The novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV2) has been responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic for over a year now. Though primarily a respiratory infection, SARS-CoV2 has demonstrated neurotropism centrally and peripherally, often with persisting neurologic symptoms beyond resolution of systemic symptoms like dyspnea and fever. Headache can broadly be associated with COVID-19 infection with overall prevalence ranging widely, encompassing both secondary and primary headache disorders (Table 1). There has been robust COVID-19 literature this past year, including numerous studies published in Headache. Several plausible mechanisms for COVID-19associated headache have been postulated, namely via ACE2 hostreceptor cellular entry with subsequent role in trigeminovascular activation, direct viral invasion, and cytokine release syndrome. 1 Though the exact phenotype of headache directly attributed to COVID-19 infection remains without specificity, we know it is often an early symptom, persistent, even isolated, and may not reliably correlate with COVID-19 disease severity. 2 People both with and without pre-existing headache disorders have experienced headache associated with COVID-19. 3 Frontline workers, and now the general population, wearing personal pro-GUEST EDITORIAL