Can Crepitus Go Away? | What Those Joints Are Telling You

Joint crepitus often eases when swelling settles and movement gets smoother, but grinding from cartilage wear can stay.

That crunchy, crackly, clicky feeling in a knee, shoulder, or ankle can mess with your head. You move, it makes noise, and you start wondering if you’re wearing your joints down.

Here’s the good news: lots of crepitus is harmless. It can come from tendons sliding, gas bubbles shifting in joint fluid, or a bit of stiffness that clears once you’re warmed up. The tricky part is sorting “normal noise” from “noise that comes with a problem.”

This article walks you through what crepitus is, when it tends to fade, when it sticks, and what you can do to make joints feel smoother day to day.

Can Crepitus Go Away?

Yes, crepitus can go away in many cases. If the sound or sensation is tied to short-term swelling, tight tissue, or a mild tracking issue, it often settles as the area calms down and your movement pattern improves.

Still, crepitus isn’t one single “thing.” It’s a label for a sound or sensation, not a diagnosis. So the real answer depends on the cause. Some causes are short-lived. Others, like cartilage thinning in osteoarthritis, may keep the joint noisy even when pain is under control.

The most useful way to think about it: your goal isn’t always “silence.” Your goal is a joint that feels steady, moves well, and lets you do what you want without nagging pain.

What crepitus means in real life

Crepitus usually describes one of two experiences:

  • Clicks and pops that come and go with movement.
  • Grinding or crunching that feels like rough surfaces moving together.

Clicks and pops are often linked to normal joint mechanics. Grinding tends to point more toward friction inside the joint, like cartilage wear or irritated tissue.

Another clue is how you feel after it happens. If the joint feels fine and works fine, the noise alone often isn’t a big deal. If the noise comes with swelling, heat, sharp pain, locking, or a clear drop in function, that’s a different story.

Why joints make noise in the first place

Gas bubbles in joint fluid

Joints contain synovial fluid, which helps surfaces glide. Shifts in pressure can form and release tiny gas bubbles. That can create a pop that surprises you, then disappears. It’s often painless and random.

Tendons and ligaments sliding over bone

As you bend and straighten, tendons can glide over bony bumps and then “snap” into a groove. This is common in hips, knees, ankles, and shoulders. It can be louder when you’re stiff, tired, or ramping up a new activity.

Stiffness and poor tracking

If muscles around a joint aren’t doing their share, the joint can track a little off. In knees, the kneecap can rub or glide unevenly, which can feel like a gritty sensation on stairs or squats. This often improves with targeted strength work and better load pacing.

Swelling inside or around the joint

After a sprain, strain, or hard training block, tissue can swell. Swelling changes how surfaces glide. As swelling drops, motion often feels smoother and the noise may calm down.

Cartilage wear and osteoarthritis

Cartilage is a smooth surface that helps bones move with low friction. When cartilage thins, the joint can feel rougher. This is one reason grinding crepitus can stick around with osteoarthritis. NIAMS notes osteoarthritis involves tissue breakdown in the joint over time and often brings pain and stiffness, especially after rest or inactivity. NIAMS osteoarthritis overview

Injury inside the joint

Meniscus tears in the knee, labrum issues in the hip or shoulder, and loose fragments can cause catching, locking, or a “clunk.” Noise alone doesn’t prove an injury, but a noisy joint that also sticks or gives way deserves a closer look.

How to tell harmless noise from a problem

If you’re trying to decide whether crepitus is a “shrug” or a “get it checked,” use the full picture, not the sound by itself.

A joint that clicks once in a while with no pain and no swelling often falls into the harmless bucket. A joint that grinds every rep and feels sore after basic daily tasks leans the other way.

Crepitus causes, patterns, and what to watch for

Likely source Common pattern Signals to watch
Gas bubble release Single pop, then quiet Pain, swelling, repeat snapping in the same spot
Tendon glide or snap Click at a specific angle Pain over the tendon, swelling, loss of strength
Stiff tissue Noisy first moves, smoother after warm-up Morning stiffness that lasts, new swelling
Kneecap tracking issue Crunch on stairs or squats Front-knee pain, swelling after activity
Inflamed joint lining Noise with a “puffy” feel Heat, redness, fever, fast swelling
Cartilage wear (OA) Grinding, roughness, stiffness after rest Ongoing pain, reduced range, swelling that returns
Meniscus or labrum issue Catch, lock, or clunk Locking, giving way, sharp pain with twist
Loose body in joint Random block or shift Sudden locking, repeated catching, swelling spikes
After surgery or injury rehab New noises during return to motion Rising pain, swelling that doesn’t settle, loss of function

When crepitus tends to fade

After swelling goes down

If crepitus started after a new workout, a fall, or a twist, swelling may be part of the story. As the joint calms down, motion can feel less gritty. This is common in knees and ankles.

When strength catches up with demand

Weak or sleepy muscles can leave a joint wobblier than it should be. As you build strength, the joint often tracks better and the noise can ease. Knees often respond to stronger quads, hips, and calves. Shoulders often respond to stronger rotator cuff and upper back work.

