The jaw, upper neck, and inner ear all feed into the same balance system, so dysfunction in one can genuinely produce dizziness that feels like it's coming from your ears. This program follows the kind of approach a physical therapist typically uses for dizziness that's driven by the jaw and neck (often called cervicogenic dizziness) rather than a primary inner-ear disorder. For the science behind the connection, see Can TMJ Cause Dizziness or Vertigo?
Before starting, confirm that a doctor has evaluated your dizziness and ruled out inner-ear pathology, a neurological cause, or a cardiovascular issue. This program assumes that screening has already happened.
10 reps, holding 3-5 seconds, several times a day. Forward head posture alters the joint receptors in your upper neck that feed directly into your sense of balance. Gently draw your chin straight back (not down), creating a "double chin," and hold. This is the same core movement used in our Posture Correction Program.
20-30 seconds per side, 2 sets. Slowly turn your head to look over one shoulder as far as comfortable, keeping shoulders level. Stiffness specifically in the top two neck joints is strongly linked to cervicogenic dizziness.
6-8 slow reps. Place a finger lightly under your chin and open your mouth slowly against that light resistance, keeping the movement straight and controlled. This is the same stabilization principle behind the Rocabado 6x6 Program, aimed at reducing erratic joint movement that can contribute to a sense of imbalance.
30-45 seconds per side. Using your fingers, apply gentle sustained pressure to tight spots along the sternocleidomastoid (side of the neck) and the base of the skull. These same muscles are covered in our TMJ Ear Pain & Fullness Relief program and can refer sensations of pressure and imbalance when tight.
Start with 30 seconds, building toward 1-2 minutes as tolerated. Hold a finger or a fixed point at arm's length, keep your eyes locked on it, and slowly turn your head side to side while your eyes stay perfectly still on the target. This is a standard vestibular rehabilitation exercise that retrains the reflex connecting eye and head movement.
1-2 minutes, several times a day. Keeping your head still, slowly track a moving finger or object left-right and up-down with just your eyes. This builds on the gaze stabilization step and helps the visual and vestibular systems work together more smoothly.
20-30 seconds per stance. Always practice near a wall or sturdy chair. Progress through: feet together → heel-to-toe (tandem) stance → single-leg stance, and only close your eyes on a stance once it feels solid with eyes open.
10 slow reps. Seated in a safe position, slowly turn your head side to side through a comfortable range. Over days, gradually increase speed and range as symptoms allow. This graded exposure is how the nervous system re-calibrates to movements that currently trigger dizziness.
Keep a simple daily log of dizziness frequency and intensity. If there's no meaningful improvement after 2-3 weeks of consistent practice, or symptoms worsen, take this log back to your doctor or a vestibular physical therapist rather than continuing to self-manage indefinitely.
Dizziness has many possible causes, and jaw/neck dysfunction is only one of them. This program addresses the cervicogenic and TMJ-referred piece specifically — it's not a substitute for a full vestibular or medical workup if symptoms are significant.