Visual answer
Why Cold in Your Mouth = Pain in Your Forehead
The path from ice cream to forehead pain explained in four steps.
Cold hits the roof of the mouth
Extremely cold food or drink makes contact with the highly vascularized roof of the mouth (the palate), rapidly dropping its temperature.
Blood vessels react
Local blood vessels constrict from the cold. The brain senses the temperature drop and sends a surge of warm blood to protect itself, causing vessels to dilate rapidly.
Sphenopalatine ganglion activates
This nerve cluster just behind the nose is highly sensitive to temperature changes and gets triggered by the rapid vascular changes nearby.
Pain is referred to the forehead
The sphenopalatine ganglion is linked to the trigeminal nerve, which also serves the forehead. The brain can't accurately locate the source, so you feel it as forehead pain.
Real reason
Your Brain Gets the Wrong Address for the Pain
The roof of your mouth is densely packed with blood vessels. It's close to the brain and very sensitive to temperature. When something very cold hits it, those vessels constrict fast. Your body interprets this as a threat to the nearby brain and rapidly dilates those vessels again to send warm blood, this sudden expansion is what triggers the pain.
The pain signal fires through the sphenopalatine ganglion, a cluster of nerves just behind your nose. These nerves are part of the trigeminal nerve network, which branches up into your forehead and the front of your head. The brain doesn't always track exactly where a pain signal originated from within that network, so it reports the pain up in the forehead rather than in your mouth.
This mislocation of pain is called referred pain, the same reason a heart attack can cause arm pain, or why a problem in one part of the body is felt somewhere else entirely. In brain freeze, the wiring between the palate nerves and the forehead branches of the trigeminal nerve creates the confusion.
Myth vs reality
Myth vs Reality
What people think
The cold is freezing part of your brain
Your brain is deep inside your skull, surrounded by layers of tissue and bone. A mouthful of ice cream cannot drop your brain's temperature. The brain is not involved in the cold sensation at all, only the nerves near your palate are.
What actually happens
It's referred pain from your mouth to your forehead
Your brain gets a pain signal from the palate, can't accurately locate it because of how the trigeminal nerve branches are wired together, and reports it in the wrong place, your forehead. The brain isn't cold. It's just confused about the address.
Common triggers
What Makes Brain Freeze Worse or Better
Eating cold food very fast
Rapid contact maximizes the temperature drop on the palate, the faster you eat, the worse it can be
Sipping through a straw
Directs cold liquid straight to the back of the roof of the mouth, one of the fastest ways to trigger brain freeze
Pressing tongue to the roof of the mouth
Warms the affected area using body heat, often shortens the duration of the freeze
Quick answers
Common questions
How do I stop brain freeze fast? +
Press your tongue firmly to the roof of your mouth. Body heat warms the palate and the blood vessels return to normal temperature faster. Drinking warm or room-temperature liquid also helps.
Why does brain freeze hurt in the forehead and not the mouth? +
Referred pain, the pain originates near the palate but the nerve signal travels up through the trigeminal nerve, which also serves the forehead. The brain misidentifies the location of the signal.
Can you get brain freeze from something other than ice cream? +
Yes, any very cold food or drink can do it. Frozen drinks, slushies, ice cold water gulped quickly, even cold air breathed in rapidly through the mouth in very cold weather can trigger it.
Why do some people never get brain freeze? +
Individual sensitivity varies. How quickly you eat cold food, your individual nerve anatomy, and your blood vessel responsiveness all play a role. Some people's palate nerves are less reactive to the cold stimulus.
Is brain freeze dangerous? +
No. It is painful but brief, usually lasting from a few seconds to around two minutes, and resolves completely on its own. It does not cause any damage to the brain or nervous system.
Does brain freeze mean I'm eating too fast? +
Essentially yes, brain freeze is caused by rapid temperature change in the palate. Eating cold foods slowly gives your mouth time to warm the food slightly and prevents the sharp thermal shock that triggers the nerve response.