When your warm-up matches the task

A lot of “first ten reps” crunchiness is plain stiffness. A short warm-up can change the feel fast: easy cycling, brisk walking, gentle range-of-motion, then a couple of light sets before heavier work.

When load stops spiking

Joints hate surprise. If you jump from low activity to long hikes, high-volume squats, or hard runs, tissue gets irritated and movement can get noisy. A steadier ramp often brings the noise down.

When crepitus may stick around

If crepitus is tied to cartilage wear, it may stay even after you feel better. Many people with osteoarthritis have noisy knees, yet they still build strength, move well, and keep doing what they enjoy.

AAOS notes that noisy knees can come from multiple causes, and the sound alone isn’t the whole story—pain, swelling, and function matter more. AAOS on why knees make noise

MSD Manuals also points out that joint noises are common even without a joint disorder, while certain patterns can show up with specific conditions like osteoarthritis or jaw joint issues. MSD Manuals on joint noises

Red flags that call for urgent care

Crepitus can show up outside joints too. A crackly feel under the skin, paired with swelling after injury or a procedure, can be a sign that air is trapped under the skin (subcutaneous emphysema). Cleveland Clinic describes this as a condition where air gets under the skin and can cause complications if untreated. Cleveland Clinic on subcutaneous emphysema

For joint crepitus, get care soon if you notice any of these:

  • Fast swelling, warmth, redness, fever, or feeling unwell
  • New inability to bear weight, or a joint that looks misshapen
  • Locking that won’t release, or repeated giving way
  • Sharp pain after a twist, fall, or impact
  • Numbness, weakness, or a cold/pale limb

These signs can point to infection, fracture, severe tissue injury, or circulation issues. In those cases, waiting it out can backfire.

Moves and habits that often make joints feel smoother

If your crepitus is painless or mild, the best approach is usually simple: get the joint moving well, build strength, and manage load so tissue can adapt.

Start with a warm-up that greases the groove

Try 5–8 minutes of easy movement that matches the joint: walking for knees and ankles, light cycling for knees, arm circles and gentle rows for shoulders. Then do a few slow reps through a comfortable range.

Build strength with steady progress

Strength changes how forces travel through the joint. For knees, that often means:

  • Slow sit-to-stands
  • Step-ups to a low step
  • Wall sits or split squats in a pain-free range
  • Hip hinges and glute work

For shoulders, think rows, external rotation work, and controlled pressing that doesn’t pinch.

Use range you can control

Grinding often gets louder at the edges of range, when control drops. Work in a range where the joint feels steady, then expand over time as control improves.

Watch for the “next day” message

Some soreness after training is normal. What you’re watching for is a clear trend: if the joint feels more swollen, more stiff, and less usable the next day, your load jumped too far. Pull it back a notch and ramp again.

Change the angle, not the goal

If squats set off crunchy knee feelings, try a shorter depth, a wider stance, or a box squat. If stairs feel rough, slow the descent and use the rail for a while. Small tweaks can calm irritation without quitting movement.

Self-check plan for the next 14 days

What you check What you do What you track
Pain level Keep daily activity steady 0–10 before and after movement
Swelling Use rest breaks and light motion Does the joint look puffy by night?
Stiffness after rest Do a short warm-up each morning Minutes until it loosens
Function Pick one daily task to test Stairs, getting up, reaching overhead
Noise pattern Notice when it shows up First reps only? Every rep? One angle?
Load tolerance Add one small strength session Same-day feel and next-day feel
Range of motion Move through a gentle range daily Any pinch, catch, or block?

What a clinician may check if the noise is paired with pain

If crepitus comes with pain, swelling, locking, or a drop in function, a clinician usually starts with a history and a hands-on exam. They’ll ask when it started, what movements trigger it, and whether there was an injury.

Depending on the story, they may check alignment, joint range, strength, tendon tenderness, and stability. Imaging depends on the suspected cause. X-rays can show joint space changes linked with osteoarthritis. MRI can show meniscus tears, ligament injury, and cartilage damage.

In many cases, the first step is still conservative care: strength work, activity changes, and symptom control. If the joint keeps locking, keeps giving way, or swells often, that’s when imaging and next steps become more likely.

If osteoarthritis is part of the picture

Osteoarthritis doesn’t mean you’re stuck. It means the joint has wear changes, and it may react to load in a touchy way at times. Many people do well with strength training, weight management when relevant, and activity choices that don’t spike symptoms.

NIAMS notes osteoarthritis affects people differently. Some have mild symptoms and keep daily life rolling. Others have more pain and disability. That spread matters, because it means “arthritis” isn’t a single fate. It’s a range. NIAMS osteoarthritis symptoms and risk factors

If your crepitus feels like grinding with stiffness after sitting, set your target on function: smoother motion, stronger muscles, and fewer flare-ups. Silence may not be the finish line, but better days can be.

Practical takeaways you can act on today

If your joint is noisy but not painful, treat it like a training cue, not a warning siren. Warm up, build strength, and ramp activity without big jumps.

If the joint is noisy and painful, or if it swells, locks, gives way, or feels hot, get it checked. The sooner you match the plan to the cause, the faster you stop guessing.

If you notice crackly skin crepitus after injury or a procedure, treat it as urgent and seek care right away.

References & Sources