps with hip flexion and knee extension. This makes it highly active in walking, jogging, sprinting, kicking, and rising from a chair.
Common pain pattern
Pain/tightness in the front of the thigh
Sometimes, pain near the front hip (because it crosses the hip)
Can contribute to front knee pain when the quad tendon or patellofemoral joint is overloaded
The quadriceps group includes:
Rectus femoris
Vastus medialis
Vastus lateralis
Vastus intermedius
These muscles are major players in knee extension and in controlling the knee during walking, stair climbing, squats, and sit-to-stand. When overloaded, they can cause anterior thigh soreness or contribute to anterior knee pain patterns.
The sartorius runs across the anterior thigh and contributes to hip and knee movement. Because it crosses multiple joints, it can get cranky when movement patterns are sloppy or when the hip flexors are overworked.
Common pain pattern
Front/inner thigh discomfort
Sometimes felt near the front hip crease with repetitive movement
The TFL helps with hip stabilization and works closely with the iliotibial (IT) band. It can tighten when:
Glutes aren’t doing enough
Hip control is poor during walking/running
Pelvis posture is off
Common pain pattern
Pain/tightness near the front of the hip
May connect to lateral thigh tension and altered knee mechanics in runners
The pectineus is located anteriorly in the hip and can be confused with hip flexor/adductor pain. These tissues are often stressed by:
Cutting/pivoting sports
Sudden direction change
Weak pelvic stability
Front hip and front thigh pain often isn’t about one “bad muscle.” It’s usually a load problem plus a movement problem, such as:
Long sitting time → hip flexors stay shortened and can feel tight or stiff
Anterior pelvic tilt (pelvis tipped forward) → increases demand on the front hip area
Weak glutes/core → hip flexors and quads try to “do everything”
Sudden sprinting/kicking → higher risk of hip flexor or quad strain
High repetition (stairs, running, cycling) → tendons and bursae can get irritated over time
This is why people often say, “My hip flexors feel tight all the time,” even if the real issue is that the body is using them as a compensation strategy.
A smart plan starts by considering other causes that can mimic hip flexor pain.
Front hip pain is more suspicious for a hip joint driver when it is:
Deep in the groin/front hip
Associated with stiffness, clicking/catching, or limited hip range of motion
Worse with deep flexion positions (squatting, sitting low, driving) or weight-bearing tasks
Clinicians sometimes describe a “C-sign,” in which a person grips the anterolateral hip/groin region as the pain site.
Pain can also be referred from the spine or involve nerve irritation. Clues include:
Burning/shooting pain
Numbness/tingling
Pain traveling into the leg along a “line”
Some conditions need prompt medical evaluation, such as:
Femoral neck stress fracture (especially runners; pain can progress to pain with any weight-bearing or even at rest)
Sports hernia/occult hernia and nerve entrapment patterns causing persistent activity-related groin pain
Significant trauma, fever, unexplained swelling, or sudden inability to bear weight
Here’s a practical way providers often think:
Pain with lifting the knee, stairs, getting up: hip flexor group (iliopsoas/rectus femoris/sartorius/TFL)
Pain in the front thigh + front knee irritation with running: quads/patellar tendon/patellofemoral joint overload (often tied to hip control problems)
Deep groin ache + clicking/catching + stiffness: consider hip joint causes like labral or intra-articular drivers (especially if persistent)
Burning/tingling down the leg: consider nerve involvement (often lumbar spine-related)
This is not a “self-diagnosis” checklist—just a way to understand why a good exam matters.
An integrative chiropractic plan often aims to do two things at the same time:
Calm down irritated tissue (reduce pain drivers and sensitivity)
Fix the reason the tissue is overloaded (strength, mobility, posture, and movement control)
A strong approach typically includes:
A thorough assessment often looks at:
Where the pain is felt (front hip, groin, thigh, knee)
Hip range of motion, gait, and pelvic control
Muscle strength (especially glutes/core vs hip flexor dominance)
Whether symptoms suggest hip joint vs spine referral
In his clinical teaching content, Dr. Alexander Jimenez emphasizes that the location of pain (groin vs. outside hip vs. thigh) helps narrow likely sources and that hip pain can overlap with back-related causes, so the evaluation should remain broad enough to capture referred patterns.
If the pelvis, lumbar spine, or hip joints are moving poorly, the body often shifts load into the hip flexors and quads. Improving motion can reduce “compensation stress.”
Common options include:
Soft tissue massage/myofascial work
Trigger point approaches
Mobilization of irritated tissues
When the hip flexors are overloaded, it often helps to build:
Glute strength (hip extension and pelvic stability)
Core stability (so the pelvis doesn’t tip forward and overload the front hip)
Balanced hip flexibility (mobility without “hanging on ligaments”)
Dr. Jimenez’s iliopsoas-focused rehabilitation content describes a plan that commonly includes soft-tissue work, joint mobilization, and a flexibility and strengthening program, with attention to core stability to reduce future overuse problems.
