TMJ & Sinuses

TMJ vs. Sinus Pressure: How to Tell the Difference

Facial pressure that feels exactly like a sinus infection, except your sinuses check out fine — this is a surprisingly common way TMD shows up.

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If you've treated presumed sinus issues repeatedly with no lasting relief, and imaging or an ENT exam shows clear sinuses, TMD is worth considering as the actual source.

Why TMJ can mimic sinus pain

The temporomandibular joint sits close to the sinus cavities, and jaw muscles overlap with facial structures near them. When those muscles are chronically tense from clenching, grinding, or joint dysfunction, the resulting referred pain can present as pressure across the cheeks, forehead, or between the eyes — the same regions people associate with sinus pressure — even with zero sinus inflammation or infection present.

How to tell them apart

What tends to help

Because this overlaps mechanically with several other TMJ-referred symptoms, the same conservative approach applies: releasing tension in the jaw and surrounding muscles. Our TMJ Ear Pain & Fullness Relief program covers trigger point massage techniques that address the same muscle groups responsible for sinus-mimicking pressure.

NOTE: Persistent facial pressure should still be evaluated for an actual sinus or dental infection before assuming it's TMJ-related — the two can also occur together.