---
title: "Lower Back Pain From Sitting: What the Latest Evidence Actually Says"
id: "6908"
type: "post"
slug: "education-lower-back-pain-from-sitting"
published_at: "2026-04-28T23:40:09+00:00"
modified_at: "2026-04-28T23:40:09+00:00"
url: "https://www.allforone.com.au/education-lower-back-pain-from-sitting/"
markdown_url: "https://www.allforone.com.au/education-lower-back-pain-from-sitting.md"
excerpt: "Quick read Around 85–90% of low back pain is “non-specific” — not linked to a specific structural problem in your spine. That’s reassuring news, even when it doesn’t feel that way. Sitting itself is not a strong, established cause of..."
taxonomy_category:
  - "Physiotherapy"
---

## Quick read

- Around **85–90% of low back pain is “non-specific”** — not linked to a specific structural problem in your spine. That’s reassuring news, even when it doesn’t feel that way.
- **Sitting itself is not a strong, established cause of back pain.** Posture, “weak core” and “disc pressure” stories are more confidently repeated than the evidence actually supports.
- **What helps most:** staying active, sleeping well, managing stress, and not being scared of your back. Movement of *any* kind matters more than any one perfect exercise.
- **See a physio if** pain has been present for more than a few weeks, is significantly limiting your life, or is associated with leg symptoms — not because something is necessarily “wrong”, but because guidance and reassurance get you back on your feet faster.

## The short answer

If you’re worried that hours at a desk are quietly damaging your back, the current evidence is much kinder than you might think. Most lower back pain is **non-specific** — meaning it isn’t caused by a clear structural issue, and it usually settles. Sitting is rarely the sole cause. What helps most is staying active in any way you enjoy, looking after the rest of your health, and not catastrophising the pain. A physio’s job today is less about “fixing” you and more about helping you trust your back again.

## Why this article reads differently to most

A lot of online content still tells desk workers their back hurts because of sustained disc pressure, a weak core, tight hip flexors, or “bad posture”. That story made sense in the 1990s. It does not match the best evidence we have in 2026.

The 2018 *Lancet* low back pain series — three landmark papers led by Hartvigsen, Foster and Buchbinder — and the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care’s [Low Back Pain Clinical Care Standard](https://www.safetyandquality.gov.au/standards/clinical-care-standards/low-back-pain-clinical-care-standard)
 collectively shifted the consensus. So did the [RESTORE trial](https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(23)00441-5/fulltext)
 published in *The Lancet* in 2023, which showed that an approach focused on confidence, education and graded movement (Cognitive Functional Therapy) outperformed usual care for chronic disabling back pain.

The short version: most pain advice you’ve absorbed is built on outdated assumptions. Here’s what the evidence actually says.

## How common is back pain in Australia?

Even with the reframe, lower back pain is genuinely common.

According to the [Australian Institute of Health and Welfare](https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/chronic-musculoskeletal-conditions/back-problems)
, an estimated **4.0 million Australians (around 16% of the population)** live with back problems. Back problems were the **third-leading cause of disease burden** in Australia in 2023, accounting for 4.3% of the total. Prevalence rises with age — 27% of 65–74 year-olds report back problems — but desk-based adults in their 30s, 40s and 50s now make up a substantial share of people booking in to see a physio.

Common doesn’t mean dangerous. It means it deserves a calm, clear explanation rather than a fear-based one.

## What is “non-specific” low back pain?

Non-specific low back pain (often shortened to NSLBP) means **pain that isn’t caused by a specific identifiable disease or structural problem** — no fracture, no nerve compression, no sinister pathology. International estimates suggest **85–90% of low back pain falls into this category**.

That sounds vague, but it’s actually good news. It means the body isn’t broken. Pain is real — but it’s most often a sign that the system is sensitive, not that it’s damaged. Sensitivity settles. Damage stories don’t help it settle; they often make it worse.

## What the evidence actually says about sitting and back pain

This is the part that surprises most people.

**Sitting itself is not a strong, consistent cause of low back pain.** A 2020 review by Saraceni and colleagues in JOSPT looked carefully at the relationship between sitting, lifting, and low back pain — and found the evidence linking sitting posture to pain is weak and inconsistent. Posture, including “slumped” sitting, is **poorly correlated** with pain in research that controls properly for other factors.

What does this mean in practice?

- **You don’t need to sit perfectly upright all day to protect your back.** The body is built to handle sustained, varied loads. The cure isn’t a more rigid spine; it’s a less anxious one.
- **A “bad” chair isn’t usually causing your pain.** A better chair won’t usually solve it.
- **Movement frequency seems to help** — but more because it’s a marker of an active life than because each shift in posture is “rescuing” your discs.

Sitting still becomes a problem when it crowds out movement everywhere else in your day. The fix isn’t sitting perfectly. It’s living more actively overall.

## So what actually helps?

The evidence consistently points to a few things — and they’re not the things that sell ergonomic gadgets.

### 1. Move regularly, in any way you enjoy

The **strongest, most consistent finding** in the back-pain literature is that physical activity protects against, and helps recover from, low back pain. The kind of movement matters less than people assume. Walking, strength training, swimming, yoga, Pilates, dancing, cycling — all credible. The Australian Clinical Care Standard explicitly recommends staying active and continuing usual activities.

A useful rule of thumb: if you’d recommend it to a friend for general health, it’s probably good for your back too.

### 2. Look after your sleep, stress and overall health

Sleep deprivation, ongoing stress, low mood and overall poor health are all associated with persistent pain. Pain is a brain-body signal, not just a tissue signal. Looking after the whole person matters — and addressing this stuff is often the missing piece for people whose back pain has hung around.

