You Deserve a Record That Actually Helps You
You have been living with migraines long enough to know how useless vague descriptions are. “I get about two a month and they are really bad” does not capture what you have been through. It does not capture the three-day postdrome that erases a week. It does not capture the pattern of attacks that seem to cluster before your period. It does not capture the fact that one medication stops working while another one helps if you take it within the first thirty minutes.
Key Takeaways
- A detailed migraine attack log tracks timing, intensity, triggers, and medications to identify your unique patterns.
- Most people with migraines have 2 to 4 consistent triggers, but it takes structured tracking to identify them reliably.
- Recording what you ate, how you slept, and your stress level in the 24 hours before an attack reveals non-obvious triggers.
- Bringing a complete attack log to your neurologist helps them determine if your treatment plan needs adjustment.
A structured migraine attack log template changes what you can bring to an appointment, what you can tell an ER nurse at midnight, and what you can tell yourself when you are trying to figure out whether things are getting better or worse.
Here is a template you can use starting today.
Why a Template Beats a Blank Journal
When an attack hits, your capacity to think clearly is low. You are in pain, possibly nauseous, probably in a darkened room. The last thing you can do is compose a thoughtful narrative entry. A template means you are filling in fields, not generating content from scratch. That is the difference between actually logging your attacks and meaning to log them when you feel better.
Consistency matters more than depth here. A quick fill-in during or immediately after each attack, logged consistently over weeks, is worth far more than a detailed essay written once.
The Full Migraine Attack Log Template
Attack Identification
- Date: ___
- Attack number this month: ___ (keeps a running count)
- Day of week: ___ (weekend patterns are real and worth tracking)
Onset and Early Warning
- Time attack began (or when you first noticed something): ___
- Prodrome symptoms noticed in prior 24 hours: Check all that apply.
[ ] Mood change (irritable / low / unusually high)
[ ] Food cravings
[ ] Excessive yawning
[ ] Neck or shoulder stiffness
[ ] Fatigue or heaviness
[ ] Increased light or sound sensitivity
[ ] Brain fog or difficulty concentrating
[ ] Digestive changes
[ ] Other: ___ - Did you have aura? (Y/N): ___
- If yes, describe aura: ___ (visual disturbances, tingling, speech difficulty)
- Aura start time: ___ / Aura end time: ___
Pain Profile
- Pain location: Circle: Left side / Right side / Both sides / Behind eye / Base of skull / Whole head
- Pain quality: Circle: Throbbing / Stabbing / Pressure / Burning / Dull ache
- Pain severity at worst point (1-10): ___
- Did pain worsen with movement or activity? (Y/N): ___
- Did pain shift location during the attack? (Y/N): ___ If yes: ___
Associated Symptoms
- [ ] Nausea
- [ ] Vomiting (note how many times: ___)
- [ ] Light sensitivity (photophobia)
- [ ] Sound sensitivity (phonophobia)
- [ ] Smell sensitivity (osmophobia)
- [ ] Dizziness or vertigo
- [ ] Neck pain or stiffness during attack
- [ ] Nasal congestion or runny nose (one side)
- [ ] Facial pressure
- [ ] Visual disturbance during headache phase (blurring, floaters)
- [ ] Cognitive difficulty (could not read, focus, or speak clearly)
- [ ] Mood changes during attack (note): ___
Medications and Treatments Used
Fill in one row for each medication or treatment attempted:
- Medication name: ___ / Dose: ___ / Time taken after onset: ___ / Effective? (Y / Partial / N): ___
- Second medication (if applicable): ___ / Dose: ___ / Time: ___ / Effective?: ___
- OTC treatments tried: ___ (ibuprofen, acetaminophen, aspirin, caffeine)
- Non-medication strategies: Check all that helped.
[ ] Dark, quiet room
[ ] Ice pack
[ ] Heating pad on neck
[ ] Sleep
[ ] Ginger (for nausea)
[ ] Peppermint oil
[ ] Eye mask
[ ] None helped
Attack Duration
- Time pain peaked: ___
- Time pain became manageable: ___
- Attack fully resolved: ___
- Total attack duration (hours): ___
- Missed work, school, or obligations? (Y/N): ___ If yes, how many hours: ___
Postdrome
- Did postdrome occur? (Y/N): ___
- Postdrome symptoms: Circle all: Fatigue / Brain fog / Mood flatness / Body soreness / Food cravings / Euphoria / Sensitivity lingering
- Postdrome duration (hours or days): ___
Suspected Triggers
Note what was different in the 24-48 hours before the attack. Do not assume causation yet. Just note what was present.
- Sleep: Less than usual / More than usual / Different schedule / Normal
- Hydration: Less than usual / Normal
- Meals skipped: ___
- Alcohol: ___ (type and amount)
- Caffeine: More than usual / Less than usual / Normal / Skipped entirely
- Stress level in prior 24-48 hours (1-10): ___
- Hormonal note (if applicable): Cycle day: ___ / Pre-period / During period / Ovulation
- Weather: Storm front / Major temperature change / Normal
- Screen exposure: Unusually high (Y/N)
- Travel or significant schedule disruption: (Y/N) ___
- Other notes on possible triggers: ___
Overall Notes
- Anything unusual about this attack compared to typical ones: ___
- How does this attack compare in severity to your last one?: Better / About the same / Worse
- What do you wish you had done differently?: ___
How to Use This Template Over Time
Keep your completed attack logs in one place. After three or four attacks, look across them and ask: What was consistently present in the 24-48 hours before? What medications worked and at what timing? How long is my typical postdrome? Are attacks getting more or less frequent?
If you are using this template as part of a broader daily logging practice, it fits directly into the ninety-day approach detailed in the guide on migraine diary triggers. The daily log gives you the surrounding context; the attack log captures the event itself in detail.
For more on recognizing the warning signs that come before attacks, the post on migraine prodrome symptoms explains what to look for in the hours before pain begins. Combining your prodrome awareness with your attack log gives you the fullest picture of your migraine pattern.
For broader resources on migraine management, visit Clarity DTX’s migraine page.
Bringing This to Your Appointments
Walk into your next neurology appointment with three completed attack logs and your appointment changes. You are no longer reconstructing from memory. You are presenting data. Your provider can see your medication response times, your typical severity, your associated symptoms, and your suspected triggers. That is the basis for a real treatment conversation.
If you are considering preventive medications, your attack frequency data from this log is directly relevant to that decision. If you are evaluating whether your current acute medication is working, your response time and effectiveness ratings give you an objective answer.
A Dedicated Tool Makes It Easier to Stay Consistent
Using this template on paper or in a notes app works well. But if you want structured logging with reminders, attack history over time, and visual pattern reports, the Migraine Tracker app handles all of this in one place. You can log during or right after an attack with minimal effort, and review your history before appointments.
Access it through the Clarity DTX migraine app.
You Already Know More Than You Think
After years of migraines, you carry a lot of knowledge about your own pattern. The problem is that it has been stored in memory, scattered across experiences that blur together over time. A template like this externalizes that knowledge. It turns what you have been living into something you can review, compare, and act on.
Fill in your next attack log during or right after the attack. Then fill in the one after that. Three attacks in, the data will start speaking for itself.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your treatment plan.
