How long does tennis elbow last?
Tennis Elbow does not recover by calendar alone; the honest timeline is the phased arc: It usually settles, but it's not instant and it can come back, so easing the load on the tendon matters. The path that works best is building the tendon up step by step — starting with gentle holds, then slow, controlled wrist movements, then gradually adding strength. A cortisone shot can feel great at first but tends to leave people worse off a year later, while sticking with exercise wins in the long run.
Irritation of the tendons that bend your wrist back, right where they attach to the bony point on the outside of your elbow. It's a tendon that's been overloaded — nothing is torn through, and despite the name you don't need to play tennis to get it. The extensor tendon gets loaded — gripping, lifting, repetitive wrist and forearm use — faster than it's currently conditioned for. That's why the fix is graded loading of those tendons, not rest: rest alone lets them de-condition and the pain returns.
What the pattern means
Pain over the bony point on the OUTSIDE of the elbow (the lateral epicondyle / common extensor origin), tender to press and reproduced by gripping or resisted wrist/finger extension, with the elbow still moving freely — and the mimics (medial epicondylalgia, radial tunnel / PIN, neck-referred pain, elbow OA) excluded. That pattern is the guardrail for this page: it keeps the advice tied to the condition's symptoms and loading plan rather than to a generic body-part label.
Mild discomfort during the exercises (below about 4 out of 10) is fine as long as it settles by the next day — ease off if it becomes disabling. If it isn't improving after a couple of months, or the ache sits lower down the forearm than the bony point, it's worth getting it reviewed. If that does not fit, stay cautious and get the pattern checked.
What to do first
How much pain is okay: Mild discomfort during the exercises is fine — keep it below about 4/10 and let it settle by the next day. If it climbs toward disabling (around 8/10 or more), stop and ease the load next time. Loading the tendon is the fix; just keep it within that window. Adapt the gripping, don't fully rest: Ease off the gripping/lifting tasks that flare it most for now — or do them a different way — but keep loading the tendon with the program. Full rest lets the tendon de-condition and the pain comes back.
The timeline moves fastest when each phase earns the next one. Pain that settles and cleaner control matter more than an exact date. That is the difference between useful modification and avoiding life until everything feels perfect.
How to progress
The phase order matters. Start with calm: Calm the irritated extensor tendon with pain-relieving isometric wrist-extension holds; reduce the most aggravating gripping. Then move toward rebuild: Load the tendon eccentrically — the active-ingredient phase — with slow wrist lowers / the Tyler Twist. The later target is back to daily life, where the payoff is gripping, lifting, and your sport.
If progress stalls, adjust dose first: less range, speed, load, time, or repetition. Should I just rest it? No — full rest lets the tendon de-condition and the pain tends to return. Ease off the most aggravating gripping for now, but keep loading the tendon with the program — that's the actual fix. Is some discomfort during the exercises okay? Yes — mild discomfort (below about 4/10) during loading is fine as long as it settles by the next day. Stop if it becomes disabling (above ~8/10).
Full guide: Tennis Elbow — recovery, timeline & exercises
Related: Golfer's Elbow — recovery guide