Overuse problems often improve faster when people adjust:
Training volume and intensity
Hill work, sprinting, or kicking volume
Sitting breaks and daily movement “snacks”
Always follow your clinician’s guidance—especially if pain is sharp, worsening, or linked to trauma. But many programs gradually work toward a balanced routine like this:
Mobility (daily)
Gentle hip flexor stretch (avoid pinching in the front hip)
Light glute stretch or hip rotation mobility
Short walking breaks if you sit for long periods
Strength (3–4 days/week)
Glute bridges or hip hinges (build hip extension power)
Side-lying hip work (glute med support for pelvic control)
Controlled step-ups/sit-to-stand practice (quality reps, not speed)
Movement quality
Keep ribcage stacked over pelvis (avoid “dumping” into an arch)
During walking/running: reduce overstriding and avoid collapsing into the front hip
Front hip or anterior thigh pain deserves prompt evaluation if you have:
Pain that quickly worsens with weight-bearing, limping, or night pain (especially in runners)
Fever/chills, major swelling, or redness
Numbness, tingling, new weakness, or symptoms radiating down the leg
A recent fall/trauma, or you suddenly cannot bear weight
If you feel pain in your front hip or front thigh, the most common muscle contributors are:
Iliopsoas (primary hip flexor; it can irritate the front hip region).
Rectus femoris (quad + hip flexor)
Sartorius and TFL (often involved in compensation patterns)
Quadriceps group (front thigh; can drive front knee pain when overloaded)
However, not all front hip pain is muscular—some patterns point to hip joint drivers, bursae, stress injuries, or nerve-related causes, which is why a structured exam is important.
Integrative chiropractic care commonly combines:
Mobility and alignment work,
Soft tissue therapy,
And progressive strengthening (especially glutes/core)
to reduce overload and help the hip move and function better over time.
American Academy of Family Physicians. (1999). Anterior Hip Pain.
National Center for Biotechnology Information. (n.d.). Thigh Muscles (StatPearls).
NHS Dorset. (n.d.). Hip Pain – Anterior Hip Pain.
Physiopedia. (n.d.). Hip Flexors.
Sports-health.com. (n.d.). Hip Muscle, Tendon, and Ligament Anatomy.
Geeky Medics. (n.d.). Muscles of the Anterior Thigh.
Body Smart. (n.d.). Anterior Thigh Muscles.
Dr Alison Grimaldi. (2021). Differential Diagnosis of Anterior Hip Pain – Joint.
Evolve Physical Therapy. (n.d.). Anterior Hip Pain.
Evolve Physical Therapy. (n.d.). What Causes Anterior Hip Pain?.
Evolve Physical Therapy. (n.d.). Anterior Hip Pain With External Rotation.
Evolve Physical Therapy. (n.d.). Front Hip Pain.
Princeton Orthopaedic Associates. (n.d.). Experiencing Hip Pain When Standing Up? You Could Have Tight Hip Flexors.
Alexander Orthopaedics. (n.d.). Hip Pain When Walking.
Total Orthopedics and Sports Medicine. (n.d.). Is My Hip Pain Coming From the Hip Joint or the Lower Back?.
Yoga International. (n.d.). Overcome and Prevent Hip Pain.
3 Planes Movement. (n.d.). Runner’s Knee: Diagnose, Causes, Treat, and How to Fix.
Dr. Alex Jimenez. (n.d.). Evaluation of the Patient With Hip Pain.
Dr. Alex Jimenez. (n.d.). Iliopsoas Muscle Injury: EP Chiropractic Functional Medicine Team.
Dr. Alex Jimenez. (n.d.). Tight Hips and Hamstrings and Back Pain Treatment.
YouTube. (n.d.). Video: xo0UNzZVcKE (Anterior hip pain discussion).
YouTube. (n.d.). Video: kXg3akhbrrg (Hip flexor/hip pain discussion).
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The information herein on "Anterior Hip + Front-Thigh Pain Management Strategies" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
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email: coach@elpasofunctionalmedicine.com
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Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
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Licenses and Board Certifications:
DC: Doctor of Chiropractic
APRNP: Advanced Practice Registered Nurse
FNP-BC: Family Practice Specialization (Multi-State Board Certified)
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CFMP: Certified Functional Medicine Provider
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| Primary Taxonomy | Selected Taxonomy | State | License Number |
|---|---|---|---|
| No | 111N00000X - Chiropractor | NM | DC2182 |
| Yes | 111N00000X - Chiropractor | TX | DC5807 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | TX | 1191402 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | FL | 11043890 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | CO | C-APN.0105610-C-NP |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | NY | N25929 |
Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
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