How Long Will I Have Pain After Rotator Cuff Surgery?

Quick Answer

Most patients experience significant pain for 3 to 6 months after rotator cuff surgery. The sharpest pain peaks in the first 1–2 weeks post-op, then gradually decreases. Mild to moderate aching can persist for 6–12 months while the repaired tendon undergoes the long process of healing and reintegrating with the bone.

The Bottom Line

Full rotator cuff repair healing takes 9 to 12 months. Pain isn't the best marker of healing — tendon-to-bone integration is a biological process that continues long after you feel better. Don't rush back to activities just because the pain is gone.

Week-by-Week Pain Timeline

Rotator cuff surgery pain follows a predictable pattern for most patients, though individual experiences vary based on tear size, age, and surgical technique. Here's what the research and clinical experience tell us to expect.

Timeframe Typical Pain Level What's Happening
Day of surgery 2–4/10 (nerve block active) Interscalene nerve block provides 12–24 hours of near-complete numbness. Enjoy it while it lasts.
Days 1–3 5–8/10 The nerve block wears off. This is often the hardest phase — sharp aching and throbbing, especially at night. Ice and prescribed pain medication are essential.
Week 1–2 4–7/10 Acute inflammation peaks then begins to resolve. Swelling and bruising are visible. Movement is minimal — your arm is in a sling.
Weeks 3–6 3–5/10 Passive range-of-motion exercises begin. Pain becomes more predictable — better at rest, worse with movement. Most patients transition from opioids to OTC pain relief.
Weeks 6–10 3–6/10 (PT flare) Active physical therapy begins. Pain may temporarily increase as you mobilize a stiff, healing joint. This is expected and not a sign of re-tear.
Months 3–4 2–4/10 Tendon is in the proliferative healing phase. Most patients sleep better by now. Significant functional improvement is noticeable.
Months 4–6 1–3/10 Strengthening exercises advance. Pain is mostly activity-related and resolves quickly with rest. Daily life becomes noticeably easier.
Months 6–12 0–2/10 Tendon maturation continues. Most patients return to normal activities. A dull ache with overhead work is still common but fades month by month.
Month 12+ 0–1/10 85–90% of patients report excellent outcomes. Full strength typically returns by 12–18 months. The repaired tendon is now mature and robust.

The "Night Pain" Problem

One of the most overlooked aspects of rotator cuff recovery is nighttime pain. Many patients find that pain is actually worse at night, particularly in the first 6–8 weeks. This is because:

  • Lying flat increases blood flow and inflammatory pressure in the shoulder
  • You lose the distraction of daytime activity
  • Your shoulder slips out of its supported position when you fall asleep

Sleeping semi-reclined (30–45° in a recliner or with pillows) significantly reduces nighttime pain for most patients. Don't try to power through sleeping flat — it will cost you recovery quality.

The Physical Therapy Flare

Around weeks 6–10, when your surgeon clears you for active physical therapy, your pain score often temporarily increases. This confuses and frightens many patients, who assume something went wrong.

It hasn't. Your shoulder has been immobilized and protected for weeks. Now you're asking it to move against stiffness and heal simultaneously. The increased inflammation is part of the process. Communicate with your PT — they can adjust intensity if the flare is severe — but don't stop therapy.

Typical Pain Scale by Phase

The chart below shows average pain ratings reported by patients in published clinical studies on arthroscopic rotator cuff repair recovery. Individual scores will vary.

Average Patient-Reported Pain (0–10 Scale)

Day 1–3
7/10
Week 2
5.5/10
Week 6
4/10
Month 3
3/10
Month 6
1.8/10
Month 12
0.8/10

Factors That Affect How Long Your Pain Lasts

No two rotator cuff recoveries look exactly the same. Several variables strongly influence the duration and intensity of post-surgical pain:

Tear Size

Massive tears (involving 2+ tendons or >5 cm) require more extensive repair and take significantly longer to heal than small partial-thickness tears. Pain duration can differ by 3–6 months between the two extremes.

Patient Age

Older patients (60+) typically experience a slower healing trajectory. The blood supply to tendons decreases with age, slowing the tendon-to-bone integration process. This doesn't mean worse outcomes — just more patience required.

Surgical Technique

Modern double-row arthroscopic repair has a lower re-tear rate than single-row techniques but often involves a longer recovery period due to the more complex repair construct. Ask your surgeon which technique they used and what it means for your timeline.

Physical Therapy Compliance

Patients who complete the full recommended PT protocol consistently report better long-term outcomes and, paradoxically, less pain at the 12-month mark — even though PT can increase short-term pain. Skipping or shortcutting physical therapy is one of the most common reasons for poor outcomes.

Pre-Surgery Muscle Condition

Muscle atrophy from a chronic untreated tear, or from being inactive pre-surgery, extends the strengthening phase and overall recovery duration. If possible, pre-operative "prehab" exercises can meaningfully shorten recovery.

