How Long To Use Theragun? | Get Relief Without Overdoing It

Most people do well with 15 seconds to 2 minutes per muscle group, using light pressure and slow glides.

A Theragun can feel so good that it’s easy to camp out on one spot. Timing keeps it comfortable. Too little time can feel like nothing happened. Too much can leave a muscle touchy for the rest of the day.

Below is a simple, clock-based way to use a Theragun for warm-ups, soreness, and desk stiffness. You’ll get time ranges, stop signals, and a full routine that doesn’t drag on.

How Long To Use A Theragun Per Muscle Group And Per Session

Therabody’s guidance sits in a wide sweet spot: 15 seconds to 2 minutes per muscle group, then move on. That range works because goals vary. A quick pass can wake tissue up before training. A longer pass can calm down a tight area after.

Start low. If you want more, add time in small steps, not in one big push. Add 15–30 seconds, then reassess. If the sensation softens, you’re good. If it starts to feel hot, bruised, or prickly, stop and switch areas.

What “Per Muscle Group” Means

Think in zones you can reach with slow glides: one quad, one calf, one glute, one lat, one pec. For smaller areas like the forearm, treat a strip of tissue end to end, not a single dot on the skin.

When you feel tempted to pin the head in place, use a tiny “hover and drift.” Keep the head moving in a slow circle or short line. That spreads the load.

A Fast Timing Map

  • Warm-up: 15–30 seconds per muscle group.
  • Between sets: 15–30 seconds on the target muscle.
  • Recovery: 60–120 seconds per muscle group.

How Long To Use Theragun? A Practical Session Plan

A “session” is the full run from turning it on to turning it off. For many people, 5–12 minutes is plenty for a focused session. A head-to-toe pass can run longer, yet it still works best when each muscle gets a timed visit, not an endless grind.

Start With Two Simple Settings

  1. Pick a low speed and a broad attachment (ball or dampener) for your first pass.
  2. Use light pressure and let the device bounce. Your hand shouldn’t be white-knuckled.

If you feel like you must press hard to “feel it,” swap to a firmer head or bump speed one step before you add pressure.

Use The “Three Checks” Method

While you work a muscle, pause at 15 seconds, 45 seconds, and 90 seconds. Each time, ask: “Did the sensation get easier?” If yes, keep going a bit. If no, move on. Staying longer often just irritates tissue.

Stop Right Away When These Show Up

  • Sharp pain, zaps, or tingling that travels.
  • Numbness, pins-and-needles, or a weak grip.
  • Skin that feels like it’s burning or looks blotchy.
  • Soreness that ramps up while you’re still using the device.

Timing By Goal And Body Area

Goal changes timing. A pre-gym pass is about waking the tissue up. A recovery pass is about easing tone after loading. For desk stiffness, you’re often chasing a reset in how the muscle feels at rest.

Therabody’s own advice gives the core range: 15 seconds to 2 minutes per muscle group. Therabody’s recommended time range per muscle group lays out that window.

Some manuals also cue short bursts per area before you glide to the next spot. One example suggests 15–20 seconds per treatment area, then move along. Theragun Relief user manual timing note shows that “glide and switch” style.

Warm-up: Short Passes That Prime The Tissue

Warm-up use is about feel. You want the area to feel awake and ready to move. A quick sweep is often enough.

  • Quads, hamstrings, calves: 15–30 seconds each.
  • Glutes: 20–40 seconds each side.
  • Upper back and lats: 20–40 seconds per side, staying off the spine.

After Training: Longer Passes For Soreness

After training, slow your glides and give the muscle more time. Many people land at 60–120 seconds per muscle group for legs and upper back. If a muscle is tender, drop speed first, then shorten time.

Desk Stiffness: Small Doses Through The Day

You don’t need one long session. Two or three short passes can feel better than one marathon. Try 45–90 seconds on the areas that feel tight, then stop. Revisit later if the tightness comes back.

How Often To Use It In A Day

Many people use a Theragun daily. The trick is spacing. If you hit the same muscle hard three times in a row, it can feel beaten up. If you spread short passes out, it tends to stay comfortable.

