No pain from shingles usually indicates that the localized nerve damage is not very severe. However, sometimes when the nerve damage is more severe, the localized pain may not be obvious. If you have shingles without pain, it may be because the virus has not yet invaded the nerves and the nerve symptoms have not yet fully manifested, and significant nerve pain may occur as the disease progresses. If you have had shingles for more than half a month and still have no symptoms of pain, it may be because although the virus has invaded the skin and nerves, the nerve damage is relatively mild, so no nerve pain has occurred. There are also some people with particularly severe nerve damage, but only localized numbness, pain is not obvious, wait until the skin lesions recovered instead of pain intensified, so you need to closely observe the condition. To summarize, if you have shingles without pain, your condition may be mild or severe. You need to consult a doctor in time to find out the condition, and treat it under the doctor’s guidance according to the severity of the condition.