How to Manage Pain After Rotator Cuff Surgery

The goal of pain management isn't just comfort — it's enabling you to participate in physical therapy effectively and sleep well enough to support healing.

Ice Therapy

Apply ice for 20 minutes every 2–3 hours in the first 1–2 weeks. Cold therapy reduces inflammatory prostaglandins and provides local analgesia. Use a cloth barrier — never apply ice directly to skin. Cryotherapy machines (like the Polar Care or Ossur Cold Rush) that circulate cold water are particularly effective for shoulder recovery.

Medications

Your surgeon will typically prescribe a stepwise approach:

  • Days 1–14: Prescription opioids (used judiciously) + scheduled NSAIDs or acetaminophen
  • Weeks 2–6: Transition to over-the-counter NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) with food
  • Months 2+: As-needed acetaminophen or NSAIDs before/after PT sessions

Note: some surgeons limit NSAID use after repair due to theoretical concerns about healing. Follow your surgeon's specific guidance.

Sling Positioning

Wearing your sling correctly isn't just about immobilization — proper arm position reduces painful traction on the healing repair. Your shoulder should be slightly abducted (moved away from the body), not pressed flat against your torso.

Sleeping Position

Invest in a recliner or a quality wedge pillow system. Sleeping at 30–45 degrees reduces pain by 30–40% compared to lying flat for most rotator cuff patients in the first 6 weeks.

Warning Signs: When to Call Your Surgeon

Most post-operative pain is normal and expected. But certain symptoms require a prompt call to your surgeon's office, as they may indicate a complication that needs treatment.

Call Your Doctor If You Experience:

  • Sudden severe pain increase after a period of consistent improvement — this can indicate a re-tear
  • Fever above 101°F (38.3°C) after the first 24–48 hours — potential sign of infection
  • Increasing redness, warmth, or discharge at the incision site
  • Significant arm or hand swelling that is getting worse rather than better
  • Numbness or tingling in the hand or fingers that is new or worsening
  • A popping or giving sensation in the shoulder with a sudden change in pain pattern
  • Pain completely unresponsive to all prescribed medications (uncontrolled acute pain)

Re-tear: How Do You Know?

Re-tear rates after rotator cuff repair range from 10% for small tears to over 40% for massive tears. The hallmark of a re-tear is a sudden, significant increase in pain — especially if accompanied by a popping sensation — after a phase of steady improvement. However, some re-tears are silent (no additional pain) and only discovered on follow-up imaging.

If you suspect a re-tear, don't wait. Early diagnosis allows for earlier intervention if revision surgery is needed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most patients experience significant pain for 3 to 6 months after rotator cuff surgery. Acute post-operative pain peaks in the first 1–2 weeks, then gradually decreases. Mild to moderate aching can persist for 6–12 months as the repaired tendon fully heals and reattaches to the bone. Full recovery to near pain-free function typically occurs between 9 and 12 months.
Yes — pain at 3 months is completely normal. At this stage, the tendon is still in the "proliferative" healing phase and has not yet fully matured. Most patients rate their pain as 2–4/10 at rest and 3–5/10 during physical therapy at the 3-month mark. Expect continued steady improvement through months 4–6.
This is common and expected. Around weeks 6–10, when you begin active physical therapy, pain may temporarily increase as you move a joint that has been immobilized. This "PT flare" occurs because you're working through stiffness and stimulating healing tissue. It typically resolves within 1–2 weeks as your shoulder adapts. Communicate with your physical therapist if the flare seems excessive — they can adjust the program.
Call your surgeon if you notice: a sudden severe increase in pain after a period of improvement, fever above 101°F (38.3°C), increasing redness or discharge at the incision site, new numbness or tingling in the hand, or a popping/giving sensation in the shoulder. These can indicate infection, re-tear, or nerve issues requiring prompt evaluation.
Most patients can sleep with minimal discomfort by months 3–4. In the first 4–6 weeks, sleeping upright in a recliner (at about 30–45 degrees) is significantly more comfortable than lying flat, which increases shoulder pressure. A wedge pillow system can approximate a recliner if you don't have one.
The majority of patients — around 85–90% — achieve excellent or good outcomes with complete or near-complete pain relief by 12–24 months post-surgery. A small percentage experience ongoing mild discomfort with overhead activities, but this rarely limits daily function. The key predictors of good outcomes are completing physical therapy, adhering to precautions, and having the surgery performed by an experienced surgeon before the tear becomes massive.

Dr. Rebecca Harmon, MD

Board-Certified Orthopedic Surgeon · Shoulder & Sports Medicine · 14 Years Experience

Dr. Harmon trained at UCSF and completed her fellowship in shoulder and elbow surgery at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York. She has performed over 2,000 rotator cuff procedures and specializes in helping patients understand what to expect during every phase of surgical recovery. All content reviewed by Dr. Harmon reflects current evidence-based clinical guidelines.