### 3. Be honest about beliefs

What you believe about pain affects how it behaves. People who believe their back is fragile and damaged tend to move less, fear more, and recover slower. People who believe their back is robust — even when it hurts — tend to recover faster. This isn’t “thinking yourself better”; it’s how the nervous system actually works.

### 4. Strengthen, but for life — not as a “fix”

Strength training is excellent for general health, function and confidence. We love it. But it works because it makes you a more capable, resilient human — not because you’ve found *the* exercise that’s “switched on” your weak core. Core-specific exercise has been shown in multiple reviews (including the 2016 Cochrane review by Saragiotto and colleagues) to be no more effective than general exercise long-term.

### 5. Don’t catastrophise sitting

You will sit at work. Your back will sometimes ache. Neither of those things is a sign of damage. The most useful thing many of our clients do is stop treating mild discomfort as evidence of a problem.

## When to see a physio (and what we actually do today)

A modern [physio](https://www.allforone.com.au/treatment/physiotherapy/)
 assessment isn’t about finding what’s “wrong” with you. It’s about:

- **Ruling out the rare red flags** that need different care.
- **Reassuring you about what’s actually going on**, in plain language.
- **Helping you understand your pain** — including the unhelpful beliefs you may have absorbed.
- **Building a movement plan that fits your life** — strength, mobility, walking, sleep, stress, return-to-sport — not a generic protocol.
- **Working with your nervous system, not against it** — settling sensitivity, gradually reintroducing movement you’ve been avoiding.

Book an assessment when:

- Pain has been present for **more than 4–6 weeks** without clear improvement.
- It’s **significantly limiting** what you do at work, at home, or with your family.
- You have **leg symptoms** — pins and needles, weakness, numbness.
- You’re feeling **stuck, scared, or unsure what to do**.

Red flags requiring urgent medical attention (not a physio appointment) include unexplained weight loss, fever, loss of bladder or bowel control, severe pain after significant trauma, or progressive neurological symptoms. Those go to a GP or emergency department.

## Where Pilates fits in (honestly)

[Clinical Pilates](https://www.allforone.com.au/classes/clinical-pilates/)
 is one option among many for building back-friendly fitness. We offer it because it’s a low-impact, prescribed, supervised way to build strength, mobility and confidence — and many of our clients enjoy it and stick with it, which is the most important factor in any exercise.

It is **not** the only answer to back pain, and we don’t claim it is. If walking, strength training or yoga is what you’ll actually do consistently, do that. If Clinical Pilates is what you’ll keep showing up to, we’d love to have you. The best exercise for your back is the one you’ll actually do.

## Frequently asked questions

### Is sitting all day ruining my back?

No. The evidence linking sitting alone to lower back pain is weaker than most people think. Sitting becomes an issue when it crowds out movement elsewhere in your day, not because each minute in a chair is causing damage.

### Do I have a weak core?

Probably not in any meaningful sense. “Weak core” is one of the most over-used explanations in fitness, and it’s not well-supported as a primary cause of back pain. General strength and overall activity matter more than targeted “core work”.

### Is my posture causing my pain?

Probably not. Posture is poorly correlated with pain in good-quality research. There’s no single “correct” posture you need to maintain. The body handles many positions; the trick is varying them and staying active overall.

### Does back pain mean something is damaged?

Usually not. Most non-specific low back pain is a sign of a sensitive system — not a damaged one. Sensitivity settles with movement, time, sleep and reassurance.

### Should I get a scan?

For most non-specific low back pain, no. Australian and international guidelines actively advise against routine imaging for uncomplicated back pain, because scans pick up findings that are common in pain-free people too — and seeing them often makes pain worse, not better.

### How long should I expect this to last?

Most acute episodes settle within a few weeks. Some hang around longer, especially if life is stressful or you’ve stopped doing things you enjoy. Consistent movement and good sleep are the strongest predictors of a good recovery — not the perfect chair or stretch.

## Move better, feel stronger — book an assessment

If your back has been telling you something for a while and you’d like a calm, current-evidence conversation about it, our physiotherapy team would love to help. We’ll listen properly, explain what’s going on in plain language, and build a plan that actually fits your life.

📍 **All for One Hampton East** — 03 9086 3740 📍 **All for One Yarraville** — 03 8319 9945 🔗 [Book a physiotherapy appointment online](https://www.allforone.com.au)

*Move better, feel stronger.*

## Sources

- [Hartvigsen et al. (2018) — What low back pain is and why we need to pay attention. The Lancet](https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(18)30480-X/fulltext)
- [Foster et al. (2018) — Prevention and treatment of low back pain: evidence, challenges, and promising directions. The Lancet](https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(18)30489-6/fulltext)
- [Buchbinder et al. (2018) — Low back pain: a call for action. The Lancet](https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(18)30488-4/fulltext)
- [Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (2022) — Low Back Pain Clinical Care Standard](https://www.safetyandquality.gov.au/standards/clinical-care-standards/low-back-pain-clinical-care-standard)
- [Kent / O’Sullivan et al. (2023) — Cognitive Functional Therapy for chronic disabling low back pain (RESTORE trial). The Lancet](https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(23)00441-5/fulltext)
- [Saragiotto et al. (2016) — Motor control exercise for chronic non-specific low back pain. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews](https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD012004/full)
- [Australian Institute of Health and Welfare — Back problems](https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/chronic-musculoskeletal-conditions/back-problems)