Try this rhythm: one short warm-up pass before activity, then one recovery pass later. On non-training days, keep each session short and change regions. If a spot feels better after a session, leave it alone for a while and treat a different area next time.

Table: Common Theragun Timelines That Keep You On Track

Pick your goal, set a timer, and move on when it rings.

Goal Time Per Muscle Group Notes To Keep It Comfortable
Pre-workout warm-up 15–30 seconds Fast sweeps, light pressure, keep moving.
Between sets reset 15–30 seconds Short pit-stop, then stop.
Post-workout recovery 60–120 seconds Slow glides, stop if soreness rises.
Morning stiffness 30–60 seconds Low speed first, put time on hips and calves.
Desk shoulders and traps 30–60 seconds per side Stay beside the spine and off the front of the neck.
Calf tightness 20–90 seconds Avoid the back of the knee, keep pressure light.
Glute tightness after sitting 45–90 seconds Work a slow loop over the whole glute.
Forearms after gripping work 20–45 seconds Glide toward the elbow with light pressure.

Pressure And Speed: Time Changes When Intensity Changes

Time and intensity trade places. If you turn speed up, time often needs to come down. If you keep speed low and pressure light, you can stay near the longer end of the range.

A quick feel check: the head should bounce, not stall. If you’re pressing so hard that the motor bogs down, ease off.

A Simple Intensity Ladder

  • Light: 60–120 seconds can feel fine on large muscles.
  • Medium: 30–90 seconds fits many situations.
  • Heavy: 15–30 seconds is usually enough, then move on.

Areas To Skip And Times To Be Careful

Percussive devices are meant for muscle, not bones, joints, or delicate structures. Stay off the spine itself, the throat area, and the front of the neck. Also skip places where you can feel a pulse strongly.

Therabody posts a precautions and contraindications page that lists times when use should be modified or avoided. Therabody product precautions and contraindications is the cleanest starting point if you’re dealing with a condition, recent injury, or an implanted device.

Bruising And Tenderness: What To Change First

Bruising tends to come from two habits: staying on one spot and pushing too hard. If you see new bruises, cut time down, lower speed, and keep the head moving. Treat the surrounding muscle group instead of the sore dot.

Tingling Or Numbness: A Clear Stop Sign

Tingling, numbness, or zaps can mean you’re too close to a nerve path. Stop right then. Shift to a nearby muscle belly and go lighter. If the sensation keeps showing up, skip that area for the day.

Table: Safe Timing Moves By Region

This table pairs timing with a plain placement note, so you can stay on muscle and off sensitive spots.

Region Typical Time Range Placement Notes
Quads and hamstrings 30–120 seconds Stay on the muscle belly, glide end to end.
Calves 20–90 seconds Avoid the back of the knee, keep pressure light.
Glutes and hips 45–120 seconds Angle away from the tailbone, keep moving.
Upper back 20–90 seconds per side Stay beside the spine, not on it.
Chest and pecs 15–45 seconds Keep it gentle, stay off the collarbone area.
Forearms 15–45 seconds Use light pressure and short glides.
Feet 10–30 seconds Short doses, treat calves first if the arch is sore.
Spine, throat, front of neck 0 seconds Skip these areas.

Build A Full Routine Without Going Long

If you want a head-to-toe routine, pick 6–8 muscle groups and give each one a timed visit. A timer keeps it honest.

  1. Calves (30–60 seconds each)
  2. Quads (45–90 seconds each)
  3. Glutes (45–90 seconds each)
  4. Upper back (30–60 seconds per side)
  5. Lats (30–60 seconds per side)
  6. Pecs (15–30 seconds per side)

This lands around 8–12 minutes for most people. If you want more, add a second short pass later, not more minutes on the same tissue right now.

Make Your Time Count With Small Technique Tweaks

Use A Timer, Not A Guess

Counting in your head never matches real time. Set a timer per muscle group, even if it’s only 30 seconds.

Match The Attachment To The Job

  • Ball: broad muscles, everyday use.
  • Dampener: tender areas, bony edges nearby.
  • Thumb or cone: small targets, short bursts only.

Keep Breathing Easy

If you’re holding your breath, you’re likely pressing too hard. Ease off, slow your glides, and keep your hand loose.

References & Sources