TENS unit and PEMF therapy device side by side
PEMF UKPEMF VS TENS

PEMF vs TENS — what's the difference?

They both treat pain. They are nothing alike. One blocks signals; the other heals tissue. Here's how they differ and when to use each.

Reviewed 2026-05-07

In 40 seconds

PEMF and TENS are commonly confused but completely different. TENS (Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation) sends an electrical current through skin electrodes to interrupt pain signals at the nerve — fast pain relief, no underlying healing effect. PEMF (Pulsed Electromagnetic Field) passes magnetic pulses through tissue at the cellular level — slower pain relief, but acts on underlying inflammation and supports tissue repair. Use TENS for acute pain control. Use PEMF for chronic conditions and recovery. They work well together.

TENSPEMF
What it isElectrical current via skin electrodesPulsed magnetic field via mat or applicator
MechanismBlocks pain signals at the nerveStimulates cellular voltage, reduces inflammation, supports repair
DepthSurface onlyWhole-body, deep tissue
SensationTingling / pulsingUsually nothing felt
Effect durationDuring use onlyCumulative, lasting
Best forAcute pain spikesChronic pain, recovery, healing
Cost£15–£100 home unit£25–£75 clinic session, £200–£3,000 home
FDA-clearedYes — pain reliefYes — multiple indications since 1979

When to use which

Use TENS for: acute pain spikes you need to manage in the moment, post-injury short-term relief, labour pain, chemotherapy-related neuropathy short-term.

Use PEMF for: chronic pain conditions, joint OA, post-surgical recovery, sports recovery, healing-focused use cases.

Use both when: chronic pain has acute flare days. TENS in the moment, PEMF for the long-term work.

Contraindications

TENS and PEMF share contraindications: pacemakers, defibrillators, electronic implants. PEMF additionally contraindicates pregnancy (over abdomen) and active malignancy.

Frequently asked questions

Are PEMF and TENS the same thing?

No. They are completely different technologies. TENS sends an electrical current through skin electrodes to mask pain signals at the nerve. PEMF passes pulsed magnetic fields through tissue without skin contact, working at the cell membrane to reduce inflammation and stimulate repair.

Which works faster for acute pain?

TENS — it blocks the pain signal in real time. PEMF works slower but addresses underlying inflammation rather than just masking pain.

Which works better for chronic pain?

PEMF, generally. Chronic pain is driven by underlying inflammation, central sensitisation, and tissue damage — things PEMF acts on. TENS only blocks signals during use.

Can I use both?

Yes. They are complementary. Many clinical patients use TENS for short-term relief and PEMF for longer-term healing.

Looking for a PEMF clinic near you?

We list every credible PEMF therapy provider in the UK so you can find one near home.