A stomach (peptic) ulcer usually causes a very specific kind of upper‑tummy discomfort that many people describe in similar ways.

Quick Scoop: What does an ulcer feel like?

Most people describe ulcer pain as:

  • A burning or gnawing ache high in the abdomen, between the belly button and the breastbone.
  • Pain in one clear spot rather than all over the stomach.
  • Discomfort that often gets worse:
    • When the stomach is empty (between meals or at night).
* A few hours after eating.
  • Pain that may briefly improve if you:
    • Eat a small amount of food
    • Take antacids or acid‑suppressing medicine.

People also commonly report:

  • Bloating or feeling very full after small meals.
  • Indigestion or heartburn‑type burning in the chest or upper stomach.
  • Nausea, sometimes vomiting.

Story‑style example

Imagine a slow, burning ache just under your ribs in the middle, that comes on late at night when you lie down. It doesn’t shoot through your whole belly; it sits in one spot and feels like it’s gnawing at you. You get up, take an antacid, maybe nibble a cracker, and the pain eases—but comes back the next evening, or a few hours after your next meal.

When it might not be a simple ulcer

You should seek urgent medical help if you have pain plus any of these:

  • Sudden, severe, knife‑like abdominal pain that doesn’t ease
  • Black, tarry stools or vomiting blood (can look like coffee grounds)
  • Feeling faint, dizzy, or very weak
  • Trouble breathing or pain spreading to chest/shoulder

These can be signs of bleeding or a perforated ulcer, which is an emergency.

If you’re having this kind of persistent upper‑tummy burning pain, it’s important to see a doctor rather than self‑diagnosing; they can check for infection (like H. pylori), start treatment, and prevent complications.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.