If your gabapentin isn't relieving your nerve pain, there is an overwhelming likelihood that the problem is not the drug — it is the dose, the schedule, or both. This is the single most common and most correctable failure in pain management.
A patient is prescribed gabapentin 100mg three times a day. They take it faithfully for a week. They feel drowsy and foggy — but their pain doesn't budge. So they stop taking it and tell their next doctor: "I tried gabapentin. It didn't work for me."
In reality, they were started on a dose designed for tolerability — not treatment. The drug never had a fair chance.
This scenario plays out millions of times a year across the United States. Gabapentin is one of the most prescribed medications in the country, yet the majority of patients receive inadequate dosing guidance and abandon it before it has any meaningful opportunity to work.
Gabapentin works by binding to voltage-gated calcium channels in nerve cells, reducing the release of excitatory neurotransmitters that drive pain signals. This is not an on-off switch. It is a gradual process of nerve signal stabilization that requires consistent medication levels in the bloodstream over an extended period.
Unlike a painkiller you take when pain spikes, gabapentin must be taken on a fixed schedule, every day, at consistent times — regardless of whether your pain happens to be better or worse on a given day. Inconsistent dosing produces inconsistent blood levels, which produces inconsistent — or no — results.
During the first one to two weeks at a low starting dose, the goal is not pain relief. The goal is teaching your nervous system to tolerate the medication without excessive side effects. Drowsiness and dizziness during this period are expected and normal — they are not signs that the medication is wrong for you.
Patients who stop during Phase 1 because "nothing is happening" are stopping precisely when they should be staying the course.
Once tolerability is established, the dose is gradually increased — a process called titration. This is where gabapentin actually begins doing its job. For most nerve pain conditions, the therapeutic range is between 900mg and 1,800mg per day, taken in divided doses throughout the day.
Patients who were started at 300mg/day and never told to increase it were never given a therapeutic trial. They were given a tolerability trial — and concluded the drug didn't work based on a dose that was never intended to provide relief.
Gabapentin has an unusual pharmacological property that sets it apart from most medications: its absorption actually decreases as the single dose increases. Unlike most drugs where a higher dose produces proportionally higher blood levels, gabapentin hits a ceiling at high single doses due to the way it is transported across the intestinal wall.
This means that taking 600mg three times daily (1,800mg total) is far more effective than taking 1,800mg all at once. The total dose matters — but so does how it is divided throughout the day. Patients who take their entire daily dose once in the morning or once at night are not getting the benefit of consistent therapeutic blood levels.
Below is a general example of how gabapentin dosing is typically increased toward a therapeutic range. This is for educational illustration only — your physician will tailor the schedule to your specific condition, tolerability, and response.
| Timeframe | Morning | Afternoon | Bedtime | Daily Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 100mg | — | 200mg | 300mg |
| Week 2 | 100mg | 100mg | 300mg | 500mg |
| Week 3–4 | 200mg | 200mg | 400mg | 800mg |
| Week 5–8 | 300–600mg | 300–600mg | 600mg | 900–1,800mg |
Note that the bedtime dose is intentionally the largest. This is because gabapentin's sedating effect is most useful at night — it improves sleep quality while also covering the period when nerve pain commonly peaks.
If your nerve pain is worse at night — as it is for many patients with post-herpetic neuralgia, diabetic neuropathy, and radiculopathy — concentrating more of your daily dose at bedtime directly targets your worst pain window. The drowsiness, rather than being a side effect to manage, becomes an asset: it helps you sleep through the peak pain period.
If your pain is worse during the day with activity, a more balanced distribution across morning, afternoon, and evening may be more appropriate — with the morning dose taken early enough to build up before your most active hours.
PainIQ's interactive dosing guide builds a week-by-week gabapentin schedule based on your diagnosis, current dose, tolerability, and pain timing — all based on physician protocols.
Open the Dosing Guide →