You stand up from the couch and hear it: a crack, pop, crunch, or grinding sound from your knee.
It may sound alarming, especially when it happens regularly. However, noisy knees are common, and the sound alone does not always mean that something is wrong.
The medical term often used to describe cracking, popping, or grinding in a joint is crepitus. Knee crepitus can happen for several reasons, from normal movement inside the joint to changes caused by an injury or a condition such as osteoarthritis.
The most important question is not simply, “Why do my knees crack when standing up?” It is whether the noise is accompanied by pain, swelling, stiffness, weakness, or difficulty moving.
Knee crepitus describes a cracking, popping, clicking, crunching, or grinding sensation that occurs when the knee bends or straightens.
You might notice it when:
Some people only hear the noise. Others may also feel a crackling or grinding sensation beneath the kneecap.
Crepitus is a symptom rather than a diagnosis. In other words, hearing a noise does not automatically tell you what is happening inside the knee. A healthcare professional may consider the type of sound, when it occurs, whether there was an injury, and whether other symptoms are present.
The knee is a complex joint made up of bones, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, muscles, and lubricating joint fluid. All of these structures work together when you bend your knee, straighten your leg, or rise from a seated position.
A knee may crack or pop for several reasons.
The knee contains synovial fluid, which helps lubricate the joint. Changes in pressure may cause gases within the joint fluid to shift or release, producing a popping sound.
This is similar to the sound that occurs when someone cracks a knuckle. When it happens without pain or swelling, it is generally not considered a sign of injury.
Tendons connect muscles to bones, while ligaments connect bones to one another. As the knee moves, these tissues may slide over nearby structures and produce a snapping or popping sensation.
This can be particularly noticeable when you stand after remaining in the same position for a while.
Your kneecap, also called the patella, moves along a groove in the thighbone as your knee bends and straightens. Minor changes in the way the kneecap moves may create clicking, crunching, or grinding sensations.
The muscles surrounding the hip and knee can also affect how the kneecap moves. However, the presence of a sound does not necessarily mean the movement is damaging the joint.
A persistent grinding sound in the knee may sometimes be associated with changes in the cartilage or other structures inside the joint.
For example, osteoarthritis can cause cartilage surfaces to become rougher over time. The knee may then creak, click, snap, or produce a grinding sensation during movement. Osteoarthritis may also cause pain, stiffness, swelling, weakness, or reduced range of motion.
A pop that begins during an injury may have a different cause. Meniscus tears, ligament injuries, tendon injuries, and other joint damage can produce a sudden popping sound, particularly when the knee twists, buckles, or receives a direct impact.
In many cases, occasional knee noise without pain is not a reason for concern.
Healthy joints can pop, click, or crack during normal movement. These sounds may become more noticeable with age, after prolonged sitting, or when returning to movement after being inactive.
Pay attention to how the knee feels and functions. A painless pop that happens occasionally is different from a knee that regularly hurts, swells, locks, or gives way.
Noise alone cannot diagnose arthritis or another knee condition. Some people with noisy knees have no significant pain or movement problems, while others with knee conditions may experience very little noise.
You generally do not need to stop normal activity simply because your knees make noise. However, new or persistent symptoms should be discussed with a healthcare professional.
Knee popping with pain deserves more attention than noise by itself.
Painful popping or grinding may be associated with several conditions, including:
The location and timing of the pain may provide helpful information. For example, pain when standing from a chair, climbing stairs, squatting, or getting out of a car may involve different structures than pain caused by a sudden twisting injury.
Additional symptoms to watch for include:
These symptoms do not confirm a particular diagnosis. A healthcare professional may need to review your medical history, examine the knee, and determine whether imaging or other testing is appropriate.
Consider making an appointment with a healthcare professional when knee noise is accompanied by persistent pain, swelling, stiffness, or difficulty completing normal activities.
Seek more immediate medical attention when:
A popping sound during an injury, especially when followed by instability or an inability to straighten the knee, may be associated with damage to a ligament, tendon, meniscus, or cartilage.
For less urgent symptoms, keep track of when the noise occurs, what activities cause pain, how long the symptoms last, and whether the knee becomes stiff after rest. This information may help your healthcare provider better understand what you are experiencing.