Quick Facts
Normal pain duration
Up to 3 months
Chronic pain risk
10–12%
Most common cause
Nerve entrapment
Treatment success
85–90%
Colorful medical illustration of the abdominal wall showing hernia repair with surgical mesh and muscle layers
Quick answer Some mild discomfort up to 3 months after hernia surgery is not uncommon. But significant pain limiting daily activities beyond 3 months — chronic post-herniorrhaphy pain — affects about 10–12% of patients and should be evaluated by your surgeon.

Hernia surgery is one of the most common surgical procedures in the United States — over 1 million inguinal hernia repairs are done each year. Most patients recover smoothly. But a significant minority experience pain that lingers for months, and understanding when this is normal versus when it signals a problem makes all the difference.

Is It Normal to Have Pain Months After Hernia Surgery?

The answer depends on how many months and how severe. Here is the breakdown:

TimeframePain statusAction needed
Weeks 1–3Significant pain — normalFollow standard recovery protocol
Weeks 3–6Mild–moderate pain — normalMonitor, follow up at 6-week appointment
Months 2–3Mild discomfort — borderline normalMention to surgeon at follow-up
Beyond 3 monthsAny significant pain — not normalRequest evaluation and imaging
Worsening at any pointAbnormal — red flagCall surgeon promptly

What the research says about long-term hernia pain

Studies consistently show that approximately 10–12% of patients develop chronic post-herniorrhaphy pain (CPHP) — defined as pain persisting beyond 3 months after hernia repair. Of these, about 2–4% have pain severe enough to affect daily activities. The remaining 6–8% have mild, intermittent discomfort that gradually improves over 6–12 months.

Which type of hernia repair causes more long-term pain?

Open repair (Lichtenstein technique) has a slightly higher rate of chronic pain — approximately 12–15% — compared to laparoscopic repair (TEP or TAPP) at approximately 6–10%. This is largely because open repair involves more direct handling of the inguinal nerves. Laparoscopic repair, when performed by an experienced surgeon, results in less nerve trauma and lower rates of chronic pain.

What Causes Pain After Hernia Surgery That Won't Go Away?

Mesh-related complications

In some patients, mesh triggers an excessive inflammatory response or contracts as it integrates with surrounding tissue. This can cause a chronic aching, pulling, or burning sensation in the groin. Mesh-related pain typically develops 4–8 weeks after surgery — later than immediate post-surgical pain — and has a constant rather than intermittent quality.

Nerve entrapment

The most common cause of chronic pain after hernia surgery is entrapment of one or more of the three inguinal nerves in sutures, mesh, or scar tissue. The pain is typically sharp, burning, or shooting, and follows a specific nerve distribution — down the inner thigh, into the scrotum or labia, or across the lower abdomen. A nerve block injection that temporarily eliminates the pain confirms nerve entrapment as the cause.

Scar tissue and adhesions

In some patients, scar tissue restricts movement of the hip flexors or surrounding muscles, causing a pulling or tightening sensation with specific movements — particularly hip extension, walking upstairs, or rising from a seated position.

Hernia recurrence

Pain months after hernia surgery can occasionally signal a recurrence — the hernia has returned. The telltale sign is a new visible or palpable bulge at the hernia site, particularly with coughing or straining. Recurrence is diagnosed by physical examination or ultrasound.

Treatment for Persistent Pain After Hernia Surgery

Medication options

Nerve block injections

An ilioinguinal or iliohypogastric nerve block — injected under ultrasound guidance — is both diagnostic and therapeutic. If it eliminates pain for several hours, it confirms nerve entrapment as the cause. Repeated injections can provide relief lasting weeks to months. Most pain specialists recommend 2–3 injections before considering surgical options.

Revision surgery — when is it needed?

Revision surgery is considered for patients with confirmed nerve entrapment or mesh complications who have not responded to 6+ months of conservative treatment. Options include surgical neurectomy (nerve removal), mesh removal, or mesh revision. Success rates for neurectomy are 70–85%.

Pain Timeline After Hernia Surgery

Average Patient-Reported Pain (0–10 Scale)
Days 1–5
6.5/10
Week 2
4.2/10
Week 6
2.0/10
Month 3
0.8/10
Month 6
0.4/10
Call your surgeon if at any point you experience:
  • A new bulge at the hernia site — possible recurrence
  • Fever above 101°F with redness or warmth — possible infection
  • Pain that is worsening rather than improving at any timepoint
  • Severe pain with nausea and inability to pass gas — possible bowel obstruction (emergency)
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FAQ: Pain Months After Hernia Surgery

Is it normal to have pain months after hernia surgery?
Some mild discomfort up to 3 months is not uncommon as the mesh integrates and scar tissue matures. However, significant pain limiting daily activities beyond 3 months affects about 10–12% of patients and warrants evaluation by your surgeon.
How long should hernia surgery pain last?
Most patients have significant pain for 1–2 weeks. By 6 weeks, most are pain-free with light activities. Full recovery typically occurs by 3 months. Pain persisting beyond 3 months is considered chronic and should be evaluated.
When should I see my surgeon about ongoing hernia pain?
See your surgeon if pain is still significant at 6 weeks, if pain is worsening, if you notice a new bulge at the hernia site, if you have fever with increasing redness, or if pain is limiting your daily activities at 3 months post-surgery.
Dr. Cyrus Abbasi, MD, PhD
Dr. Cyrus Abbasi, MD, PhD
Interventional Spine/Pain Management
Dr. Abbasi contributes to PainAfter.com to help patients understand post-surgical recovery. She works with hernia surgery specialists to guide patients with chronic post-herniorrhaphy pain.